Last updated: 2026-06-19
The UAE's Mobile Networks — What Travelers Need to Know
The United Arab Emirates has just two mobile network operators: e& (formerly Etisalat) and du. Both run dense, modern 4G/5G networks, and the UAE has some of the fastest mobile data in the world — median download speeds routinely top 300 Mbps, with 5G peaks well past 700 Mbps in central Dubai and Abu Dhabi. For a traveler, the practical takeaway is that connectivity quality is rarely the problem in the Emirates. Coverage is excellent in every city, mall, hotel, metro, and tourist district.
The one thing to plan around isn't signal — it's the network-level block on VoIP calling. WhatsApp and FaceTime messaging works normally; their voice and video calling is restricted on UAE networks. We cover that in detail below, because it's the single most common surprise for first-time visitors.
The Two Networks Compared
| e& (Etisalat) | du | |
|---|---|---|
| Operator | Emirates Telecommunications Group | Emirates Integrated Telecom |
| Approx. subscribers | ~14 million | ~9 million |
| 4G population coverage | ~99% | ~99% |
| 5G | Nationwide across all seven emirates | Widely available in cities and along major roads |
| Typical city download | 150–400 Mbps (5G higher) | 120–350 Mbps (5G higher) |
| Strengths | Broadest reach into rural/desert and remote east coast | Strong, dense urban coverage; competitive city speeds |
| Used by travel eSIMs? | Yes | Yes |
Sources: Ookla Speedtest Global Index, OpenSignal UAE reports, TDRA data, carrier disclosures (2025–2026). Carriers may change assignments without notice.
e& (Etisalat) — Broadest Reach
e& is the older, larger operator and was a state monopoly until du launched in 2007. It has the most extensive footprint into rural areas, the desert interior, and the mountainous east coast around Fujairah. If your trip pushes beyond the main cities — a desert camp, a drive into the Hajar Mountains, or the long road south toward Liwa — e& is the network most likely to keep a bar of signal.
Best for: Desert excursions, the east coast, anywhere outside the Dubai–Abu Dhabi–Sharjah core.
du — Strong in the Cities
du competes hard in the urban core and posts city speeds neck-and-neck with e&. Coverage across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Sharjah is dense and fast. It thins out faster than e& once you leave populated areas, but the vast majority of visitors never leave the zones where du is excellent.
Best for: City-focused trips that stay within Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Sharjah.
Does it matter which one your eSIM uses?
For most travelers, no. Both networks blanket the cities and tourist areas with fast 5G/4G, so your experience in Dubai Marina, on the Palm, at Yas Island, or in the Abu Dhabi museums will be excellent on either. The choice only starts to matter on deep-desert or remote-mountain trips, where e&'s wider footprint can be the difference between a weak signal and no signal.
Which Network Does Each eSIM Provider Use in the UAE?
| Provider | Network(s) in the UAE | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| eSIM-Now | e& (Etisalat), du | Connects to the local carriers for broad nationwide coverage |
| Airalo | du / e& | Varies by plan |
| Holafly | e& (Etisalat) | Single carrier |
| Saily | du | Not always publicly confirmed |
| Nomad | e& / du | Varies |
Network assignments based on provider disclosures and user testing as of 2026. Carriers may change without notice.
Because the UAE has only two operators and both are strong, the provider you choose matters far less here than the timing of when you set it up. The far more important decision is installing your eSIM before you fly — see Set up before you arrive below.
Coverage by Area
The Cities — All Excellent
| Area | 5G/4G | Speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dubai | 5G excellent | 100–700+ Mbps | Best 5G density in the country. Strong even in the Metro and the deeper malls |
| Abu Dhabi | 5G excellent | 100–500 Mbps | Corniche, Saadiyat, Yas Island all well covered |
| Sharjah | 5G excellent | 80–400 Mbps | Dense urban coverage; flows continuously from Dubai |
| Ajman | 5G/4G very good | 50–300 Mbps | |
| Ras Al Khaimah | 5G/4G very good | 50–250 Mbps | Strong in town; thins toward Jebel Jais |
In the urban core, both carriers work superbly and 5G is the default rather than a luxury. Your eSIM provider choice will not noticeably affect your experience here.
