Current Time in Dubai – GST Time Zone (UTC+4) | TimeTranslator.com
Dubai · United Arab Emirates · Middle East

Current Time in Dubai

Live NTP-synced clock · GST UTC+4 — no daylight saving · Weather, world city comparisons & complete guide

Dubai United Arab Emirates — Middle East
GST Gulf Standard Time
UTC +04:00
⏰ No DST — UTC+4 year-round
25.2048°N 55.2708°E ~5 m asl
🌡️ Current Weather in Dubai


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UTC OffsetUTC+4
Daylight SavingNone ⏰
vs London
Population3.6 mil.

The exact current time in Dubai is displayed live above, synchronized with international NTP servers. The UAE’s most populous city operates on GST (Gulf Standard Time), permanently fixed at UTC+4 year-round. The United Arab Emirates has never observed Daylight Saving Time — Dubai’s clocks never change, making scheduling straightforward and fully predictable. Dubai shares its time zone with the neighbouring emirate of Abu Dhabi, with Oman (Gulf Standard Time), and with Mauritius and Réunion in the Indian Ocean, though the IANA identifier Asia/Dubai is used as the canonical reference for the Gulf Standard Time zone.

01

Dubai Time vs World Cities – Live Comparison

CityCurrent TimeTime Zonevs Dubai
🇦🇪 DubaiGST UTC+4±0
🇬🇧 London
🇫🇷 Paris
🇺🇸 New York
🇺🇸 Los Angeles
🇮🇳 MumbaiIST UTC+5:30
🇸🇬 SingaporeSGT UTC+8
🇯🇵 TokyoJST UTC+9
🇦🇺 Sydney
02

Gulf Standard Time – GST Explained (No Daylight Saving)

GST is always UTC+4 — the UAE never changes its clocks
☀️ Summer UTC+4 GST — Gulf Standard Time
Clocks do NOT change
❄️ Winter UTC+4 GST — Gulf Standard Time
Clocks do NOT change

💡 No clock changes, ever. The United Arab Emirates has never observed Daylight Saving Time since its founding in 1971, and there are no plans to introduce it. In the Middle East, the practice of changing clocks is unpopular due to the extreme summer heat — shifting daylight into evening hours would extend exposure to peak temperatures. Most Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states share this position: Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar likewise observe no DST. The stability of GST is valuable for Dubai as a global financial and logistics hub: business partners in Asia, Europe and the Americas always know the exact time difference, with only their own DST schedules creating any seasonal variation. The difference between Dubai and any other fixed-offset city (such as Mumbai or Singapore) never changes, while the gap to DST-observing cities like London or New York shifts seasonally as their clocks move.

03

Dubai Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities

Enter a Dubai time to convert
AM Dubai (GST)
🇬🇧 London --:--
🇺🇸 New York --:--
🇺🇸 Los Angeles --:--
🇫🇷 Paris --:--
🇮🇳 Mumbai --:--
🇸🇬 Singapore --:--
🇯🇵 Tokyo --:--
🇦🇺 Sydney --:--
🇨🇳 Shanghai --:--
🇧🇷 São Paulo --:--
🇰🇪 Nairobi --:--
🇰🇷 Seoul --:--
04

Dubai – Geography & Location Facts

🌍LocationArabian PeninsulaPersian Gulf coast · Dubai Emirate · UAE
📌GPS Coordinates25.2048°N55.2708°E (east of Greenwich)
⛰️Elevation~5 m avgFlat coastal desert; ranges from sea level to ~300 m (Hajar foothills, east)
📐Area (emirate)4,114 km²Dubai Emirate; urban area ~1,287 km²
🌡️ClimateBWh (Köppen)Hot desert — extremely hot summers (40–48°C), mild winters (14–24°C), minimal rainfall
🌊Coastline72 kmPersian Gulf shoreline including the Palm Jumeirah artificial island; Dubai Creek divides Deira from Bur Dubai
05

Population & Administrative Data

Population (Dubai Emirate)~3.6 million
Expatriate share~88–90% of residents
Density (urban area)~2,800 people/km²
Official languageArabic
CurrencyUAE Dirham (AED, Dhs)
International dial code+971 (04 Dubai)
Internet domain.ae / .dubai
Postcode formatNo postal codes (PO Box system)
Drives onRight 🚗
ISO codeAE-DU (Dubai Emirate)
06

