Dubai Metro and Nol Card 2026: Complete Guide to Getting Around

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Mastering the Dubai Metro Nol card system is the single best way to move around the city quickly, cheaply and without the stress of traffic or parking. Dubai’s public transport network is clean, driverless and remarkably easy to use once you understand the lines, the Nol card types and the zone-based fares. This 2026 guide walks you through the Metro, including the upcoming Blue Line, the Nol card options, buses, trams and the RTA apps that tie it all together.

The Dubai Metro lines explained

The Metro currently runs on two main lines, with a third in construction.

  • Red Line — The backbone of the network, running parallel to Sheikh Zayed Road across 35 stations and about 67 km, from Centrepoint in the east to Expo in the west.
  • Green Line — Covers older Dubai and the creek districts with 20 stations across roughly 22.5 km. It connects to the Red Line at the Union and BurJuman interchange stations.
  • Route 2020 — A 15 km extension of the Red Line with seven stations, branching from Jebel Ali station out to the Expo site, opening up the city’s south-western communities.

Looking ahead, the much-anticipated Blue Line is under construction and planned to open in 2029, adding 14 stations to connect key residential communities to the city’s business districts. It is part of Dubai’s long-term push to make public transport the default choice for residents and the millions of visitors arriving each year, as covered in our Dubai tourism report.

Nol card types: which one is right for you

The Nol card is your contactless ticket for the Metro, buses, trams and water transport. There are four main types:

  • Red Ticket — A paper-based card costing AED 2, ideal for visitors making occasional trips. It holds single journeys or day passes.
  • Silver Card — The standard everyday card, AED 25 (including credit), for residents and frequent riders.
  • Gold Card — Also AED 25, giving access to the premium Gold Class cabin at double the standard fare.
  • Blue Card — A personalised card costing around AED 70, offering 50% concession fares for students, senior citizens and People of Determination.

How fares work: the zone system

Dubai is divided into fare zones, and your fare depends on how many zones you cross. With a Silver Nol card, standard fares are:

  • 1 zone: AED 3.00
  • 2 zones: AED 5.00
  • 3 or more zones: AED 7.50

Blue (concession) card holders pay half these amounts, while single-use Red tickets cost a little more per trip. There is also a daily fare cap of AED 14 on Silver and Blue cards (AED 20 for Gold), so heavy travel in a single day is automatically limited.

Passes for regular commuters

If you ride daily, a travel pass saves money. Silver card monthly passes start at AED 140 for one zone, AED 230 for two adjacent zones and AED 350 for all zones. Gold passes cost double, and concession passes are roughly half. Seven-day, 90-day and annual durations are also available on registered cards, which is worth setting up if commuting is part of your routine. For new arrivals job-hunting, an affordable commute matters, and our guide to finding a job in Dubai pairs naturally with sorting out your transport.

Buses, trams and the wider network

The same Nol card works across the whole network. The Dubai Tram runs a circular loop of 11 stations through the Marina and Jumeirah area, all within Zone 2, so any tram journey costs a flat AED 3 on a Silver card. The tram links neatly with the Metro and the Palm Monorail. A vast bus network fills the gaps the rail lines do not reach, using the same tap-in, tap-out Nol system, so you never need cash.

The RTA apps that make it easy

The Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) offers smartphone apps that handle journey planning, fare checking, Nol balance top-ups and live timetables. You can plan a multi-leg trip across Metro, tram and bus, check your remaining balance and recharge instantly, all from your phone. Many residents now use the digital Nol option on their device, removing the need for a physical card entirely.

Tips for getting around like a local

  • Always tap in and tap out, even on buses and trams, or you may be charged a maximum fare.
  • Avoid rush hours (roughly 7–9 am and 5–7 pm) on the Red Line if you can.
  • Keep at least AED 7.50 on your card to clear the gates.
  • Gold Class is worth the premium during peak times for guaranteed seating.

With low fares, expanding lines and a single card covering everything, the Metro makes living without a car genuinely practical, a real factor when budgeting your move as detailed in our UAE cost of living breakdown. Set up your Nol card on arrival, download the RTA app, and Dubai opens up around you.

James Mitchell
James Mitchell
Business and Economy Editor

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