In the UAE, iOS owns roughly 65 percent of the smartphone market and Android owns the rest, according to StatCounter's 2026 data. That is the opposite of every Asian and African market around it. It is also the single most important number for any founder deciding which platform to ship first.
The short version: if your audience is UAE residents with disposable income, expat professionals, government users, or premium retail customers, build iOS first. If your audience is delivery drivers, blue-collar workforce apps, parts of Sharjah and the Northern Emirates, or anything cross-GCC into Saudi Arabia, Android first wins. If your audience is everyone, you build both at once with React Native or Flutter.
This guide explains the why, the costs, and how Dubai teams actually make this call in 2026.
UAE platform share, what the data says
iOS share in the UAE has hovered between 62 and 68 percent since 2022. It is the highest in the region. Saudi Arabia is around 30 percent iOS. India is below 5 percent. Inside the UAE itself, the split changes by audience:
- Dubai, Abu Dhabi residents, banking and finance customers: 70 to 80 percent iOS
- Government and DEWA, Etisalat e&, Smart Dubai users: 60 to 70 percent iOS, but Android is non-negotiable
- Retail consumers in Sharjah, Ajman, Ras Al Khaimah: closer to 50/50
- Delivery drivers, warehouse staff, blue-collar workers: 80 to 90 percent Android
- Tourists and short-stay visitors: mirrors global average, around 30 percent iOS
If you are building a banking app for Dubai professionals, iOS-first is the obvious call. If you are building a fleet app for Talabat-style riders, Android-first wins.
What each platform costs to build
For an identical app of average complexity, expect:
| Build target | Typical cost in UAE | Build time | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| iOS only (native Swift) | AED 15,000 to 60,000 | 3 to 5 months | Premium UAE consumer apps, banking, healthtech |
| Android only (native Kotlin) | AED 15,000 to 60,000 | 3 to 5 months | Driver apps, mass-market, Saudi-bound products |
| Both native | AED 30,000 to 110,000 | 4 to 7 months | Apps needing platform-specific features (CarPlay, Android Auto, advanced widgets) |
| Cross-platform (Flutter or React Native) | AED 15,000 to 70,000 | 3 to 5 months | Most UAE startups and SMEs |
| PWA (progressive web app) | AED 8,000 to 30,000 | 6 to 12 weeks | Content apps, light commerce, no offline-heavy needs |
The headline: cross-platform gets you both stores for 30 to 50 percent less than building twice. The catch is that some interactions (deep widgets, Apple Watch, CarPlay) still need native code, and some financial regulators in the UAE are uncomfortable with cross-platform builds for high-trust apps.
Why iOS-first works in the UAE
Most founders here ship iOS first for four reasons.
Purchasing power. iPhone users in the UAE spend 2 to 4 times more on in-app purchases than Android users, mirroring global patterns. If your business depends on subscriptions, premium content, or paid features, iOS revenue per user is higher.
Cleaner App Store environment. Apple's review takes 24 to 48 hours, the rules are clear, fragmentation is minimal. Two iPhone models cover 80 percent of UAE iOS devices. You can ship and trust the experience.
Where decisions get made. Government officials, hospital procurement teams, bank executives, mall owners. The vast majority of these people in the UAE carry iPhones. If you are selling to them, your demo runs on iOS.
App Store ranking is easier in the UAE. Apple's UAE App Store has thinner competition than Google Play UAE. New apps surface faster, often within 24 hours of launch.
Why Android-first works for specific UAE audiences
Three cases where Android-first beats iOS-first:
Workforce, fleet, and delivery apps. Drivers, riders, warehouse staff, and field workers in the UAE overwhelmingly use Android. An iOS-only delivery app cannot recruit. A workforce management app that does not run on Android phones priced under AED 800 is dead on arrival.
Saudi market expansion. If you plan to launch in KSA after the UAE, build Android first. Saudi Arabia is 70 percent Android. The work you do once will earn you a market three times the size.
