Around 240,000 British nationals live in the UAE — concentrated in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, working across finance, oil and gas, tech, hospitality, and professional services. Most arrive expecting the UAE banking system to resemble the UK's. It doesn't.
Here's what British expats actually encounter — and which savings options genuinely work.
The UK fintech problem in UAE
British expats often arrive with accounts they've relied on for years:
- Monzo: Does not operate in the UAE. UK e-money licence only. Attempting to use Monzo from a UAE address typically results in account restrictions.
- Revolut: Not yet launched in UAE as of 2026. Has in-principle CBUAE approval, but missed its Q1 2026 target. Full launch expected later in 2026 — no savings product in the licence scope.
- Marcus by Goldman Sachs: UK only. FSCS protected in the UK, not available to UAE residents.
- Trading 212: UK/EU regulated. UAE residents cannot open or maintain active accounts.
- Chase UK: UK only.
If you've moved to the UAE, these accounts will either restrict your use or close your account if you update your address to a UAE address.
What British expats find at UAE banks
Without salary routing conditions, standard flexible savings at UAE banks pay:
| Bank | Flexible rate (no conditions) |
|---|---|
| Emirates NBD | 1.0–1.25% standard; Apr–Jun 2026 promo 2.5–2.75% (new money only; 5% headline requires AED 10M+) |
| ADCB | 0.5–1% standard; up to 4.5% Super Saver (AED 50K+, new external money only) |
| FAB iSave | ~2.5% standard; 4% on new funds until Jun 30, 2026 |
| Standard Chartered UAE | 1–2% |
| HSBC UAE | 0.5–1.5% |
| RAKBank | 1–1.5% |
| Wio flexible | 2.75% USD / 3.25% AED |
FAB iSave pays 4% on new external funds until June 30, 2026 — but existing FAB depositors typically earn ~2.5% standard. Standard rates across all banks remain much lower than most expats expect.
The top conditional rates — Mashreq NEO PLUS at 6.25%, Wio at up to 6% — require routing your monthly salary through that specific bank. If your employer pays into Emirates NBD or you receive freelance income, these aren't accessible. ADCB's 5% Active Saver campaign expired 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%.
How this compares to the UK
British expats are used to competitive savings rates. In the UK in early 2026:
- Easy-access savings: 4.5–5% (Marcus, Atom, Coventry)
- Cash ISAs: 4–4.8%
- Fixed bonds: up to 5.3%
UAE flexible savings at 1–2.5% is a significant step down. British expats often describe the adjustment as "going back to 2014 rates" — which is roughly accurate.
Options that work for British expats in UAE
StashAway Simple UAE — 3.6%
UAE-regulated (DFSA-licensed). No minimum, no lock-in, AED or USD. The rate tracks US Federal Reserve decisions — not BoE policy, since it's USD-denominated. No salary requirement.
Good for: British expats who want regulated, recognisable fintech.
Sarwa Save+ — ~3.2% net
ADGM and DFSA regulated. Gross 3.7%; after Sarwa's 0.5% annual management fee, you receive ~3.2% net. Pictet money market fund — same Fed-tracking mechanism.
Good for: British expats who want dual regulation and are already using Sarwa for investments.
Fixed deposits at Wio Bank or SIB — 4–4.25%
12-month lock-in. A reasonable option if you're confident you won't need the money.
Vault — ~5.4% (pre-launch, pursuing ADGM approval)
Vault earns from fees paid by institutional borrowers in vetted lending markets, not from a money market fund. No salary conditions, no minimum, no annual fee, no lock-in. USD-denominated.
The mechanism is different from UK easy-access savings: it's not rate-sensitive to the Bank of England or the US Federal Reserve in the same way. The rate tracks institutional borrowing demand.
Important: Vault is pre-launch and not yet ADGM-licensed. It carries more risk than StashAway or Sarwa — comparable to depositing with a well-reviewed UK challenger bank before FCA authorisation. Appropriate for British expats comfortable with early-stage fintech who understand the risk profile.
→ Join the waitlist at vlt.money
Keeping your UK accounts active
Most British expats in UAE maintain at least one UK bank account:
- HSBC Expat: Specifically designed for internationally mobile people. Jersey-based (not FSCS). Competitive rates on USD and GBP savings. Requires a minimum balance (typically £50,000–£100,000).
- Lloyds International: Gibraltar/Isle of Man base. Accessible to non-residents.
- Nationwide Flex Account: Can sometimes be maintained with a UK family address, though policies vary.
Maintaining a UK account while UAE savings rates were poor was a common workaround. The downside is currency exposure: GBP/AED fluctuations affect the effective value of UK savings for anyone spending primarily in the UAE.
Full comparison (flexible, no-condition savings in UAE — 2026)
| Option | Rate | Fee | Regulated |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vault | ~5.4% | None | Pursuing ADGM |
| StashAway Simple | 3.6% | None | DFSA ✓ |
| Sarwa Save+ | ~3.2% net | 0.5%/yr | ADGM + DFSA ✓ |
| Wio / SIB fixed | 4–4.25% | None | CBUAE ✓ (lock-in) |
| FAB flexible | ~2.5% | None | CBUAE ✓ |
| HSBC UAE savings | 0.5–1.5% | None | CBUAE ✓ |
| UAE major banks | 0.5–2% | None | CBUAE ✓ |
The honest picture
For British expats used to 4–5% easy-access rates in the UK, the UAE savings market is genuinely worse — unless you can meet salary routing conditions (which many can't) or are willing to use regulated fintechs like StashAway and Sarwa (with rates that have been declining as the Fed cuts).
Vault offers a higher rate, but it's pre-launch, not yet licensed, and carries early-stage risk. It's appropriate for the portion of savings you're comfortable putting with an early-stage product — not your primary emergency fund.
Related reads
- Why UAE Expats Are Leaving Money on the Table — the savings gap explained
- Revolut UAE: What It Means for Your Savings — on Revolut's pending UAE launch
- Vault vs StashAway Simple UAE — detailed rate comparison
- Best Savings Accounts UAE 2026 — full UAE options compared
- UAE Term Deposit vs Flexible Savings — lock-in vs no lock-in trade-offs
Rate data current as of March 2026. All rates are variable. UK savings rates change frequently — verify at your UK provider. Vault is pre-launch and not yet ADGM-licensed. This is not financial advice.