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25 February 20265 Min. Lesezeit

Tipping in UAE: How Much, When & Who

Not sure how much to tip in the UAE? This practical guide covers restaurants, taxis, hotels and more for first-time visitors.

UAE flag

Tipping in the UAE is appreciated but never obligatory — you won't cause offence by not tipping, but a little extra goes a long way for the many migrant workers who make up the service industry. Service charges sometimes appear on bills, so it's worth knowing when you're already covered and when a cash tip would be genuinely welcomed. This guide gives you the straightforward numbers so you can tip with confidence across Dubai, Abu Dhabi and beyond.

Tipping at a Glance

Restaurants10–15% — Check bill for included service charge
TaxisRound up — Use Careem or Uber for standard pricing
Hotel PortersAED 5–20 per bag — Hand cash directly to the porter
BarsAED 5–10 per round — Cash tips appreciated; card tips rare
Tour GuidesAED 20–50 per person — More for full-day or private tours
Food DeliveryAED 5–10 — Cash at the door is standard

Restaurants & Cafés

A tip of 10–15% is the norm for good service at sit-down restaurants across the UAE. Before you leave anything extra, check your bill carefully — many hotels, upscale restaurants and resort dining venues automatically add a service charge of 10%, sometimes listed alongside municipality fees and VAT. If that charge is already there, you're covered, though leaving a small additional cash tip for your server is always a kind gesture.

  • Tip 10–15% for attentive service at restaurants and cafés
  • Check the bill for a service charge before adding more
  • If a service charge is included, a small cash tip of AED 10–20 to your server directly is still appreciated
  • At casual eateries and food courts, rounding up or leaving loose change is perfectly appropriate
  • Tips left on card machines don't always reach the server — cash is more reliable

Taxis & Rideshare

Dubai and Abu Dhabi taxis run on meters, and the standard practice is simply to round up the fare — if the meter reads AED 23, handing over AED 25 is plenty. Drivers won't expect more than that. If you're using Careem or Uber, fares are fixed upfront and tipping through the app is optional but appreciated for good service. There's no pressure either way, and drivers won't react negatively if you skip it. For airport transfers or if a driver helps with heavy luggage, rounding up more generously — or adding AED 5–10 in cash — is a thoughtful touch.

Hotels, Tours & Other Services

  • Hotel porters: AED 5–20 per bag is standard — tip in cash when they deliver your luggage
  • Housekeeping: AED 10–20 per night, left in an envelope or on the pillow with a note
  • Tour guides: AED 20–50 per person for a half-day tour; AED 50–100 per person for a full day or private experience
  • Spa and salon staff: 10–15% of the treatment cost if a service charge isn't already included
  • Valet parking attendants: AED 5–10 when your car is returned
  • Concierge staff who secure hard-to-get reservations or go beyond basic help: AED 20–50 is appropriate

How to Tip in the UAE

Cash is king when it comes to tipping in the UAE. UAE dirhams (AED) are the currency to use — don't worry about having small notes for everything, but keeping a few AED 5, AED 10 and AED 20 notes handy makes tipping seamless. Hand cash tips directly to the person you want to thank rather than leaving it on the table, as this ensures it reaches them. Some point-of-sale terminals now prompt for a tip when you pay by card, and this is fine to use at restaurants, though the distribution to staff can vary. For hotel staff and delivery drivers, cash at the moment of service is always the clearest and most direct way to show appreciation.

💡

Many restaurants in UAE luxury hotels list three separate line items — VAT (5%), a municipality fee, and a service charge — which together can add 20–25% on top of your base bill. Always add these up before deciding whether to tip further. You may already be paying more than you realise.

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