Zero Tolerance: Abu Dhabi vs Dubai
The single most important thing to understand about speed enforcement in Abu Dhabi is this: there is no official buffer above the posted speed limit. Dubai operates a 20 km/h tolerance — drivers in an 80 km/h zone can legally travel up to 100 km/h before a camera triggers. Abu Dhabi has no equivalent. When the sign says 100 km/h, that is your ceiling.
In practice, cameras carry a small technical margin (typically 1–3 km/h) to account for speedometer calibration variance. This is not an official tolerance and should not be relied upon. The safe approach is simple: treat posted limits as absolute maxima.
| Policy | Abu Dhabi | Dubai |
|---|---|---|
| Official speed buffer | None | 20 km/h above posted limit |
| Enforcement philosophy | Zero tolerance | Graduated enforcement |
| Camera types in use | Fixed, mobile, average speed | Fixed, mobile, radar |
Drivers accustomed to Dubai must reset their habits at the emirate boundary — particularly on Sheikh Zayed Bridge and the E11 corridor, where enforcement is especially heavy.
Types of Speed Cameras
Fixed Speed Cameras
Permanently installed units, typically housed in bright yellow enclosures, mounted at accident-prone areas, school zones, residential roads, and major intersections. Active 24/7, often covering both directions of travel. The most common enforcement tool — once you know your regular routes, their locations become predictable, but consistent speed compliance is still the only reliable protection.
Mobile Speed Cameras
Portable equipment deployed by Abu Dhabi Police on overpasses, roadsides, and less visible positions. Locations rotate regularly. There is no reliable way to anticipate them — the only effective strategy is maintaining legal speeds at all times.
Average Speed Cameras
Two cameras at either end of a measured stretch record your entry and exit times. If your average speed over the distance exceeds the limit, a fine is issued automatically. This technology specifically prevents the habit of braking near fixed cameras and accelerating between them. Average speed enforcement is used on sections of the E11 and E22 highways and on approaches to major bridges.
Major Enforcement Locations
Abu Dhabi has hundreds of cameras across all road types. Enforcement is particularly heavy at:
- E11 highway (Sheikh Zayed Road) — fixed cameras at regular intervals plus average-speed sections, especially between Abu Dhabi city and Al Ain
- E22 Coastal Highway — fixed and mobile units; several high-accident sections are specifically targeted
- Sheikh Zayed Bridge approaches — average speed enforcement; Abu Dhabi limits apply right up to the emirate boundary
- Saadiyat Island roads — fixed cameras at intersections; 60–80 km/h limits strictly enforced
- All school zones — 40 km/h limit; cameras active during school operating hours
- Airport Road, Corniche Road, Khalifa Street — fixed cameras on all major urban arterials
Speed Limits by Road Type
| Road Type | Typical Limit |
|---|---|
| School zones (during operating hours) | 40 km/h |
| Residential and internal roads | 60 km/h |
| Urban arterials | 80 km/h |
| Major highways | 100 km/h |
| Open highways (where signed) | 120 km/h |
| Construction zones | Variable — always follow posted signs |
Speed limits change frequently near construction and road works. Do not rely on memory — observe signs on every journey.
Consequences of Speeding
Every speeding violation generates both a financial fine and black points. The two are independent: paying the fine does not remove the points. Points accumulate nationally — a violation in Abu Dhabi counts toward the same total as one in Dubai or any other emirate.
| Overage | Severity | Typical Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 1–20 km/h | Minor | Fine + low black points added |
| 21–40 km/h | Moderate | Larger fine + moderate black points |
| 40+ km/h | Serious | AED 1,000 fine + 6 black points (vehicle confiscation at 60+ km/h) |
| Extreme overage | Critical | Maximum points + possible vehicle confiscation |
For current fine amounts and exact black point values, check tamm.abudhabi or the Abu Dhabi Police app — these are set by law and updated periodically. See also our black points guide for suspension thresholds and how to clear your record.
Test Your Knowledge of Abu Dhabi Speed Laws
Speed violations are the most common source of fines and black points for new drivers. Our free quiz covers the scenarios that catch drivers out most often.
Take the Free Quiz →How to Check and Pay Speed Fines
Violations typically appear in the system within 24–48 hours of being recorded. You will not always receive an SMS notification, so checking regularly is important — particularly after driving on heavily monitored routes.
- TAMM portal: Visit tamm.abudhabi, log in with UAE Pass, select “Traffic Violations” to view and pay
- Abu Dhabi Police app: Download on iOS or Android; log in with Emirates ID; navigate to “Traffic Services” → “My Violations”
- In person: Any Abu Dhabi Police Traffic Department office with your Emirates ID and driving licence
Pay within 60 days to receive a 35% discount. Serious unpaid fines can result in an emigration hold that prevents you from leaving the UAE until the debt is cleared.
Appealing a Speed Camera Fine
Submit an appeal through the TAMM portal or in person at an Abu Dhabi Police Traffic Department office within 30 days of the violation. Speed camera evidence is photographic and includes vehicle, plate, and time stamp. Appeals succeed only when there is a clear system error — a wrong plate number or demonstrable camera fault. If you were actually speeding, an appeal is unlikely to succeed.
Safe Speed Management Habits
- Use cruise control on highways. Set it to the posted limit and eliminate the temptation to drift above it gradually.
- Leave earlier. Most dangerous speeding is driven by time pressure. A 15-minute buffer in your journey plan removes the need to rush.
- Treat all limits as absolute. In Abu Dhabi, calculating what you can “get away with” is not a useful approach. The enforcement system is designed specifically to catch this behaviour.
- Know your routes. Learn where limits change on roads you use regularly, especially approaching school zones and construction areas where limits drop suddenly.
For professional coaching on speed management and safe driving habits in Abu Dhabi’s specific traffic environment, see our certified instructor directory.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Abu Dhabi speed fines affect my driving record in Dubai?
Yes. The UAE traffic system is unified. Black points from any emirate accumulate on your national driving record. However, Dubai’s insurance and enforcement consequences may differ; check with your insurer how an Abu Dhabi violation affects your policy.
If I received 12 black points for serious speeding, can a course reduce them?
Approved defensive driving or refresher courses may reduce your points balance by a small number. Contact the ITC for currently approved courses. Our instructor directory lists certified trainers who offer defensive driving sessions that may qualify.
What is the fastest legal speed on Abu Dhabi roads?
120 km/h on open highways where that limit is signed. Most highway sections are 100 km/h. Always observe the posted sign for the specific section you are on — limits can change within a few hundred metres, especially near intersections, construction, and urban areas.