The GCC is genuinely one of the safest regions in the world for expatriates — consistently ranking at the top of global safety surveys. This guide isn't about fear. It's about knowing the specific risks that do exist so you can protect yourself and enjoy everything the Gulf has to offer.
Before we get to practical tips, let's start with the facts — because the data is genuinely reassuring. These aren't marketing claims; they come from independent global surveys and rankings.
The UAE has ranked #1 or top-3 safest country in multiple global surveys including Numbeo's Crime Index and the Global Peace Index sub-categories. Violent crime against expatriates is exceptionally rare.
Qatar consistently posts one of the world's lowest crime rates. The safety infrastructure built for the 2022 FIFA World Cup — thousands of cameras, trained security, well-lit streets — remains fully operational.
According to Expat Insider 2023, 94% of expatriates in Saudi Arabia report feeling personally safe. The Kingdom has transformed its urban environments dramatically since 2019, and expat enclaves are well-secured.
All GCC nations have some of the highest CCTV coverage per capita globally. Law enforcement is visible, well-funded, well-equipped, and professionally trained. Emergency response times are among the fastest worldwide.
All six GCC nations are safe — but each has its own character and minor nuances worth knowing.
The UAE is consistently ranked among the top-3 safest countries on Earth. Violent crime is extremely rare. The vast majority of safety incidents involve petty matters or scams rather than anything physical. Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah and all other major urban areas are safe to walk around at any hour.
Saudi Arabia has undergone a profound safety and social transformation since Vision 2030. Women expatriates in particular report dramatically improved experiences since 2019 — the removal of the male guardianship requirement for many daily activities has made a tangible difference. Compound living provides an additional layer of security and community.
Qatar routinely tops global safety rankings. The security investment made for the 2022 FIFA World Cup — extensive CCTV networks, trained personnel, well-lit public spaces, rapid emergency response — continues to benefit residents. Walking alone at night, including as a solo woman, is normal and generally fine throughout Qatar's main urban areas.
Kuwait is safe for expatriates — the large expat community (over 70% of the population is non-Kuwaiti) is well-established and welcomed. Cultural conservatism is stronger here than in UAE or Qatar, so expats should be especially mindful of respecting cultural and legal boundaries. Driving aggression is a genuine and well-known issue.
Bahrain is a small, well-policed island nation where the large expat population — particularly in the financial and healthcare sectors — is well-integrated. Day-to-day safety for expatriate nurses is very good. The 2011 civil unrest is a distant memory in terms of daily life, though awareness of politically sensitive areas remains sensible.
Oman is widely regarded as the most gentle and hospitable of all GCC nations. Omanis have a deserved reputation for warmth towards visitors and expatriates. Crime is extremely low. The main practical safety concern in Oman is road safety — the country has a disproportionately high road fatality rate relative to its peaceful character in all other respects.
The risks that matter in GCC are almost never violent crime. Here is an honest guide to the issues that do affect expatriate nurses — so you can protect yourself effectively.
This is the biggest real safety risk in GCC. Road fatality rates are significantly higher than Europe or Australia. Speeding, tailgating, and phone use while driving are common. Always wear your seatbelt — it is the law and it saves lives. Drive defensively and never match the speed of aggressive drivers.
Temperatures reach 40–50°C in summer (June–August). Humidity in coastal areas adds to heat stress. Dehydration and heat exhaustion can develop quickly, especially for those new to the climate. Drink 3–4 litres of water daily and limit outdoor exposure between 11am and 4pm during peak summer.
Job offer scams targeting overseas nurses are prevalent. Fake recruitment agencies, phantom hospital positions, inflated accommodation deals, and taxi overcharging are the most common. Always verify job offers through official hospital HR channels. Use Careem/Uber for taxis.
As a nurse, your workplace risks are specific: needlestick injuries, chemical/medication exposure, patient handling injuries, and violence from patients or relatives. These exist everywhere but follow your hospital's safety protocols, report every incident, and never skip PPE.
GCC cyber laws are strict and consequences can be severe. Posting criticism of governments, rulers, religions, or sharing inappropriate images can lead to fines, detention, or deportation. This is covered in full detail in our dedicated guide. Read the Social Media Safety Guide →
Pyramid and multi-level marketing schemes circulate heavily within expat WhatsApp communities. "Too good to be true" investment opportunities are common. Be especially wary of financial schemes promoted by fellow expats — social trust makes these more convincing and more dangerous.
The GCC is, on balance, very safe for women — in many respects safer than major Western cities. These tips are about navigating the region confidently, not about fear.
Start with this: Thousands of single female nurses live and thrive across the GCC every year. The region consistently ranks higher for women's personal safety than many European and North American cities. The tips below are practical enhancements to an already safe environment — not warnings about a dangerous one.
