Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, spans 67,340 square kilometres — 87% of the country's total land area — yet most of its 3.8 million residents live within a compact, walkable city core on a T-shaped island at the tip of the Arabian Gulf. This is the emirate that built the world's largest mosque open to non-Muslims, imported the Louvre, and placed five global theme parks on a single island. It is also, at its core, deeply traditional: culturally conservative, proudly Islamic, and unhurried in a way that Dubai is not.
For South Asian visitors — the Pakistani and Indian communities who make up a significant share of the UAE's population — Abu Dhabi holds particular resonance. Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque draws Muslim visitors from across the world for Friday prayers. Halal food is universal, not an option. The cultural DNA of the city is familiar and welcoming.
This guide covers every aspect of planning your Abu Dhabi visit in 2026, including the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi opening, the launch of Etihad Rail passenger services, and the new teamLab Phenomena digital art space.
Abu Dhabi — Quick Facts
| Status | Capital of the United Arab Emirates; largest of seven emirates |
| Area | 67,340 km² (87% of UAE land area) |
| Population | Approx. 3.8 million (2024 estimate) |
| Airport | Zayed International Airport (AUH) — new terminal opened November 2023 |
| Currency | UAE Dirham (AED) — 1 AED ≈ £0.21 / $0.27 / PKR 75 |
| Language | Arabic (official); English widely spoken; Urdu/Hindi understood |
| Time Zone | GST (UTC+4) — no daylight saving |
| Visa | GCC residents: visa-free. UK, EU, US: 30-day visa on arrival. Indian: 14-day VoA (eligible passports). Pakistani: advance visa required. |
| Best Time to Visit | November–March (18°C–28°C). Summer (June–Aug) is extreme heat but offers 30–50% hotel discounts. |
| Electricity | 230V / 50Hz, UK-type G plugs (3-pin rectangular) |
| Tourism Authority | DCT Abu Dhabi (Department of Culture and Tourism) |