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How to Compare UAE Credit Cards (Salary, Fees, Lounge)

โœฆ By BestCreditCards.cc Editorial Team ยท Updated June 2026 ยท 5 min read ยท Why trust us
How to Compare UAE Credit Cards (Salary, Fees, Lounge)

Here's the short answer: in the UAE, check the cards in this order, salary eligibility, then the real annual fee (and whether spend waives it), then how many lounge visits you actually get, and only then the reward rate. Most people sort by cashback or air miles first and then get rejected on the minimum-salary line, or they qualify for a card whose AED 1,500 fee quietly eats the rewards they were chasing. Salary gate first. Fee math second. Perks last.

That ordering isn't arbitrary. A UAE bank can decline you in seconds if your monthly salary is below the card's threshold, so there's no point comparing reward rates on a card you can't get. And once you can get it, the annual fee and the foreign-currency markup decide far more of your real return than the headline "up to 10% cashback" line. Below is the method we use on our side-by-side tool, with a worked example in dirhams.

Step 1: The salary gate, this filters you before anything else

UAE issuers set a minimum monthly salary for each card, and it's a hard cut. As of 2026, entry cashback cards typically ask for somewhere around AED 5,000 a month, mid-tier travel cards land around AED 8,000 to AED 15,000, and the genuine premium tier (the metal cards with unlimited lounge) often wants AED 25,000+ or a private-banking relationship. Self-employed applicants are usually assessed on bank statements or a salary-equivalent figure instead.

Two edge cases that trip people up. First, some banks waive the salary requirement if you park a fixed deposit as security, that's a secured card, and the limit is tied to your deposit rather than your income. Second, if your salary isn't transferred to that same bank, a few issuers raise the threshold or ask for a higher minimum. Confirm the exact figure and whether salary transfer is required on the issuer's official site before you apply, because these numbers move.

Step 2: The annual fee, and whether spend actually waives it

Lots of UAE cards advertise "first year free" and then charge from year two. As of 2026 the renewal fee on a mid-tier card runs roughly AED 700 to AED 1,500, and premium cards can sit well above AED 3,000. Many issuers waive the renewal fee if you spend over a threshold the prior year, often somewhere around AED 50,000 to AED 100,000. That waiver is great if you'll hit it and a silent annual cost if you won't.

One thing that's easy to miss, supplementary cards for family members sometimes carry their own fee even when the primary is free. So does the optional credit-shield insurance some banks pre-tick at signup. Read the schedule of charges, not the marketing tile.

Step 3: Lounge access, count the visits, ignore the word "complimentary"

Nearly every travel card in the UAE mentions lounge access. What matters is how many free visits and how the counter resets. A card offering 2 visits per quarter gives you 8 a year; one offering "complimentary access" with a fair-usage cap of 2 per year gives you 2. Same word, four times the value.

Most cards route international lounge access through a Priority Pass or LoungeKey membership. The membership being free doesn't mean every visit is free, after your included quota you can pay around US$32 per entry, and guests are almost always charged separately. If you fly out of Dubai or Abu Dhabi a lot, also check whether the card covers the specific marhaba or premium lounges you'd actually use, not just the network ones.

Step 4: Foreign-currency markup, the silent fee for a city of expats

In a country where most people send money home or shop on overseas sites, the foreign-currency (FX) markup matters more than the reward rate. The UAE standard is around 2.99% as of 2026 on non-AED transactions, and that's charged on the full amount, including international online purchases billed in USD. A few cards market a lower markup. Don't let a 3% cashback rate distract you from a 2.99% FX fee, they roughly cancel out on overseas spend.

Worked example: cashback card vs. premium travel card on an AED 120,000 year

Say you spend AED 120,000 a year, of which AED 30,000 is in foreign currency. Card A needs AED 5,000 salary, no annual fee, 1.5% flat cashback, 2.99% FX markup, no lounge. Card B needs AED 15,000 salary, AED 1,500 renewal fee (waived above AED 150,000 spend, so here you pay it), 2.5% on travel and 1% elsewhere, 2.99% FX, plus 6 lounge visits worth roughly AED 150 each to you.

