Dubai Itinerary 2026
Dubai does everything at scale — tallest building, largest mall, longest artificial beach. This 5-day itinerary balances the architectural spectacle with the Dubai that existed before the skyscrapers: the historic creek, Deira spice souks, and the emerging art district of Al Quoz.
Dubai Travel Guides
Day-by-Day Dubai Itinerary
Old Dubai: Creek + Souks
Al Fahidi Historic District (Bastakiya)
Start in the oldest preserved neighbourhood in Dubai — wind-tower architecture, the Dubai Museum (AED 3), and coffee houses. Best visited in the morning before it gets hot.
Gold Souk + Spice Souk (Deira)
Take an abra (water taxi, AED 1) across the Creek to Deira. Explore the covered Gold Souk (10 tonnes of gold on display) and the aromatic Spice Souk. Bargaining is expected.
Dubai Frame + dinner
The Dubai Frame (AED 50) bridges old and new Dubai with a glass-floored sky bridge. Dinner at one of the waterfront restaurants along the Dubai Creek promenade.
Tip: Visit the Gold Souk in the evening (4pm–10pm) when it's busiest but cooler. The best photos are from the Deira side looking across the Creek toward Al Fahidi.
Burj Khalifa + Downtown
Burj Khalifa (At the Top)
Book Level 124 or 125 observatory (AED 149–399). The early morning slot (8:30am) is the best value — still quiet and beautiful light before the heat builds.
Dubai Mall + Dubai Aquarium
The world's largest mall by total area. The Dubai Aquarium (AED 150 for tunnel walk) is genuinely impressive. The nearby Dubai Fountain show runs at 6pm and 6:30pm (free to watch from outside).
Burj Khalifa light show + dinner
The Dubai Fountain show at sunset is spectacular from the Burj Lake. Dinner at one of the waterfront restaurants — At.mosphere on the 122nd floor if budget allows (from AED 600/person).
Jumeirah Beach + Palm
Jumeirah Beach
Dubai's main public beach is well maintained and free. Jumeriah Beach Park (AED 5) offers more shade and facilities. Sunrise here with views of the Burj Al Arab is spectacular.
Palm Jumeirah + Atlantis
Take the Palm Monorail (AED 15 return) or Dubai Tram to the Palm. The Atlantis Hotel viewpoint and public Aquaventure Beach (non-guests: AED 395) or just walk the boardwalk for free.
Dubai Marina + JBR Walk
Dubai Marina's illuminated skyscrapers at night are among the world's most spectacular urban views. The JBR Walk has dozens of restaurants from fast food to fine dining.
Tip: Public beaches are free and well-patrolled. The stretch between The Walk at JBR and Kite Beach is particularly popular with residents and far less crowded than tourist-facing beaches.
Desert Safari
Breakfast + leisure
Most desert safaris start in the afternoon. Use the morning for remaining attractions or the Dubai Museum.
Evening Desert Safari (3pm departure)
Book through your hotel or a reputable operator (AED 200–350). Includes dune bashing, sandboarding, camel riding, and a traditional Bedouin camp dinner under the stars.
Bedouin camp dinner
Henna painting, belly dancing performance, tanoura dance, and a BBQ buffet dinner in the desert. Return to hotel by 10pm.
Tip: The desert safaris all cover similar ground — the difference is the camp quality and group size. Private sunset safaris (AED 600–1,000 for 2) are far more atmospheric than group tours.
Al Quoz Art District + Dubai Frame
Alserkal Avenue (Al Quoz)
Dubai's creative district: 70+ galleries, studios, and independent cafes in an industrial warehouse complex. Best on Thursday or Friday evenings but also open daytime.
Dubai Design District (d3)
The luxury fashion and design hub hosts free art installations and has excellent coffee shops and restaurants. Good for a final afternoon of browsing and people watching.
Airport transfer
Dubai airport (DXB) is connected by metro (Red Line, ~AED 12–14 from city centre, 30–45 min). Terminal 3 is the main Emirates terminal.
Practical Information
November–March (winter): 20–28°C — perfect weather. April and October are shoulder season (getting warm/cooling). June–September is extremely hot (40°C+) — mainly indoors activities only.
Dubai Metro (Red + Green Lines) covers the main tourist corridor. Use Careem (Uber equivalent) for everywhere else. Taxis are metered and affordable (AED 12 flag fall).
AED 400–800/day ($110–220) mid-range. Budget is difficult — even cheap hotels are AED 200–350/night. Eating at food courts and shwarma spots keeps food costs to AED 30–80/day.
Buy a Nol Card at any metro station (AED 25 refundable deposit) for metro, bus, and tram travel. Much faster than buying single tickets at the gate.
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Dubai Itinerary: FAQs
How many days do you need in Dubai?
4–5 days covers the main highlights. 3 days is possible if you focus. Dubai's efficient transport and proximity of attractions mean you cover a lot quickly.
Is alcohol available in Dubai?
Alcohol is served in licensed hotels, restaurants, and bars — not on the street or in public. You can drink freely in hotel venues. There is no prohibition for tourists, but public intoxication is illegal.
What should I wear in Dubai?
Smart casual is fine most places. Cover shoulders and knees in shopping malls (though dress codes are rarely enforced for tourists). Modest dress required at the Gold Souk, Grand Mosque (free entry with guided tour), and heritage areas.
Is Dubai expensive?
Dubai ranges from budget (cheap food courts, free beaches, metro) to ultra-luxury. A comfortable mid-range trip costs $150–250/day. Book hotels early — prices spike 30–50% during peak winter months.