A Brief History of Dubai

  • c. 1833Around 800 members of the Bani Yas tribe, led by Ubaid bin Said and Maktoum bin Butti, migrate from Abu Dhabi and establish a permanent settlement at the mouth of the Dubai Creek. The Maktoum dynasty, which rules Dubai to this day, is founded. The settlement is a small pearl-diving and fishing village, unremarkable among Gulf ports.
  • 1892The Trucial States (including Dubai) sign Exclusive Agreements with Britain, granting the UK control of foreign relations in exchange for protection. Dubai enters an era of relative stability. In 1894, Sheikh Maktoum bin Hasher grants visiting foreign merchants tax-free trading status — a defining decision that begins Dubai’s tradition of openness to international commerce.
  • 1966Oil is discovered offshore at the Fateh field, 60 km west of Dubai. Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum uses the revenues to build modern infrastructure at extraordinary speed: roads, a deepwater port (Port Rashid, 1972), an international airport, schools and hospitals transform Dubai from a creek-side trading town into a modern city within a single generation.
  • 1971The United Arab Emirates is formally established on 2 December, uniting Dubai with Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm Al Quwain and Fujairah (Ras Al Khaimah joins in 1972). Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan becomes the first President and Sheikh Rashid of Dubai becomes Vice President. Gulf Standard Time (UTC+4) is adopted as the official national time zone.
  • 1985–2000Emirates airline is founded in 1985 with two aircraft and grows into one of the world’s largest carriers by the 2000s, cementing Dubai’s position as a global aviation hub. The 1990s see the opening of the Dubai Internet City and Dubai Media City free zones, attracting multinationals with zero corporate tax and full foreign ownership, reshaping the emirate into a technology and media capital.
  • 2010–presentThe Burj Khalifa opens in January 2010 at 828 metres — the world’s tallest structure. Dubai weathers the 2009 debt crisis with Abu Dhabi’s support and rebounds dramatically. Expo 2020 (held 2021–22) draws 24 million visits. Today Dubai is one of the world’s top financial centres, most visited cities, and a pivotal node in global logistics, with Dubai International Airport consistently ranked the world’s busiest by international passenger traffic.
07

Top Tourist Attractions in Dubai

🏙️
Burj KhalifaThe world’s tallest structure at 828 metres, with 163 floors above ground. The observation decks on floors 124 and 148 offer panoramic views across the Dubai skyline, Palm Jumeirah and, on clear days, the Hajar mountains of Oman. The base of the tower hosts the Dubai Mall, one of the world’s largest shopping centres by total area.
🏝️
Palm JumeirahThe world’s largest artificial island, reclaimed from the Persian Gulf in the shape of a palm tree with 17 fronds and a crescent breakwater. Home to the Atlantis The Palm resort, over 4,000 residences, luxury hotels and the Palm Monorail. The island added approximately 78 km of beachfront to Dubai’s coastline when completed in 2006.
🚢
Dubai Creek & Old DubaiThe natural saltwater inlet that gave birth to Dubai’s trading identity. Traditional wooden abra water taxis cross the creek between the historic districts of Deira (gold and spice souks) and Bur Dubai (heritage museums, the Al Fahidi historical neighbourhood). The Dubai Gold Souk in Deira is one of the largest in the world.
🏄
Jumeirah Beach & JBRDubai’s coastline stretches along the Persian Gulf south of the creek, with public and private beaches clustered at Jumeirah, Kite Beach, and the Jumeirah Beach Residence (JBR) — a 1.7 km beachside promenade lined with cafes, restaurants and boutiques. The beach culture, with the Burj Al Arab on the horizon, is one of Dubai’s most iconic images.
🏕️
Desert SafariThe Arabian Desert begins immediately beyond Dubai’s urban fringe. Evening desert safaris include dune bashing in 4WD vehicles, camel rides, sandboarding and traditional Bedouin-style dinners under the stars at private desert camps. The Al Marmoom Desert Conservation Reserve, 40 km south-east of Dubai, protects 40,000 hectares of natural desert and is home to Arabian oryx and gazelles.
🕌
Jumeirah MosqueOne of the most photographed buildings in Dubai and among the few mosques in the UAE open to non-Muslim visitors, through the Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding’s guided tours. Built in the Fatimid style between 1975 and 1979, the mosque is beautifully floodlit at night. Guided tours explain Islamic culture and traditions and include a Q&A session.

