The Rate That Has Not Moved in 29 Years
Since November 1997, one US dollar has bought exactly AED 3.6725 — a fixed exchange rate maintained without a single deviation for nearly three decades. Most currencies float freely against the dollar, rising and falling with trade flows and investor sentiment. The dirham does not. The Central Bank of UAE operates a currency board: it holds enough US dollar reserves to back every dirham in circulation, and it stands ready to exchange dirhams for dollars at the official rate on demand.
Before 1997, the dirham was informally pegged at a similar level, but the formal currency board arrangement locked the rate in law. At that time, oil revenues were the dominant driver of UAE GDP, almost entirely priced in USD. Fixing the dirham to the dollar eliminated currency risk for the government's largest source of income and gave foreign investors a predictable cost of doing business.
The peg rate of 3.6725 was not arbitrary. It was set to reflect the dirham's purchasing power at the time relative to the dollar, and it has remained there since — making it one of the longest-running fixed exchange rates in any significant economy.
How the Central Bank Maintains the Peg
The Central Bank of UAE maintains the peg through a currency board mechanism, not through active market intervention in the way that China or Switzerland occasionally manage their currencies. A currency board means the dirham money supply is mechanically linked to USD reserves: the bank can only issue new dirhams when it acquires an equivalent value of US dollars to back them.
This creates a self-correcting system. If demand for dirhams rises — say, more capital flows into the UAE — the central bank receives dollars and issues more dirhams. If capital flows out, the bank absorbs dirhams and releases dollars from reserves. Interest rates in the UAE effectively track US Federal Reserve rates automatically, because large divergences would trigger capital flows that strain the reserve base.
As of 2026, the UAE holds over USD 170 billion in foreign reserves, among the highest reserve-to-GDP ratios in the world. This is the financial firewall that makes the peg credible. Speculators would need to bet against a sovereign wealth backstop that includes Abu Dhabi Investment Authority assets estimated above USD 900 billion.
| Mechanism | How It Works | Effect on Dirham |
|---|---|---|
| Currency board | Every AED issued is backed by USD reserves | Limits money supply growth |
| USD reserves | CBUAE holds >$170B in foreign reserves | Deters speculative attack |
| Interest rate tracking | UAE rates follow the US Fed automatically | Capital stays in balance |
| Sovereign wealth backing | ADIA adds an implicit $900B+ firewall | Market confidence remains high |
What the Peg Means for Expats and Their Finances
If you earn in AED and send money home, the peg eliminates one layer of currency risk entirely: you always know how many dollars you are sending. For Pakistani, Indian, and Filipino workers — whose home currencies float freely against the dollar — the risk is between the dollar and the home currency, not between AED and dollar. The AED-to-USD conversion is always 3.6725.
For expats earning in USD or with USD-denominated assets (common in banking, oil, and tech sectors in Dubai), working in the UAE carries no exchange rate risk on the AED side. Your AED salary, when converted to USD, is perfectly stable. This predictability is a significant financial advantage over working in a country with a floating currency.
The peg also affects borrowing. UAE mortgages and personal loans are typically priced off EIBOR (Emirates Interbank Offered Rate), which moves in step with SOFR and US Fed rates. When the Federal Reserve raised rates sharply in 2022–2023, UAE variable mortgage holders saw their monthly payments increase in parallel — a direct consequence of the peg transmitting US monetary policy into the UAE economy.
The Inflation Problem: Importing US Monetary Policy
The peg's main cost is that the UAE cannot run an independent monetary policy. When the US Fed raises rates to fight American inflation, UAE rates rise too — even if UAE inflation dynamics are entirely different. Conversely, when the Fed cut rates near zero in 2020–2021, the UAE was flooded with cheap money that inflated Dubai property prices and consumer goods.
Because so many goods are imported and priced in USD, US inflation translates directly into UAE price levels. The 2022–2023 US inflation episode pushed UAE inflation above 4% — high by historical standards for a country where consumer prices had been broadly stable for a decade. Rent, food, and imported goods all rose in tandem with global USD prices.
For households budgeting in Dubai, this means your purchasing power is partly determined by decisions made in Washington DC, not Abu Dhabi. When the Fed is in a tightening cycle, the dirham effectively strengthens against non-USD currencies (euro, pound, rupee) while everything imported from the US becomes more expensive.
GCC Currency Comparisons: Who Pegs and Who Does Not
The UAE is not alone in pegging to the dollar. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, and Oman all maintain dollar pegs at fixed rates, reflecting the same logic: oil revenues in USD, foreign workforces sending remittances, and deep ties to US financial markets. Kuwait is the one GCC exception — it pegs to a basket of currencies in which the dollar holds the largest weight (approximately 55%), giving it slightly more flexibility.
The coordinated GCC peg creates a de facto single currency zone for the region. An AED, SAR, and QAR are each tied to the dollar at their respective fixed rates, which means they also trade at predictable cross-rates against each other. AED 1 = SAR 1.0209 essentially always, a figure that changes only when one of the pegs is adjusted — which has not happened since Kuwait revalued in 2007.
The risk all GCC pegs share is oil price dependency. Government revenues in dollar terms collapse when oil falls to USD 40 per barrel or below. If a country's fiscal position deteriorates severely enough that it cannot maintain USD reserves, pressure on the peg builds. The UAE's diversified economy (Dubai's non-oil GDP is over 99% of its total) and ADIA's sovereign wealth provide significantly more cushion than smaller GCC states.
| Country | Currency | Peg Type | Rate vs USD | Peg Since |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UAE | AED | Hard dollar peg | 3.6725 | 1997 |
| Saudi Arabia | SAR | Hard dollar peg | 3.7500 | 1986 |
| Bahrain | BHD | Hard dollar peg | 0.3760 | 1980 |
| Qatar | QAR | Hard dollar peg | 3.6400 | 1980 |
| Kuwait | KWD | Basket peg (USD ~55%) | ~0.3070 | 2007 (basket) |
| Oman | OMR | Hard dollar peg | 0.3845 | 1986 |
Should You Hold AED or USD Savings in Dubai?
Since AED and USD move together by definition, the question of whether to save in AED or USD inside the UAE is primarily a question of interest rates, not currency risk. UAE banks typically pay slightly higher rates on AED deposits than on USD deposits for the same product — partly to incentivise local currency holding and partly due to the slight EIBOR-SOFR spread. As of mid-2026, AED 12-month fixed deposits at top UAE banks offer around 4.5–5% per annum against comparable USD deposits at 4.2–4.8%.
The practical recommendation: if your expenses are in AED (rent, school fees, groceries), hold your emergency fund in AED. If you plan to repatriate savings within 12 months, USD or home-currency deposits may be more appropriate to avoid one unnecessary conversion. For long-term savings in the UAE, AED makes the most sense — it tracks the dollar perfectly while keeping your money in the currency of your daily expenditure.
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