Tourist Spots & Day Trips
| Area | Coverage | Carrier Matters? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Palm Jumeirah / Dubai Marina / JBR | Excellent | No | Dense 5G throughout |
| Burj Khalifa / Downtown / Dubai Mall | Excellent | No | High demand but well provisioned |
| Yas Island / Ferrari World / Saadiyat | Excellent | No | Abu Dhabi's leisure hub is fully covered |
| Hatta (mountain enclave) | Good | Slightly | Solid in Hatta town and the dam; weaker on remote trails. e& edges it |
| Jebel Jais (RAK mountain road) | Good to Moderate | Yes | Signal along the main road; gaps on switchbacks and viewpoints |
| East coast (Fujairah, Khor Fakkan) | Very Good | Slightly | Good in towns; e& holds up better in the Hajar Mountains between them |
The Desert — Plan Around It
| Area | Coverage | Recommended Carrier | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desert safari zones (near Dubai/Abu Dhabi) | Good | e& | Reliable on access roads and at established camps |
| Liwa Oasis & Rub' al Khali (Empty Quarter) edge | Variable | e& | Signal near the highway and resorts; patchy once you're off-track in the dunes |
| Al Ain & the desert interior | Very Good | Either | Al Ain is a full city; the surrounding desert thins out |
| Remote dune-bashing routes | Variable to None | e& | Long stretches without signal are normal off the main tracks |
If your trip includes a desert camp, dune-bashing, or the drive to Liwa: prefer an eSIM that connects to e&, and download offline maps before you leave the city. Coverage near the roads and resorts is usually fine; it's the off-track stretches in the dunes where signal disappears.
Is 5G Worth It for Travelers in the UAE?
Unlike many countries where 5G is still aspirational, the UAE has genuinely useful, widely deployed 5G:
- Both carriers offer 5G across all major emirates, not just a few city blocks
- City download speeds frequently exceed 300 Mbps, with peaks past 700 Mbps
- Travel eSIMs connect to 5G where the plan and your device support it, falling back to 4G otherwise
That said, 4G in the UAE is already faster than most travelers will ever need — comfortably enough for HD video calls (where calling works), 4K streaming, live navigation, and uploading photos. You will not be limited by network speed in the Emirates. The real constraint is the VoIP-calling restriction, not bandwidth.
The VoIP Calling Block — What to Expect
This is the part that catches almost every first-time visitor off guard, and it has nothing to do with coverage. The UAE's telecom regulator, the TDRA, restricts consumer "over-the-top" VoIP calling — the internet-based voice and video calls that bypass the traditional phone network. Both e& and du enforce this at the network level, so on a regular UAE SIM you can text on WhatsApp but not make WhatsApp or FaceTime calls. The same applies to Skype and Facebook Messenger calling.
A few specifics:
- Messaging is untouched. WhatsApp texts, images, documents, and voice notes send normally. It's only the live call function that's affected.
- Data and browsing work normally. Maps, ride-hailing, email, streaming, and the web are all unaffected.
- On a travel eSIM, calling usually works. Because your eSIM's data is typically routed internationally before it reaches the internet, WhatsApp and FaceTime calls often go through where a local SIM's would be blocked. This is described typical behavior, not something we provision — it isn't guaranteed, it varies by app and network, and the UAE can change how the restriction is enforced at any time. Many travelers run a reputable VPN over their eSIM data as a fallback for calling home.
For the full explanation — which apps to use, how the routing works, and the VPN fallback — see our guide to WhatsApp and FaceTime calling in the UAE.
Set Up Before You Arrive (Buying From Inside the UAE Is Unreliable)
The same restrictions that affect VoIP calling can also make some foreign eSIM provider websites and apps slow, partially loaded, or unreachable on UAE networks — and downloading a fresh eSIM profile sometimes fails over a restricted or VPN-routed connection. The fix is simple and applies no matter which provider you use: buy and install your eSIM before you fly, while you're still on familiar home WiFi.
An eSIM profile that's already on your phone connects to e& or du automatically the moment you land — no app store, no SIM kiosk, no ID registration, no queue at DXB or AUH arrivals. Scan the QR code at home, and you're set for the whole trip. Because topping up from inside the country can be unreliable, it's worth picking a slightly larger plan up front rather than counting on a refill later.
Check Official Coverage Maps
- e& (Etisalat) — etisalat.ae (English available)
- du — du.ae (English available)
- GSMA Coverage Map — gsma.com/coverage (English, both carriers)
Get Connected Before You Land
Coverage is rarely the challenge in the UAE — the network is world-class. The thing to get right is setting up before you arrive, so your phone connects to e& or du the instant you land and your calling apps are ready to go. eSIM-Now connects to the local UAE carriers with no passport registration and no airport queue, and instant QR delivery means you can install at home in a couple of minutes.
For full plans, prices, and data recommendations, see our Best eSIM for the United Arab Emirates guide, or browse UAE plans directly.
eSIM-Now.com
eSIM-Now.com