Thousands of tourists and expats are stranded across the UAE after Iran's February 28 missile strikes triggered widespread airspace closures across the Middle East. With hundreds of flights cancelled and visa expiry dates passing, governments worldwide are scrambling to help their citizens get home โ or stay legally until they can.
Here's everything you need to know if you're affected.
What happened?
On February 28, 2026, Iran launched missile strikes that forced the closure of airspace across large parts of the Middle East. Airlines including Air India, Emirates, and flydubai suspended or rerouted flights, leaving thousands of passengers stranded in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and other Gulf cities.
If you're stranded right now: All tourist, visit, and transit visas expiring between February 28 and March 31, 2026 are automatically extended by 30 days. You do not need to apply โ it's automatic. Overstay fines are waived.
UAE's emergency visa measures
The UAE's General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs (GDRFA) and the Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Ports Security have activated emergency immigration measures:
Automatic 30-day extension: All tourist, visit, and transit visas expiring between Feb 28 โ Mar 31, 2026 get a free 30-day grace period. No application needed.
Further extensions available: If you can show proof of cancelled flights or no alternative routing, you can apply โ free of charge โ for an additional 30-day extension or a one-year humanitarian stay permit.
Overstay fines suspended: The normal AED 100/day () overstay fine is suspended while applications are processed. GDRFA officers have been instructed to consider full or partial fine waivers where overstays are directly linked to flight cancellations.
Expats with expired visas can return: Residents whose visas expired on or after February 28 while they were outside the UAE can now return without penalties, provided they enter before March 31, 2026.
Which countries are helping?
A global coalition is coordinating repatriation and consular support:
India: Thousands of Indian nationals are stranded. Air India extended flight suspensions. Repatriation charter flights are running on SpiceJet to Delhi, Mumbai, and Kochi. The Indian embassy in Abu Dhabi has set up 24/7 helplines.
United Kingdom: The UK Foreign Office has issued updated travel advisories and is coordinating repatriation flights. Consular support is available in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
Germany: Coordinating with UAE authorities on emergency visa extensions and repatriation flights for German nationals.
Canada: Canadian consular services active in Dubai. Repatriation coordination ongoing.
Italy: Just joined the international effort as of March 18, providing consular support and coordinating with Italian nationals in the region.
China: Working with UAE authorities on visa extensions and charter flights for Chinese tourists stranded in Dubai.
Other countries actively involved: Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Indonesia, and Bangladesh.
How to get help if you're stranded
Step 1: Check your visa status. If it expires between Feb 28 โ Mar 31, you're automatically extended 30 days. No action needed.
Step 2: Contact your embassy. Every major embassy in the UAE has activated emergency consular services. Find your embassy's contact on the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs directory.
Step 3: Apply for further extension if needed. Use the GDRFA app, visit official service centers, or go to authorized typing centers. Bring proof of flight cancellation.
Step 4: Check repatriation flights. Charter flights are operating from Dubai, Ras Al Khaimah, and Fujairah. Check with your airline and embassy for availability.
Step 5: Document everything. Keep all flight cancellation emails, embassy communications, and visa extension receipts. You'll need these for insurance claims and any future visa applications.
What about expats living in the UAE?
If you're an expat resident (not a tourist) in Dubai or Abu Dhabi:
- Your residence visa remains valid โ this crisis doesn't affect resident permits
- If you were outside the UAE when airspace closed and your visa expired, you can return penalty-free before March 31
- Check with your employer about any company-specific policies
- Keep your Emirates ID and residence visa documents accessible
Is Dubai safe right now?
Dubai itself has not been directly affected by military action. The city is functioning normally โ malls, restaurants, and businesses are open. The issue is airspace, not ground safety. Flights are the problem, not the destination.
For our full safety analysis, see: Is Dubai Safe for Expats in 2026?
Key Takeaways
- All UAE tourist/visit visas expiring Feb 28 โ Mar 31 are automatically extended 30 days โ no application needed
- Overstay fines are waived for stranded travelers with proof of flight cancellations
- Expats with expired visas can return to UAE penalty-free before March 31
- 8+ countries (India, UK, Germany, Canada, Italy, China, and more) are running repatriation flights and consular support
- Dubai is safe on the ground โ the crisis is about airspace closures, not security in the city
- Document everything โ flight cancellations, embassy contacts, visa extensions for insurance claims
Who to contact
- UAE GDRFA: App or service centers for visa extensions
- ICP (Federal Authority): icp.gov.ae for immigration queries
- Your country's embassy in UAE: 24/7 emergency consular services active
- Your airline: For rebooking or repatriation flight options
Stay safe. This situation is evolving โ we'll update this article as new information comes in.
Last updated: March 19, 2026
Sources: UAE GDRFA emergency directives (March 8-14, 2026), VisaHQ UAE tracker, Travel and Tour World, Republic World, Gulf News.
Which country is right for you?
Answer 6 quick questions about your budget, lifestyle, and priorities. Our AI ranks 122 countries and builds a personalised relocation plan.
Enjoyed this article?
Subscribe for more expat tips and guides.
Free: The Ultimate Expat Checklist
Everything you need to prepare before moving abroad โ visa, finances, healthcare, housing, and more.
Enjoyed this article? Share it with fellow expats



