How to Save on Fuel in the UAE: Tips, Apps, and Prices

Last verified: June 2026

Petrol in the UAE cost AED 2.33 per litre for Special 95 in February 2026. In June 2026 it costs AED 3.83, a 64% increase in four months. Fuel prices here are set monthly by the UAE Fuel Price Committee based on global oil benchmarks, which means they can move significantly and without much warning. The tips in this guide are not about dramatic lifestyle changes. They are about the specific UAE habits, apps, and payment methods that reduce what you spend on fuel every month, with current June 2026 prices and verified AED numbers throughout.

Current UAE fuel prices in June 2026

Prices are set nationwide by the UAE Fuel Price Committee and are identical at every ADNOC, ENOC, EPPCO, and Emarat station across all seven emirates. The June 2026 rates, effective from 1 June, are the fourth consecutive monthly increase for petrol.

Grade June 2026 May 2026 Full 50-litre tank Best for
E-Plus 91 AED 3.76 AED 3.48 AED 188 Older vehicles with lower-compression engines
Special 95 AED 3.83 AED 3.55 AED 191.50 Most standard cars, SUVs, crossovers
Super 98 AED 3.95 AED 3.66 AED 197.50 High-performance, turbocharged, luxury cars
Diesel AED 4.33 AED 4.69 AED 216.50 Trucks, buses, some SUVs and pickup trucks

Prices are updated on the first of every month. The next update is 1 July 2026. Bookmark the ways to save money in Dubai guide which covers the broader picture of how transport costs fit into a Dubai resident’s monthly budget.

Use the right fuel grade, not the cheapest one

The AED 0.07 difference between E-Plus 91 and Special 95 per litre looks trivial but using the wrong grade costs more than the saving. Using E-Plus 91 in a car that requires 95 octane causes engine knock, reduces performance, and over time causes real engine damage. The AED 3.50 you save on a 50-litre fill is not worth the long-term repair cost.

Check your owner’s manual or the fuel flap inside the filler cap for the minimum octane rating your car requires. If it says 95, use Special 95 or Super 98. If it says 91, E-Plus 91 is fine. If it says 98, use Super 98. Do not downgrade to save a few dirhams on each fill.

Conversely, there is no benefit to using Super 98 in a car designed for 95. The AED 0.12 per litre premium over Special 95 is wasted on most standard engines. Use it only if your car requires it or specifically recommends it for performance.

Use a cashback credit card at the pump

Several UAE credit cards offer cashback specifically on fuel purchases, which is one of the few ways to get money back on a cost you cannot avoid.

The Emirates Islamic RTA credit card offers 10% cashback on fuel spending, capped at AED 100 per month. On a typical monthly fuel spend of AED 400 to AED 600 for a regular commuter, this saves AED 40 to AED 60 per month, or AED 480 to AED 720 per year, from a card that also covers the embedded Nol chip for Metro and bus travel. The annual fee needs to be factored against the cashback earned to confirm it is net positive for your specific spending level.

Other cards worth checking for fuel cashback include ADCB TouchPoints cards, FAB cashback cards, and Mashreq Cashback Mastercard, each of which includes petrol station spending in their cashback categories at varying rates. The specific rate and cap change periodically so verify the current terms before applying rather than relying on a rate quoted in an older comparison.

Earn Yes Rewards points at ENOC and EPPCO

The Yes Rewards app is the free loyalty programme for ENOC and EPPCO stations, which are the primary petrol station brands across Dubai and the Northern Emirates. Download the app, create an account, and show the cashier your one-time password or scan the app’s barcode at the pump before each purchase. You earn one Yes point per litre of fuel purchased. Points can be redeemed at participating retail outlets and partners.

The redemption value of Yes points is modest compared to the cashback value of a fuel-specific credit card, but it costs nothing to collect and the app also offers periodic bonus promotions at specific ENOC and EPPCO stations. For residents who already fill up at ENOC stations, running the app alongside a cashback card stacks both benefits on the same transaction.

Earn ADNOC Rewards points at ADNOC stations

ADNOC stations, which dominate Abu Dhabi and are increasingly present in Dubai and the Northern Emirates, have their own rewards programme through the ADNOC Rewards app. Similar to Yes Rewards, the app issues points on fuel purchases that can be redeemed at ADNOC or partner outlets. If you fill up primarily at ADNOC, register for the ADNOC Rewards programme rather than defaulting to the ENOC Yes Rewards app.

Use CAFU for fuel delivery

CAFU is a UAE-based app that delivers fuel directly to your car wherever it is parked, at the same regulated pump price that applies at any petrol station. There is no price premium for the delivery itself, CAFU charges the government-set rate per litre and earns revenue through a service or delivery fee that is either embedded in the transaction or charged separately depending on the promotion running at the time.

The practical use case is when your tank is low and you are nowhere near a petrol station, or when you would rather not spend 15 to 20 minutes driving to a station and queuing during peak hours. It does not save you money on the fuel itself but it does save time, and for a resident who drives mainly within a specific area, it removes the inconvenience of planning refuels around station proximity.