✈️ Airports Serving Dubai

AirportIATADistanceTransferNotes
Dubai InternationalDXB~4 km east~20 min (Dubai Metro Red Line)🌍 World’s busiest by international passengers
Al Maktoum InternationalDWC~37 km south-west~45 min (road); future metro link planned🛫 Dubai South; planned to be world’s largest airport
08

Emirati & Gulf Food Culture – Dubai Specialities

🍲HareesA slow-cooked porridge of wheat and meat (usually lamb or chicken), stirred for hours until it reaches a smooth, creamy consistency. One of the oldest Emirati dishes, traditionally served at weddings, Ramadan and Eid feasts. The UAE’s version is seasoned simply with cinnamon, ghee and sometimes a squeeze of lemon, letting the slow-cooked flavours speak for themselves.
🍚MachboosThe national dish of the UAE: spiced rice (similar to biryani) cooked with meat (lamb, chicken or seafood), tomatoes, dried limes (loomi), saffron, and a complex blend of spices including baharat, turmeric and cardamom. The rice absorbs the cooking juices from the meat, resulting in a deeply flavoured, aromatic one-pot meal central to Emirati family gatherings.
🥖LuqaimatCrispy-outside, soft-inside fried dough balls drizzled with date syrup (dibs) and sprinkled with sesame seeds — one of Dubai’s most beloved street foods and desserts. During Ramadan, vendors set up carts along heritage streets offering freshly cooked luqaimat to break the fast. The recipe has been made in the Gulf for centuries and appears in medieval Arabic cookbooks.
🥣ShawarmaAlthough not exclusively Emirati, shawarma is arguably Dubai’s most-eaten street food, available at every hour from thousands of small restaurants across the city. Dubai’s version typically uses marinated chicken or lamb shaved from a vertical rotisserie, served in flatbread with garlic sauce (toum), pickled turnip and chilli. The Al Mallah restaurant in Satwa has been serving celebrated chicken shawarmas since 1979.
🥦Camel Milk ProductsCamel milk has been a staple of Bedouin life for millennia and has found a premium market in modern Dubai. Al Nassma, founded in 2008, produces award-winning camel milk chocolate sold globally. Camel milk ice cream, laban (fermented milk drink) and cheeses are available in traditional markets, high-end restaurants and speciality stores. Camel milk is said to be lower in fat and higher in iron than cow’s milk.
Karak ChaiDubai’s ubiquitous spiced milk tea, brought by South Asian workers and now fully adopted as the city’s communal beverage. Strong black tea is brewed with evaporated milk, sugar, cardamom and sometimes saffron or ginger into a rich, frothy drink served in small disposable cups. Karak shops, often tiny hole-in-the-wall counters, are found on every block of the old city and serve labourers, office workers and tourists alike.
09

