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Best Savings Account for Pakistani Expats in the UAE (2026)

Best Savings Account for Pakistani Expats in the UAE (2026)

27 مارس 2026·5 min read

Pakistani nationals are one of the largest expat communities in the UAE — over 1.5 million people, working across professional services, construction, retail, and entrepreneurship. Many maintain financial ties to Pakistan while building careers and savings in the UAE.

The challenge: Pakistan's economic environment has changed significantly, and navigating savings across two countries takes some planning.


The salary routing trap

The most competitive UAE savings rates are conditional:

  • Mashreq NEO PLUS (6.25%): Requires AED 10,000/month salary routing (max 2 debits/month or you earn 0%)
  • Wio Bank (up to 6%): Requires Salary or Family plan with active monthly salary routing

ADCB's 5% Active Saver campaign ended March 2025. ADCB now has a live Super Saver at up to 4.5% AED — but only on balances of AED 50,000 or more, and only on new external money that also increases your total ADCB relationship balance. Below AED 50,000, you earn 0.01%.

If your employer pays into a bank you didn't choose, or you receive client payments through multiple channels, you typically can't meet these conditions. You fall to the base rate — usually 0.5–2%.


What Pakistani expats earn at UAE banks without conditions

Bank Flexible savings (no salary req)
Emirates NBD 1.0–1.25% standard; Apr–Jun 2026 promo 2.5–2.75% (new money only; 5% headline requires AED 10M+)
FAB iSave ~2.5% standard; 4% on new funds until Jun 30, 2026
ADCB 0.5–1% standard; up to 4.5% Super Saver (AED 50K+, new external money only)
Standard Chartered 0.5–1%
Meezan Bank UAE Islamic savings (profit rate varies)
Wio flexible 2.75% USD / 3.25% AED

FAB iSave pays 4% on new external funds until June 30, 2026 — existing depositors earn ~2.5% standard. Across all banks, standard flexible rates without conditions remain low.


Roshan Digital Account — Pakistan's cross-border savings option

Pakistan's State Bank launched the Roshan Digital Account (RDA) specifically for overseas Pakistanis. It allows Pakistanis abroad to hold PKR and foreign currency (USD, GBP, EUR) accounts with major Pakistani banks including HBL, MCB, UBL, and Bank Alfalah.

Key points for UAE-based Pakistanis:

  • Naya Pakistan Certificate (NPC): Offers dollar profit rates around 5–7% on USD deposits — competitive, but in a Pakistani bank, not a UAE one
  • Currency risk: If you plan to spend in the UAE, holding PKR exposes you to PKR/AED exchange fluctuations
  • Repatriation: RDA funds are freely repatriable — a genuine advantage
  • Risk profile: Pakistani banking sector is regulated by the State Bank, but country risk applies for someone spending in the UAE

The trade-off: RDA is excellent for Pakistanis planning to return. For those planning to stay in the UAE long-term, keeping savings in PKR in Pakistan while spending in AED/USD introduces currency risk that erodes returns.


Islamic banking in the UAE

A significant portion of Pakistani expats prefer Sharia-compliant financial products. The UAE has robust Islamic banking options:

  • Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB): Islamic savings with profit rates typically 1–3%
  • Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank (ADIB): Comparable profit rates
  • Meezan Bank UAE: Pakistan-linked Islamic bank with UAE presence
  • Emirates Islamic: Part of Emirates NBD Group, full Sharia-compliant savings range

These are solid, regulated options — but profit rates on standard Islamic savings accounts in the UAE are broadly similar to conventional bank rates, in the 0.5–2.5% range for flexible accounts.


Options that work without salary routing

StashAway Simple UAE — 3.6%

UAE-regulated (DFSA-licensed) money market fund. No minimum, no lock-in. Rate tracks US Federal Reserve — will move with Fed decisions. No salary requirement, no fee.

Sarwa Save+ — ~3.2% net

ADGM and DFSA regulated. Gross rate 3.7%; net 3.2% after 0.5% annual fee. Conventional savings instrument (not Sharia-compliant — Sarwa has a separate Halal product at ~3.5% net for Islamic-preference investors).

Vault — ~5.4% (pre-launch, pursuing ADGM approval)

Vault earns from fees paid by institutional borrowers in vetted lending markets — independent of Fed rate decisions. No salary condition, no minimum, no fee, no lock-in. USD-denominated.

Important: Vault is pre-launch and not yet ADGM-licensed. It is not currently Sharia-certified. Higher potential return comes with higher risk than a licensed, regulated product. Suitable for those comfortable with early-stage fintech.

Join the waitlist at vlt.money


Comparison: UAE vs. Pakistan savings options

Option Rate Currency Regulated Notes
Vault ~5.4% USD Pursuing ADGM Pre-launch
Naya Pakistan Cert (USD) ~5–7% USD State Bank Pakistan Pakistan bank risk
StashAway Simple 3.6% USD/AED DFSA UAE ✓ Fed-linked
Sarwa Halal ~3.5% net USD/AED ADGM/DFSA UAE ✓ Islamic
Sarwa Save+ ~3.2% net USD/AED ADGM/DFSA UAE ✓ Conventional
UAE Islamic savings 1–3% AED CBUAE ✓ Sharia-compliant
UAE bank standard 0.5–2% AED/USD CBUAE ✓ Conditional

The idle capital problem

Many Pakistani expats accumulate savings between remittances — holding AED or USD in a current account waiting for the right moment to send money home or invest. That idle period, which can be weeks or months, is earning almost nothing at a standard UAE bank rate.

On AED 30,000 sitting idle for 12 months: the difference between 1% (bank) and 5.4% (Vault) is approximately AED 1,260 — that's a one-way flight home, or two months of school fees.


Related reads


Rate data current as of March 2026. All rates are variable. Vault is pre-launch and not yet ADGM-licensed. Naya Pakistan Certificate rates change periodically — verify at your bank. This is not financial advice.

Vault يحقق ~5.4% على مدّخراتك.احصل على وصول مبكر

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Vault يحقق ~5.4% على مدّخراتك.احصل على وصول مبكر