Avant de vous installer à United Arab Emirates, la question qui compte n'est pas « les soins sont-ils bons » — c'est « puis-je, avec un visa temporaire, réellement y accéder, et que se passe-t-il en cas d'urgence ? » Voici comment le système fonctionne pour un nomade, et où s'insère l'assurance privée.
En un coup d'œil
- Système
- Deux niveaux : public + privé
- Accès public (nomades)
- Non — assurance privée nécessaire
- Numéro d'urgence
- 998
- Consultation généraliste privée
- ~€63
- Soins en anglais
- Largement disponible en anglais
Comment fonctionne le système
The UAE runs a mixed system of government (public) hospitals and a large, heavily used private sector. Healthcare is regulated through a dual federal/emirate structure: the federal Ministry of Health and Prevention (MoHAP) sets national policy and standards, while each emirate has its own authority (DHA in Dubai, DoH/SEHA in Abu Dhabi, Sharjah Health Authority). Funding for non-citizens runs primarily through mandatory employer-/sponsor-provided private health insurance rather than general taxation.
Nomads and expatriates overwhelmingly use the private sector, which offers modern hospitals and clinics, short wait times and multilingual (largely English-speaking) staff. From 1 January 2025 a health authority-approved health insurance policy is a federal prerequisite for issuing or renewing a residence visa, with low-cost basic plans (around AED 320 per year) available; a private self-pay GP consultation typically runs about AED 150-500 (roughly EUR 38-125), with a midpoint around AED 250 (about EUR 63).
UAE government and international sources describe a well-resourced system; the federal ministry works with the emirate-level health authorities on national and international facility accreditation and quality standards, and coordination between the federal ministry and the separate emirate authorities (DHA, DoH) is a recurring administrative theme. The private self-pay GP cost is a market estimate rather than a fixed published tariff.
Bon à savoir
- Modern, well-equipped private hospitals and clinics, especially in Dubai and Abu Dhabi
- Care is widely available in English; the large expatriate majority means staff are often internationally trained
- Short waiting times in the private sector compared with many public systems
- Emergency ambulance is reached on 998; police 999 and fire/civil defence 997
À surveiller
- Public/government facilities are not free for foreigners; you generally need a health card and still pay (reduced) fees, and short-stay visitors typically pay full price
- Holding an approved health insurance policy is mandatory to get or renew a residence visa (federal rule effective 1 January 2025), and the cost is borne by the employer/sponsor for salaried staff
- Out-of-pocket private care can be expensive, so adequate insurance is essential for any non-emergency treatment
- Coverage, minimum plans and rules vary by emirate (DHA in Dubai, DoH in Abu Dhabi), so check the specific emirate of your stay
🩺 L'assurance dont vous aurez besoin
Comme les résidents temporaires ne peuvent guère s'appuyer sur le système public, et que le VWP exige une couverture, l'assurance santé privée fait partie de l'installation — pas un détail à régler après coup. Nous listons les formules qui répondent vraisemblablement à l'exigence de United Arab Emirates, classées par adéquation.
Voir les formules admissibles pour United Arab Emirates →La santé à United Arab Emirates : FAQ
La santé à United Arab Emirates : FAQ
Puis-je utiliser la santé publique à United Arab Emirates en tant que nomade numérique ?
En bref — le système public n'est pas ouvert aux résidents temporaires, l'assurance santé privée est donc la voie à suivre. Nomads and expatriates overwhelmingly use the private sector, which offers modern hospitals and clinics, short wait times and multilingual (largely English-speaking) staff. From 1 January 2025 a health authority-approved health insurance policy is a federal prerequisite for issuing or renewing a residence visa, with low-cost basic plans (around AED 320 per year) available; a private self-pay GP consultation typically runs about AED 150-500 (roughly EUR 38-125), with a midpoint around AED 250 (about EUR 63).
Quel est le numéro d'urgence à United Arab Emirates ?
998. Appelez-le pour les urgences vitales ; les services d'urgence vous prendront en charge quelle que soit votre assurance, mais vous pourrez être facturé ensuite si vous n'êtes pas couvert.
Ai-je besoin d'une assurance santé privée à United Arab Emirates ?
Oui — au-delà de la simple prudence, le VWP l'exige (obligatoire (explicite)). Voir les formules admissibles pour United Arab Emirates.
Sources
- Government Medical emergencies | The Official Portal of the UAE Government (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Health insurance | The Official Portal of the UAE Government (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Health insurance for resident expatriates | The Official Portal of the UAE Government (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Health regulatory authorities | The Official Portal of the UAE Government (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Doctor Consultation Fees in Dubai (2025): Specialty & Clinic (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15