Practical Travel Information

💧 Tap waterTechnically safe but not widely recommended for drinking due to desalinated taste. Bottled water is cheap, ubiquitous and preferred by most residents and visitors. The tap water supply comes from desalination plants on the Persian Gulf; while it meets WHO standards after treatment, the taste and high mineral content deter regular consumption.
🚌 Public transportThe Dubai Metro has two lines (Red Line 52 km, Green Line 22.5 km), air-conditioned and fully automated. The Dubai Tram connects Al Sufouh and JBR. RTA buses, water buses and the Creek abra network supplement the system. Nol cards (contactless transit cards) work across all modes. Taxis and Uber/Careem are abundant and inexpensive by international standards.
⚡ Power outletsType G (three rectangular pins, British standard) — 220–240V / 50 Hz. US, European and Australian visitors need Type G adaptor plugs. Most major hotels supply universal adaptor sockets; airports and malls typically provide USB charging points widely.
🗣️ LanguageArabic is the official language, but English is the dominant language of business, tourism and daily commerce. Virtually all signage is bilingual. Hindi, Urdu, Tagalog and Malay are widely spoken in communities making up the majority expatriate workforce. A visitor who speaks only English will encounter no language barriers in hotels, malls, tourist sites or taxis.
💳 PaymentsDubai is increasingly cashless. Contactless payments (Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Samsung Pay) are accepted in virtually all hotels, restaurants, taxis and shops. Cash (AED) is still useful for souks, smaller cafes and tipping. ATMs are plentiful throughout the city. There are no foreign exchange restrictions; the AED is pegged to the USD at 3.6725 AED = 1 USD.
💰 TippingNo tipping obligation, but leaving 10–15% is appreciated in restaurants where service is not included. Taxi drivers do not expect tips; rounding up to the nearest dirham is the norm. Hotel porters and housekeeping staff are typically tipped 5–10 AED per service.
🛂 Dress codeDress modestly in souks, malls and public areas (covered shoulders and knees are expected). Beach and resort attire is entirely appropriate at beaches and pools. Alcohol is permitted in licensed venues (hotels, restaurants, bars) but not in public spaces or unlicensed establishments. Ramadan brings specific etiquette requirements around eating and drinking in public during daylight hours.
10

Frequently Asked Questions – Dubai Time Zone & GST

Dubai uses GST (Gulf Standard Time, UTC+4) permanently throughout the year. The UAE does not observe Daylight Saving Time, so the offset never changes. The IANA timezone identifier is Asia/Dubai. The same offset applies to Abu Dhabi, Sharjah and all other UAE emirates, as the country operates on a single unified time zone.
No. The United Arab Emirates has never observed Daylight Saving Time since its founding in 1971, and there are no plans to introduce it. Dubai is permanently on GST (UTC+4) on every day of the year. Most other GCC states — Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain — similarly do not observe DST, making the Gulf region one of the most consistent clock zones in the world.
Dubai is 4 hours ahead of London during UK winter (GMT, UTC+0). When the UK switches to BST (British Summer Time, UTC+1) in late March, Dubai becomes 3 hours ahead. This difference reverts to 4 hours when the UK returns to GMT at the end of October. Dubai’s clocks never move; only the UK’s DST schedule changes the gap. To convert: London 09:00 GMT = Dubai 13:00 GST; London 09:00 BST = Dubai 12:00 GST.
Dubai is 9 hours ahead of New York during US winter (EST, UTC−5). When New York switches to EDT (UTC−4) in mid-March, Dubai is 8 hours ahead. This difference reverts to 9 hours when the US returns to EST at the start of November. There is a brief window each spring where the US and Europe are on different DST schedules, but the Dubai–New York difference only ever takes two values: 8 or 9 hours.
Dubai is always 1 hour and 30 minutes behind Mumbai (and all of India, which uses IST, UTC+5:30). The difference arises because India is on UTC+5:30 while Dubai is on UTC+4 — a gap of 90 minutes. Neither the UAE nor India observes Daylight Saving Time, so this difference of −1:30 (Mumbai is 1 hour and 30 minutes ahead) is constant throughout the year, every day. This is a permanent, invariable relationship: Dubai 09:00 GST = Mumbai 10:30 IST.
Tokyo is always 5 hours ahead of Dubai (JST UTC+9 vs GST UTC+4). Neither Japan nor the UAE observes Daylight Saving Time, so this 5-hour difference is constant throughout the year. Dubai 09:00 GST = Tokyo 14:00 JST. This permanent relationship makes scheduling between the two cities exceptionally straightforward.
Dubai is served by two airports. Dubai International (DXB), just 4 km east of the city centre, is consistently ranked the world’s busiest airport by international passenger traffic and is the home hub of Emirates airline. It is served by the Dubai Metro Red Line (approximately 20 minutes to Union station). Al Maktoum International (DWC) at Dubai South, 37 km south-west, currently handles cargo and lower-cost carriers but is undergoing massive expansion to eventually become the world’s largest airport. Because the UAE does not observe DST, flight schedules to/from Dubai are consistent throughout the year.