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Understanding the current UAE spouse visa requirements is essential for any resident planning to bring a husband or wife to the Emirates in 2026. The official UAE government platform confirmed on 27 February 2026 that the minimum salary threshold remains AED 4,000 per month, or AED 3,000 plus employer-provided accommodation, while relaxing earlier job-title restrictions that had prevented certain categories of workers from sponsoring dependants. This guide walks through every step of the process, from eligibility and document attestation to the practical differences between applying through the federal ICP portal and the emirate-level GDRFA system in Dubai.
Whether you are a mainland employee, a free-zone professional or an investor, the information below covers the family visa UAE requirements you need to satisfy before your spouse can join you.
Not everyone holding a UAE residence visa is automatically entitled to sponsor a spouse. The family visa UAE requirements set out by the Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security (ICP) establish several sponsor categories, each with its own conditions. Knowing which category applies to you determines the documents you will need and the channel through which you apply.
The table below summarises who can sponsor a family visa in the UAE and the key conditions that attach to each sponsor type.
| Sponsor Type | Key Conditions | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mainland employee | Valid residence visa; meets salary/accommodation threshold; employment contract active | Most common sponsor category. No job-title restriction under the 2026 rules published on u.ae. |
| Free-zone employee | Same salary threshold; some free zones require an employer NOC before the application is submitted | Check with your free-zone authority, certain zones process family visas through their own service desks before routing to ICP or GDRFA. |
| Investor / partner / company owner | Valid investor or partner visa; proof of business activity (trade licence) and income or capital | Self-sponsors must demonstrate adequate financial resources. Bank statements carry additional weight. |
| UAE national (citizen) | Citizen ID; marriage contract registered with the court or personal status authority | Citizens follow a streamlined process and may sponsor additional family members beyond spouses. |
| Government-sector employee | Employment letter from government entity; salary confirmation through WPS or payroll system | Abu Dhabi government employees may use the TAMM platform rather than ICP or GDRFA. |
Domestic workers, individuals on short-term visit visas and anyone whose own residence permit has fewer than six months of validity remaining generally cannot initiate a spousal sponsorship. The sponsor must hold a valid, active UAE residence visa at the time the application is submitted. If the sponsor’s visa is due to expire within a few months, it is advisable to renew it first to avoid processing delays. Additionally, the sponsor’s employment status and salary must be verifiable through official payroll records or Wage Protection System (WPS) data.
The salary test is the single most scrutinised element of the UAE spouse visa requirements. According to the official UAE platform (u.ae, updated 27 February 2026), a sponsor must earn a minimum monthly salary of AED 4,000. Alternatively, a salary of AED 3,000 per month is accepted when the employer provides accommodation, meaning the sponsor does not need to rent or own a home independently.
In practice, authorities assess the salary figure stated on the employment contract and cross-reference it with recent WPS records or bank statements. Industry observers note that discrepancies between contractual salary and actual bank credits are a common reason for application delays. Sponsors whose total compensation includes variable allowances should ensure that their salary certificate clearly breaks down the fixed basic salary and housing allowance so the reviewing officer can confirm the threshold is met.
A salary certificate submitted as part of the application should, at a minimum, include the following elements:
The certificate should be printed on company letterhead. Many typing centres and Amer service counters will reject certificates that lack a company stamp or that show an issuance date more than 30 days old.
If your salary falls between AED 3,000 and AED 4,000 and you rely on employer-provided housing, you will need written confirmation from your employer. For sponsors earning AED 4,000 or more, proof of accommodation remains a mandatory supporting document regardless. This means either a valid Ejari-registered tenancy contract or a property title deed. Those who own property in the UAE can submit a copy of the title deed issued by the relevant land department. Tenants must ensure that their Ejari registration is active and that the address on the tenancy contract matches the application form.
Document preparation is where most delays occur. The checklist below reflects the standard requirements published by ICP and GDRFA Dubai. Variations apply depending on whether the spouse is already inside the UAE (status change) or applying from abroad (entry permit).
| Document | When Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sponsor’s passport (colour copy) | All applications | Must have at least six months’ validity. |
| Sponsor’s Emirates ID | All applications | Valid and linked to active residence visa. |
| Sponsor’s residence visa page | All applications | Copy of visa sticker or digital visa printout. |
| Spouse’s passport (colour copy) | All applications | At least six months’ validity from date of application. |
| Attested marriage certificate | All applications | Must be attested through the full chain, see attestation steps below. |
| Passport-size photographs (spouse) | All applications | White background, recent (typically within six months). |
| Salary certificate | Employee sponsors | Issued within 30 days, on company letterhead with stamp. |
| Bank statements (3–6 months) | All sponsors (especially investors) | Shows regular salary credits or adequate financial reserves. |
| Ejari tenancy contract or title deed | All applications | Ejari registration must be active. Title deeds accepted for property owners. |
| Employer NOC (if required) | Certain free-zone employees | Check with free-zone authority whether an NOC is needed before filing. |
| Previous marriage/divorce decree (if applicable) | Previously married sponsors or spouses | Must also be attested and translated into Arabic. |
The marriage certificate attestation process for use in the UAE typically follows this sequence:
The exact steps and fees vary by nationality. Pakistani, Indian and Filipino nationals, for example, may face slightly different embassy procedures or additional documentation requirements. It is always advisable to confirm the current attestation process with the relevant UAE Embassy before travelling.
If the spouse is already in the UAE, on a visit visa, for instance, the sponsor can apply for an in-country status change. This eliminates the need for the spouse to exit and re-enter the country. The document requirements are largely the same, but the application must include the spouse’s current entry stamp or visit visa copy. If the spouse is outside the UAE, the sponsor first obtains an entry permit, which the spouse then uses to enter the country and complete the medical, Emirates ID and visa-stamping steps inside the UAE.
