Travel scam UAE
Booking a Summer Getaway? Dubai Police and UAE Banks Just Issued the Same Warning
The ad looks perfect. Return flights to Istanbul, a four-star hotel, half the price you saw last week. The agent on WhatsApp is friendly and quick. He just needs the transfer today, because the offer expires tonight.
That exact script is why two of the UAE’s biggest institutions spoke up in the same week. Dubai Police renewed its Beware Of Fraud campaign with a warning about fake travel and tourism offers. A day later, the UAE Banks Federation urged customers to slow down before paying for holiday bookings. Both said the same thing. Summer is when travel scammers do their best business.
School holidays have started. Millions of residents are hunting for cheap fares. Robius pulled both warnings apart so you know what to watch for, and what to do if you have already paid.
| THE ROBIUS VERDICT: If a travel deal pressures you to pay right now, it is not a deal. It is bait. Every tactic in these scams, from the below-market price to the countdown clock, is designed to make you transfer money before you think. Legitimate agencies do not need urgency. Book only through licensed agencies or official airline and hotel sites, pay by card rather than bank transfer, and treat any request to wire money to a personal account as a full stop. |
Why Scammers Love UAE Summers
The timing is not random. Dubai Police says fraudsters become especially active during the summer travel season, when residents rush to lock in holiday packages, hotel stays, and airline tickets before prices climb. Demand is high. Patience is low. That is the perfect hunting ground.
The methods are familiar but sharper than before. Cloned booking websites that differ from the real one by a single letter. Fake travel agency profiles on Instagram and TikTok running polished ads. Messaging app agents posing as airline sales teams with exclusive discounts. Victims often discover the truth at the airport, when the booking reference does not exist. One Dubai resident recently lost AED 8,000 on a chalet rental that was never real.
The Red Flags Both Warnings Agree On
Read the Dubai Police advice and the UAE Banks Federation advice side by side and the overlap is striking. The same tricks appear in both. Here is what the scam looks like next to what a safe booking looks like.
| What the scam looks like | What safe booking looks like |
|---|---|
| Prices well below market rate on flights or hotels | Prices roughly in line with airline and hotel official sites |
| Pressure to pay immediately or lose the offer | Time to verify the agency and compare before paying |
| Bank transfer to a personal or unfamiliar account | Card payment with fraud protection on an official platform |
| Links arriving by DM, random email, or social media ads | You typed the official URL or used the official app yourself |
| Requests for Emirates ID, passport copies, or OTP codes | No legitimate agent ever asks for your OTP. Ever. |
How to Report a Travel Scam in Dubai
Speed matters. If you have paid a suspicious agent or shared card details, save everything first. Screenshots of the chat, payment receipts, the website address, the account you paid. Then report it through the eCrime platform at eCrime.ae or via the Dubai Police website and app. You log in with UAE PASS, pick the travel category, enter your details, and upload your evidence. For non-emergency help you can also call 901.
Call your bank at the same time. The earlier a fraudulent transfer is flagged, the better the chance of freezing it. Banks can act fast. They cannot act on transfers you report a week later.
What About Abu Dhabi and the Other Emirates?
Abu Dhabi Police runs its own channel for exactly this. The Aman service takes reports by phone on 8002626, by SMS on 2828, and by email. Abu Dhabi authorities have also warned this year about fake accounts posing as legitimate businesses, selling everything from event tickets to visa services. Different emirate, same playbook.
The Two-Minute Check Before You Pay
Search the agency name plus the word scam. Check the website address letter by letter. Confirm the agency holds a UAE trade license. Compare the price against the airline’s own site. Pay by card, never by transfer to an individual. Five checks. Two minutes. That is the entire cost of not spending your holiday budget on a booking that does not exist.
A deal that cannot survive a two-minute check was never a deal.
Sources
- Khaleej Times: Dubai Police shares six ways to spot fake travel offers this summer — https://www.khaleejtimes.com/uae/summer-holiday-dubai-police-6-ways-spot-fake-travel-offers
- Gulf News: UAE Banks Federation warns travellers of fake holiday deals and payment scams — https://gulfnews.com/uae/crime/planning-a-holiday-uae-banks-urge-travellers-to-beware-of-fake-holiday-deals-and-payment-scams-1.500594441
- Emirates 24|7: How to report travel and tourism scams through the eCrime platform — https://www.emirates247.com/uae-guide/how-to-avoid-online-travel-scams-dubai-police-shares-tips-for-safe-holiday-bookings/3201
- Gulf News: Abu Dhabi Police and Customs warning on fake business accounts and the Aman service — https://gulfnews.com/uae/crime/think-its-real-abu-dhabi-warns-of-fake-accounts-stealing-your-money-1.500518882
Robius.news — Dubai, UAE — 2026 | Built to be first. Built to be trusted.





