
In a companion move to the Metro timetable, Dubai has finalised the emirate-wide road-pricing plan for Ramadan. Paid street parking will pause between 18:00 and 20:00 daily – an ‘Iftar break’ designed to let residents park near mosques or family homes free of charge. Salik e-tolls will drop to AED 4 outside core business hours and be suspended entirely in the quiet 02:00-07:00 window, mirroring Abu Dhabi’s Darb model. (arabwheels.ae)
The RTA expects the policy to smooth traffic across Downtown, Deira and the fast-growing Dubai South district, where several Blue-chip employers host late-night Ramadan tents and CSR events. Businesses running night shifts – especially hospitality, hospitals and airports – can leverage the toll-free early-morning window for staff shuttles, cutting transport overheads by up to 25 %, according to local fleet managers.
If you’re planning to visit the UAE during Ramadan to experience these late-night events or to meet with local businesses taking advantage of the calmer roads, VisaHQ can quickly arrange the necessary travel documents. Their online portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) walks applicants through every step, offers live support, and can expedite tourist, business or transit visas—so you can focus on your trip instead of paperwork.
Motorists should note that multi-storey car parks are excluded and remain chargeable 24/7; HR and mobility managers must communicate this nuance to visitors to avoid fines.
Salik’s operator will monitor gate loads and may re-introduce dynamic pricing in future Ramadans if the current flat discount leads to revenue loss or new choke-points.
The Dubai Chamber of Commerce has welcomed the time-band approach, calling it a “smart compromise” that supports both small retailers relying on evening foot-traffic and the city’s sustainability targets by incentivising modal shifts to public transport.
The RTA expects the policy to smooth traffic across Downtown, Deira and the fast-growing Dubai South district, where several Blue-chip employers host late-night Ramadan tents and CSR events. Businesses running night shifts – especially hospitality, hospitals and airports – can leverage the toll-free early-morning window for staff shuttles, cutting transport overheads by up to 25 %, according to local fleet managers.
If you’re planning to visit the UAE during Ramadan to experience these late-night events or to meet with local businesses taking advantage of the calmer roads, VisaHQ can quickly arrange the necessary travel documents. Their online portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) walks applicants through every step, offers live support, and can expedite tourist, business or transit visas—so you can focus on your trip instead of paperwork.
Motorists should note that multi-storey car parks are excluded and remain chargeable 24/7; HR and mobility managers must communicate this nuance to visitors to avoid fines.
Salik’s operator will monitor gate loads and may re-introduce dynamic pricing in future Ramadans if the current flat discount leads to revenue loss or new choke-points.
The Dubai Chamber of Commerce has welcomed the time-band approach, calling it a “smart compromise” that supports both small retailers relying on evening foot-traffic and the city’s sustainability targets by incentivising modal shifts to public transport.





