
The Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security (ICP) has quietly ended the 10-day grace period that previously cushioned visitors who ran past their permitted stay. A detailed explainer published on 15 May 2026 by leading visa-processing platform FlyUAEVisa sets out the new enforcement mechanics: the AED 50 (≈ US $14) daily fine now activates the moment a tourist, visit-visa holder, resident whose permit has lapsed, or a traveller with a cancelled visa passes midnight on their last authorised day. Officials began flagging the change inside the ICP Smart Services portal on 13 May. Travellers can already see accrued penalties in real time—something that was previously possible only at exit counters. The fines accumulate until settlement and must be paid before departure or during a status-change application.
To avoid stumbling into these automatic penalties, visitors can lean on specialised visa-concierge services. VisaHQ, for instance, lets individuals and corporate travel teams apply for new UAE visas, request extensions and monitor status updates through a single dashboard—see https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/ for the current menu of options. Using such a platform removes guesswork around expiry dates and minimises the risk of incurring AED 50-per-day fines.
Failure to do so can trigger travel bans and future-visa rejections. Why the tougher stance? Industry advisers say the post-pandemic tourism boom has stretched immigration counters at Dubai International (DXB) and Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International, leaving little leeway for manual overrides. Automating fines via the Smart Channel shifts the administrative burden away from airport officers and discourages “border-hop” extensions. The same AED 50/day rate now applies universally—tourists, cancelled-residence holders and overstaying residents—creating a single rule set that is easier to communicate and enforce. For businesses, the message is clear: ensure staff, short-term secondees and visiting clients exit, extend or convert status on time. Corporate travel managers should build visa-expiry alerts into their mobility workflows and budget for higher contingency costs if projects slip. Advisers also recommend scheduling outward flights at least 24 hours before the last legal day to avoid flight-delay-induced fines, and using the ICP smart-portal calculator to verify balances before airport check-in. Looking ahead, immigration consultants expect the overstay ledger to feed into a broader risk-scoring model when the UAE’s AI-driven work-permit screening platform goes live later this year. That means today’s AED 50 could morph into tomorrow’s rejected residence application for candidates with blemished travel histories. Proactive compliance now will protect access to the region’s most business-friendly hub in the decade to come.
To avoid stumbling into these automatic penalties, visitors can lean on specialised visa-concierge services. VisaHQ, for instance, lets individuals and corporate travel teams apply for new UAE visas, request extensions and monitor status updates through a single dashboard—see https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/ for the current menu of options. Using such a platform removes guesswork around expiry dates and minimises the risk of incurring AED 50-per-day fines.
Failure to do so can trigger travel bans and future-visa rejections. Why the tougher stance? Industry advisers say the post-pandemic tourism boom has stretched immigration counters at Dubai International (DXB) and Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International, leaving little leeway for manual overrides. Automating fines via the Smart Channel shifts the administrative burden away from airport officers and discourages “border-hop” extensions. The same AED 50/day rate now applies universally—tourists, cancelled-residence holders and overstaying residents—creating a single rule set that is easier to communicate and enforce. For businesses, the message is clear: ensure staff, short-term secondees and visiting clients exit, extend or convert status on time. Corporate travel managers should build visa-expiry alerts into their mobility workflows and budget for higher contingency costs if projects slip. Advisers also recommend scheduling outward flights at least 24 hours before the last legal day to avoid flight-delay-induced fines, and using the ICP smart-portal calculator to verify balances before airport check-in. Looking ahead, immigration consultants expect the overstay ledger to feed into a broader risk-scoring model when the UAE’s AI-driven work-permit screening platform goes live later this year. That means today’s AED 50 could morph into tomorrow’s rejected residence application for candidates with blemished travel histories. Proactive compliance now will protect access to the region’s most business-friendly hub in the decade to come.