Dubai remains operational and broadly calm, but the regional security picture has shifted rapidly after reports of Iranian missile activity targeting parts of the Gulf.
Several governments and major airlines have issued fresh warnings and operational updates, and the biggest near-term risk for visitors is travel disruption—especially sudden airspace restrictions, diversions, and last-minute cancellations.
What Official Advisories Say Today
The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) updated its United Arab Emirates guidance on 28 February 2026, telling British nationals in the UAE to avoid travel and remain indoors amid “reported missile attacks.” In the government’s words: “British nationals in UAE should immediately shelter in place.”
That guidance does not single out Dubai as uniquely dangerous, but it signals that authorities consider the wider situation volatile enough to warrant sheltering and limiting movement. Travelers should treat this as a material escalation from routine “exercise caution” messaging.
What’s Happening on the Ground in the UAE
UAE officials said air defenses intercepted ballistic missiles and reported debris falling in residential areas with material damage. Separately, UAE-based reporting described emergency alerts and safety instructions being issued in response to missile activity, including calls for residents to take cover.
These accounts underscore that—while Dubai may be functioning normally in many districts—the UAE is responding to an unprecedented regional security incident, and conditions can change quickly.
Airports and Flights: The Most Immediate Risk for Travelers

For most visitors, the most practical impact is aviation volatility. Travel reporting indicates partial airspace restrictions and knock-on effects for routes transiting the region, with airlines canceling or rerouting services. One report highlighted flight cancellations affecting the Heathrow–Dubai corridor and broader disruptions across Middle East routings.
If you have imminent travel, assume rapid schedule changes are possible even if your flight is currently “on time.” In these situations, disruptions often come from airspace closures in nearby corridors (not necessarily Dubai airspace itself), creating cascading delays and diversions.
What Travelers Should Do Now
If you are in Dubai now:
- Monitor alerts from your embassy/consulate and local authorities; if official guidance recommends staying indoors, follow it. Avoid unnecessary travel and stay away from sensitive sites (government buildings, military facilities).
- Keep essentials ready (ID, charger, medication). Know your hotel’s shelter guidance and emergency procedures.
If you are traveling to Dubai in the next 24–72 hours:
- Reconfirm flights repeatedly (airline app + airport status). Build buffer time and have a reroute plan via non-affected hubs where possible.
- Check official travel advisories (UK FCDO is currently among the clearest). If your government issues similar instructions, treat them as the baseline for decision-making.
Dubai is not being described as a city in active chaos, but the UAE is responding to missile-related threats and governments are issuing extraordinary protective guidance. Right now, Dubai can be “safe enough” for many travelers only if you can tolerate fast-changing security and flight conditions—and if you follow official instructions promptly.