Previously married individuals must provide an attested divorce decree or death certificate of the former spouse. Non-Muslim marriages registered under community law in the home country are generally recognised for immigration purposes, although the attestation chain must still be followed. For any complex marital situation, including marriages that may not be recognised under UAE personal status law, early legal advice is strongly recommended. For broader context on spousal rights under UAE family law, see our detailed guide.
One of the most common points of confusion is whether to use the federal ICP Smart Services portal or the emirate-level GDRFA system in Dubai. The answer depends primarily on where the sponsor’s residence visa was issued and, in some cases, which service the sponsor finds more convenient. Below is a step-by-step comparison of both flows, designed to clarify how to apply for a family visa in the UAE online.
The entry permit is the first official approval. It authorises the spouse to enter (or remain in) the UAE for the purpose of residence-visa processing. Both the ICP and GDRFA portals accept online applications, but the interface and service naming conventions differ.
Once the spouse arrives in the UAE (or once a status change is approved), the next step is the mandatory medical fitness examination at a government-approved health centre. The medical test screens for communicable diseases and is a prerequisite for Emirates ID enrolment. Emirates ID biometrics are captured either at the medical centre or at a separate ICP/ICA service centre, depending on the emirate.
After the medical results are cleared and the Emirates ID application is processed, the residence visa is stamped in the spouse’s passport, or, increasingly, linked digitally to the passport number without a physical sticker. The sponsor receives confirmation through the relevant portal, and the spouse’s residence status becomes active.
| Step | ICP (Federal) Flow | GDRFA (Dubai) / Emirate Flow |
|---|---|---|
| Apply for entry permit | Log in to ICP Smart Services via UAE Pass. Upload documents, select “New Entry Permit, Family Joining,” and pay fees online. | Access the GDRFA Dubai smart-services portal. Create an account or log in, then select “Issuance of a Residence Permit for Family.” Upload documents and pay fees. |
| In-country status change | Select the “Status Change” service on ICP Smart Services. Submit the spouse’s current visit-visa details and supporting documents. Alternatively, visit an Amer typing centre for assisted filing. | Initiate the “Status Change” service through GDRFA Dubai. The system may require additional landlord/Ejari verification before approval. |
| Medical and Emirates ID | Book an appointment at an approved medical centre. Emirates ID biometrics are captured via ICP/ICA. Results are linked automatically to the application. | Same approved medical centres. GDRFA accepts medical results system-wide. Emirates ID enrolment follows the same federal process. |
| Visa stamping / residence permit | ICP issues the residence visa. Passport stamping at a service centre or digital linking to passport number. | GDRFA stamps or digitally records the residence permit. Dubai may require an additional address-verification step before final issuance. |
Abu Dhabi residents, particularly those working in the government sector, may use the TAMM platform as their primary channel. The document requirements are substantively the same, but the portal interface and service names differ from both ICP and GDRFA.
The total family sponsor visa UAE cost depends on the visa duration chosen, the emirate of processing, and whether you use a typing centre or apply directly online. The table below provides indicative fee ranges based on government and service-centre schedules current as of 2026.
| Fee Item | Typical Range (AED) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Entry permit (1 year) | 1,100 – 1,200 | Government fee plus e-service/knowledge fee. Varies slightly by channel. |
| Entry permit (2 years) | 1,100 – 1,300 | The 2 years family visa price in Dubai is typically within this range when processed through GDRFA or Amer centres. |
| Medical fitness test | 300 – 500 | Varies by health authority (DHA in Dubai, HAAD in Abu Dhabi) and centre. |
| Emirates ID (per year of validity) | 100 – 170 | Charged per year. A 2-year ID costs approximately AED 270 – 340 total. |
| Visa stamping / residence permit issuance | 500 – 700 | Includes government and service fees. Status-change applications may carry a small surcharge. |
| Typing/service centre fees | 150 – 350 | If using Amer or similar typing centres rather than applying directly online. |
| Estimated total (2-year visa) | 2,400 – 3,200 | All-in estimate. Actual costs depend on emirate, channel and optional expedited processing. |
The UAE spouse visa processing time varies by step. Early indications from service-centre operators suggest the following typical timelines when all documents are complete and correct:
Peak periods, such as the start of the academic year, and incomplete documentation can extend timelines significantly. Sponsors should factor in additional time for marriage-certificate attestation, which can itself take two to four weeks when home-country embassy processing is required.
Application rejections are rarely permanent but are almost always avoidable. The most frequently reported reasons include:
Free-zone employees sometimes encounter an additional hurdle: certain free zones require the employer to issue a No Objection Certificate (NOC) before the family-visa application can be filed. Mainland employees generally do not face this requirement. If you are employed in a free zone and are unsure whether an NOC is needed, contact your free-zone authority directly. Additionally, be aware that some free zones process the initial entry-permit request through their own service desk before routing it to ICP or GDRFA. If you encounter a dispute over salary documentation or employment status, understanding your rights through the UAE’s legal processes for resolving outstanding disputes can be valuable context.
For straightforward applications where the sponsor meets the salary threshold and all documents are properly attested, the process can be completed without professional assistance. However, specialist legal advice is strongly recommended in the following situations: complex attestation requirements for marriages registered in jurisdictions with limited UAE diplomatic representation; mixed-income households where the minimum salary threshold is met only through combined sources; marriages that may not be recognised under UAE personal status law; and any application that has already been refused. An immigration lawyer experienced in UAE spouse visa requirements can identify and resolve documentation issues before they result in costly delays or repeated refusals.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jem Felicilda at Knightsbridge Group, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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