Emirates Islamic Bank (EIB) is one of the UAE's major Islamic banking institutions, operating under Sharia principles and regulated by the Central Bank of the UAE. It is part of the Emirates NBD Group.
If you're researching Islamic savings options in the UAE, here's what to expect from Emirates Islamic — and how it compares to other products available in 2026.
Emirates Islamic savings profit rates (2026)
Emirates Islamic uses hibah (voluntary gifts) and murabaha (profit-sharing) structures instead of conventional interest. Profit rates on standard savings accounts are broadly comparable to conventional bank rates:
| Account type | Typical profit rate |
|---|---|
| Current account (AED) | 0% |
| Savings account (AED) | 0.5–1.5% |
| Smart Saver (tiered balance) | Up to 3% (conditions apply) |
| Fixed deposits (3–12 months) | 2.5–4% |
Rates vary and are reviewed periodically. Promotional rates exist but may require balance minimums or salary routing conditions.
The conditions problem
Emirates Islamic, like most UAE banks, offers higher profit rates with conditions:
- Salary routing to EIB account
- Minimum monthly balance (often AED 3,000–10,000)
- Specific account tier enrollment
Without meeting these conditions, most customers earn the base rate — typically 0.5–1.5%.
Islamic savings vs. conventional savings in the UAE
For UAE residents seeking Sharia-compliant savings, Islamic banks offer:
Advantages:
- Sharia certification — products are reviewed by independent Sharia boards
- Full regulatory protection under CBUAE
- No concerns about interest (riba) — profit-sharing model
- Familiar banking infrastructure
Limitations:
- Profit rates are broadly similar to conventional bank rates (0.5–3% for flexible savings)
- The highest Islamic savings rates in the UAE still require conditions (salary routing, minimum balance)
- Most Islamic savings products don't meaningfully outperform the broader UAE savings market
Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank (ADIB) and Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) offer similar products at broadly comparable rates to Emirates Islamic.
How Emirates Islamic compares to other no-condition UAE savings options (2026)
| Provider | Rate | Islamic? | Conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vault | ~5.4% | Not yet certified | None (pre-launch) |
| StashAway Simple | 3.6% | No | None |
| Sarwa Save+ (Halal) | ~3.5% net | Yes (Sharia-certified) | None |
| Sarwa Save+ (conventional) | ~3.2% net | No | None |
| Wio flexible | 3.25% AED / 2.75% USD | No | None |
| Emirates Islamic Smart Saver | Up to 3% | Yes | Balance + conditions |
| FAB flexible / iSave | ~2.5% standard; 4% new funds until Jun 30 | No | iSave 4% on new money only; standard ~2.5% |
| Emirates Islamic savings | 0.5–1.5% | Yes | None |
For Islamic-preference investors, Sarwa Halal at ~3.5% net is currently the strongest no-condition, flexible UAE Islamic savings option. It is ADGM and DFSA regulated, and Sharia-certified by an independent board.
What to consider when choosing Islamic savings in the UAE
Rate vs. compliance: Islamic bank savings rates in the UAE tend to be lower than fintech alternatives. This is a real trade-off — not a hidden fee or structural problem, just supply and demand for Sharia-compliant products.
CBUAE regulation is the same: Islamic banks in the UAE are regulated by the same Central Bank as conventional banks. The underlying regulatory protection is identical.
Sharia certification: If Islamic compliance matters to you, look for a product with a named, independent Sharia Supervisory Board. Both Emirates Islamic and Sarwa Halal have this. Not all "Islamic" products in the market are formally certified.
Vault and Islamic finance
Vault is not currently Sharia-certified. The underlying mechanism — lending market fees from institutional borrowers — is not identical to a conventional interest model, but it has not been reviewed by an Islamic finance board.
If Islamic compliance is a requirement, StashAway Simple, Sarwa Halal, or Emirates Islamic products are the appropriate options. Vault is appropriate for customers where rate and flexibility are the primary considerations and Sharia certification is not required.
→ Join the Vault waitlist at vlt.money
Profit rates are indicative and subject to change. All Emirates Islamic rates are published on emiratesislamic.ae. Vault is pre-launch and not yet ADGM-licensed. This is not financial advice.