Price-sensitive consumer products. Discount apps, deals platforms, e-commerce targeting middle-income expats. Android shoppers convert at lower price points and respond better to free-with-ads models.
Cross-platform: the default in 2026
Most new UAE app projects in 2026 ship as cross-platform from day one. The cost of being on both stores from launch outweighs the small performance trade-off. Specifically:
- Flutter (Google's framework): strong for visually consistent apps, animation-heavy interfaces, custom design. Used by ADIB, ADNOC apps, several Dubai government services.
- React Native (Meta's framework): strong for content-heavy apps, easier to find developers in the UAE, large ecosystem. Used by Talabat's customer app, ENBD's mobile banking, and many Careem flows.
Both ship 80 to 95 percent shared code between iOS and Android. For most UAE businesses, cross-platform is the right call. Build for both at the start, optimise for one based on user signal in the first three months.
When you should stay native
You go fully native (Swift for iOS, Kotlin for Android) in a few situations:
- Heavy on-device performance: AR features, real-time video processing, machine learning inference.
- Deep OS integrations: Apple Wallet for transit cards, CarPlay, advanced widgets, Live Activities, Android's PiP and foreground services for real-time tracking.
- Banking and regulated fintech: the Central Bank of the UAE and VARA prefer native for trust and security audit reasons. Cross-platform fintech apps are legal but face more questions.
- Apps that will be on the device for years: native code ages better than cross-platform code.
How Dubai teams actually decide
The framework most product teams in the UAE use looks like this:
- Who is your highest-value user, and what do they carry? Build for them first.
- What revenue model are you using? Subscriptions and premium pricing favour iOS. Ads and freemium favour Android.
- Are you cross-GCC? If KSA is on the roadmap, Android cannot be ignored.
- How complex is the product? A simple MVP works fine on cross-platform. A regulated banking app or a deep AR experience does not.
- What is your hiring plan? Native iOS developers in the UAE charge a 20 to 30 percent premium over React Native or Flutter developers. Factor that in for the next two years, not just the build.
Hidden costs people forget
- App Store yearly fee: USD 99 for Apple, USD 25 one-time for Google. Trivial but easy to miss.
- App signing for the UAE: Apple needs your developer account verified with UAE Trade Licence and Emirates ID. Google is easier.
- Two-platform QA: budget 30 to 40 percent of the build for proper testing. Skipping this is how UAE apps get 2-star reviews in week one.
- Maintenance overhead: native apps need updates when Apple or Google ships a major OS. Cross-platform reduces this slightly but does not eliminate it.
Frequently asked questions
What is the iOS market share in the UAE in 2026? Around 62 to 68 percent. Highest in the GCC region. Has been stable for three years.
Is Flutter or React Native better for UAE startups? Both are good. Flutter ships slightly faster for visually rich consumer apps. React Native is easier to hire for in Dubai and integrates better with existing web teams. Pick based on team skills.
Can I build an app on iOS only in the UAE? Yes, and it is common. The risk is missing 35 percent of the market and the entire labour-force segment. If your business does not need them, iOS-only is fine.
Do UAE government apps need to support both platforms? Yes. UAE Pass, DubaiNow, Tasheel, MoHRE and all major government services run on both. If you are building a B2G app or anything aligned with Smart Dubai, both platforms are mandatory.
Which platform is faster to monetise in the UAE? iOS. App Store users in the region pay more per user. Conversion rates on paid features are roughly 2x higher than Google Play.
Closing thought
The right answer for most UAE founders in 2026 is: build cross-platform with Flutter or React Native, ship both stores at once, and watch which platform your users actually convert on for the first three months. Then optimise.
If you want a phased estimate for your specific audience and product, Skimbox builds iOS, Android, and cross-platform apps for clients across the UAE. Tell us what you are shipping and we will come back with a clear scope and a clear price.