Save on Salik by timing your driving

Salik tolls are not fuel costs in the literal sense but they are a direct transport cost that many residents conflate with their overall motoring budget. Since January 2026, Salik charges AED 6 per gate during peak hours (6am to 10am and 4pm to 8pm Monday to Saturday) and AED 4 during off-peak hours. All gates are free between 1am and 6am daily.

A commuter passing four Salik gates twice a day during peak hours pays AED 48 in Salik alone on a working day. Shifting the same commute entirely to off-peak hours reduces the daily Salik cost to AED 32, saving AED 16 per day and over AED 300 per month for regular five-day commuters. Over a year this is a saving of more than AED 3,500, which dwarfs the savings available from driving tips or loyalty points at the pump.

For the full breakdown of Salik gate locations, current rates, and the one-hour rule that saves on paired gate crossings, the complete Salik guide for Dubai covers everything in one place.

Driving habits that make a real difference in UAE conditions

UAE driving conditions are specific enough that generic fuel saving advice does not always translate directly. The two most impactful habits for UAE roads are smooth acceleration and using air conditioning intelligently.

Hard acceleration from traffic lights and then heavy braking at the next red light is the single biggest fuel waster in city driving. On Sheikh Zayed Road or Al Khail Road where the road surface and lane widths encourage acceleration, the temptation is real. Accelerating smoothly to the speed limit and anticipating traffic ahead rather than braking hard reduces fuel consumption by 10% to 15% on urban routes.

Air conditioning is unavoidable in UAE summer but how you use it matters. At lower speeds, keeping windows down is genuinely more efficient than running the air conditioning. Above around 80km/h, the aerodynamic drag from open windows costs more than the air conditioning. On motorway driving, keep the windows up and the air conditioning set to the minimum comfortable temperature rather than maximum cold. Pre-cooling the cabin before a long drive by parking in shade or using a windscreen shade is more efficient than running the air conditioning harder once you get in.

Highway cruising between 100 and 120km/h is significantly more fuel efficient than speeds above 130km/h. Wind resistance increases sharply above 120km/h, and the fuel cost of each additional 10km/h above that is meaningful on a long motorway run between Dubai, Abu Dhabi, or Sharjah.

The maintenance checks that directly affect fuel consumption

Three maintenance items have a direct, measurable effect on how many litres your car burns per 100 kilometres in UAE conditions.

Tyre pressure is the most overlooked. Under-inflated tyres increase rolling resistance and fuel consumption by up to 3% per litre. In UAE summer heat, tyres can lose pressure faster than in cooler climates, and many residents check tyre pressure infrequently. Check pressure monthly as a minimum, and check after any significant temperature swing. Most UAE petrol stations have free tyre pressure equipment at the forecourt. If you are renting a car, this check is even more important since rental fleets are not always checked as rigorously between hires as your own car might be, and the Dubai car rental guide covers what to inspect before driving off.

Air filter condition directly affects engine breathing efficiency. A clogged air filter forces the engine to work harder and burns more fuel per kilometre. In Dubai and Abu Dhabi, dusty conditions, particularly after sandstorms, block air filters faster than in most other climates. Replace the air filter at the manufacturer’s recommended interval or earlier if you drive regularly after dust events.

Engine oil grade and condition matters more in UAE summer heat than in most climates because extreme temperatures put additional stress on the engine. Using the oil grade specified by the manufacturer, not a cheaper alternative, keeps the engine running at its designed efficiency. Oil that has degraded from heat or that is the wrong viscosity for the engine causes friction that costs fuel.

Frequently asked questions

What is the petrol price in the UAE in June 2026?

UAE petrol prices for June 2026, set by the Fuel Price Committee on 30 May and effective from 1 June, are E-Plus 91 at AED 3.76 per litre, Special 95 at AED 3.83 per litre, and Super 98 at AED 3.95 per litre. Diesel is AED 4.33 per litre. These prices are identical at every fuel station across all seven emirates. Prices are revised monthly and the next update is 1 July 2026.

Which petrol grade should I use in the UAE?

Use the grade specified in your vehicle’s owner’s manual or on the fuel filler cap. Most standard cars, SUVs, and crossovers require Special 95. High-performance, turbocharged, and luxury vehicles typically require Super 98. E-Plus 91 is only suitable for older or lower-compression engines that explicitly specify a 91 octane minimum. Using a lower grade than your car requires causes engine knock and long-term damage. The saving of AED 0.07 to AED 0.19 per litre is not worth the risk.

How do fuel prices in the UAE compare to other countries?

Even at the elevated June 2026 rate of AED 3.83 for Special 95, UAE fuel prices remain among the lower end globally. Most European countries charge the equivalent of AED 7 to AED 10 per litre after heavy fuel taxes. The UAE does not impose fuel excise taxes and prices track global crude oil benchmarks with a one-month lag under the market-linked pricing system introduced in September 2015. However, prices can move sharply from month to month, as the 64% increase between February and June 2026 demonstrates.