Line itemCard A (no-fee cashback)Card B (premium travel)
Annual fee paidAED 0- AED 1,500
Rewards on AED 90,000 localAED 1,350 (1.5%)AED 900 (1%)
Rewards on AED 30,000 foreignAED 450 (1.5%)AED 750 (2.5% travel)
FX markup on AED 30,000- AED 897 (2.99%)- AED 897 (2.99%)
Lounge value usedAED 0AED 900 (6 x 150)
Net value+ AED 903+ AED 153

At this spend, the no-fee cashback card wins by about AED 750, because Card B's annual fee plus its narrower bonus category outweigh the lounge value, unless you'd really use all six visits and value them above AED 150 each. Bump foreign spend to AED 60,000 and use eight lounge visits, and Card B pulls ahead. The takeaway isn't that one card is better. Your numbers decide it, which is what a comparison tool is for.

Who should skip the premium card

If you spend under roughly AED 60,000 a year, rarely fly, and wouldn't use more than a couple of lounge visits, skip the fee-bearing premium tier. You'll either pay a renewal fee or chase a spend threshold to dodge it, for perks you barely touch, and a no-fee cashback card is the cleaner hold. The same goes if you ever carry a balance, UAE card APRs commonly run around 36% to 43% annualised as of 2026, and that interest swamps any reward. Clear the balance first; treat rewards as a tiebreaker, not a plan. And if your salary is below a card's stated minimum, don't apply hoping for an exception, a hard decline can ding your credit profile with Al Etihad Credit Bureau.

To build a shortlist, browse the UAE cards hub or filter by travel cards, then drop two or three into the comparison view. Our methodology shows how we line up salary thresholds, fees, lounge caps, and FX side by side. If you're weighing rewards types, cash back vs points vs miles is a useful companion read.

Cards mentioned in this guide

โœˆ Lounge Access Availableโ˜… Lounge access under $400/yr

Capital One Venture X Rewards

Capital One

The premium card to pick if you want lounge access without the Platinum's $695 sting; atโ€ฆ

$395/yr Details
Apply on official site โ†—
โœˆ Lounge Access Availableโ˜… Most lounge access of any card

The Platinum Card from American Express

American Express

Buy this for the lounge network and credits, not the rewards rate, since outside travel iโ€ฆ

$695/yr Details
Apply on official site โ†—

Frequently asked questions

What's the minimum salary to get a credit card in the UAE?+

It depends on the card. As of 2026, entry-level cashback cards typically ask for around AED 5,000 a month, mid-tier travel cards roughly AED 8,000 to AED 15,000, and premium metal cards often AED 25,000 or more. Some banks raise the threshold if your salary isn't transferred to them, and a few waive it entirely for a secured card backed by a fixed deposit. Confirm the exact figure on the issuer's official site, since it changes.

Do UAE credit cards charge a foreign-currency fee?+

Yes. The common markup is around 2.99% on non-AED transactions as of 2026, charged on the full amount, including international online purchases billed in another currency. A handful of cards advertise a lower markup, which is usually the main reason to pick them for overseas or remittance-heavy spending. The fee applies regardless of any rewards you earn, so check the current figure before relying on it.

Is the annual fee on a UAE credit card always charged?+

Not always. Many cards are first-year-free and then charge a renewal fee from year two, often around AED 700 to AED 1,500 for mid-tier cards as of 2026. Banks frequently waive that fee if you spend above a threshold the prior year, commonly somewhere near AED 50,000 to AED 100,000. Supplementary cards and optional credit-shield insurance can carry their own charges, so read the schedule of charges in full.

How many free lounge visits do UAE travel cards give?+

It varies widely, and the reset period is what counts. A card offering 2 visits per quarter gives you 8 a year, while "complimentary access" capped at 2 per year gives you only 2. Most cards route international access through Priority Pass or LoungeKey, where visits beyond your quota can cost about US$32 each and guests are usually charged separately. Check whether the specific lounges you'd use in Dubai or Abu Dhabi are actually covered.

Should I pick a cashback or a travel card in the UAE?+

It comes down to how much you spend in foreign currency and whether you'll genuinely use lounges. If you rarely fly and spend modestly, a no-fee cashback card usually beats a fee-bearing travel card once you subtract the annual fee and FX markup. If you spend heavily abroad and use lounges often, a travel card can more than cover its fee. Run your real dirham numbers through a comparison tool rather than trusting the headline rate.

โœฆ

BestCreditCards.cc Editorial Team

Credit cards research desk ยท Independent comparison desk ยท not a bank or lender

Our editorial team researches credit cards across the US, India, Brazil, Germany and other markets โ€” reading issuer terms, schedules of fees and benefit guides directly from the source, then cross-checking against the official application pages before anything is published. We update cards and guides regularly as offers change.

How we research & rate cards โ†’

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Stop guessing. Put the cards side by side.

Line up fees, rewards, intro APR and lounge perks in one table โ€” then apply on the issuer's official site with your eyes open.