Multiple global surveys rank UAE, Qatar, and Oman among the top-10 safest countries for women. Violent crime targeting women is rare. You are far more likely to feel uncomfortable walking a European city at night than a GCC one.
Covered shoulders and knees outside the hospital is the single easiest way to avoid unwanted attention in most GCC countries. You don't need an abaya as an expat — but a light cardigan and loose trousers go a long way. Dressing modestly is respect, not restriction.
Use Careem or Uber rather than flagging a street taxi at night. Share your live location with a colleague when travelling alone after late shifts. This is sensible practice anywhere in the world — and these apps make it effortless.
Hospital campuses in GCC are secure, camera-monitored environments with security personnel on-site 24/7. Your colleagues and team are close by. The compound or dormitory model used by most GCC hospitals adds another layer of community and security.
If you are approached or harassed, you have every legal right to be assertive and call for help. GCC police forces take harassment seriously and law enforcement consistently supports the complainant. You are not expected to simply tolerate unwanted behaviour.
Major GCC hospital networks have explicit zero-tolerance harassment policies. If you experience anything, report it to your HR department and know that you can also contact the national labour ministry. Document everything — date, time, witnesses.
Expat WhatsApp groups are a fantastic resource but keep personal details (home address, salary, relationship status) limited until you genuinely know the people. Social trust is high in expat communities — which is mostly wonderful, but worth maintaining basic discretion.
Dating apps are widely used in GCC by expats. Use the same common sense you would anywhere: meet first in a public place, tell a trusted colleague where you are going, and keep your phone charged. Don't share your home address until you've met in person.
Road accidents are the #1 cause of serious harm for expatriates in GCC — not crime. This section could save your life. Please read it carefully, even if you are an experienced driver.
Important context: GCC road fatality rates are significantly higher than Europe, Australia, or North America. The primary causes are speeding, tailgating, and mobile phone use while driving — not poor road infrastructure (which is actually excellent). Most accidents are preventable by defensive driving.
As a healthcare professional you know heat illness theory. As someone new to 48°C in 80% humidity, the practical reality hits differently. Here is what you need to know to protect yourself.
Summer in GCC (June–September): temperatures reach 40–50°C, with coastal humidity of 80–90% making it feel significantly hotter. The body cannot cool itself effectively through sweating when humidity is this high. New arrivals are especially vulnerable in the first 2–4 weeks before acclimatisation.
Your passport, nursing licence, and employment contract are your most valuable possessions in GCC. Losing them — or having them retained illegally — creates enormous problems. Here is how to protect them.
Never hand your passport to anyone except official border control, immigration officers, or police with a legal reason to hold it. No employer, landlord, or hotel has the legal right to retain your passport permanently.
Make certified copies of: passport (all pages), visa/residency permit, nursing licence, employment contract, educational certificates. Keep one set at home, one at your workplace locker, and one with a trusted person back home.
Store original documents in a safe or lockbox if your accommodation has one. If not, keep them in a sturdy, lockable bag — not in your car. Hospital staff lockers are not secure enough for passports.
Scan all critical documents and store them in: an encrypted folder on your phone, your email (sent to yourself), and a secure cloud service (Google Drive with 2FA). This lets you access proof of identity even if everything physical is lost.
UAE and Qatar: illegal for employers to retain passports — report to the Ministry of Labour if forced. Saudi Arabia: retention is still common practice despite being technically against ILO guidelines — know your contract and push back where possible.
Step 1: Report to local police and get a police report (required for insurance and embassy). Step 2: Contact your home country's embassy with your police report and digital copies of documents. Step 3: Keep copies of the police report — you will need multiple copies.
For a full country-by-country emergency number directory, see our Emergency Numbers page. Below are the situations — and what to do in each.
UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman use 999. Saudi Arabia uses 911. Kuwait uses 112. GCC emergency response times are fast. Ambulances are well-equipped.
Say nothing until you speak to your embassy representative. Contact your embassy immediately — you have the right to consular assistance. Do not sign anything in a language you don't understand.
Report to police and get a police report number. This is essential for insurance claims. Keep the report number safe. GCC police are generally efficient with robbery reports.
Rare but real — GCC wadis and some urban areas can flood rapidly in rain. Follow Civil Defense alerts on social media and official apps. Do not drive through flooded roads.
Terrorism threat in GCC is very low — lower than most Western capitals. If an incident occurs: move away from the area calmly, shelter in place if instructed, follow official emergency communications only.
Register with your embassy: Most embassies offer a free registration service (e.g., UK FCDO LOCATE, US STEP program, Australian Smartraveller). Registration means embassy staff can reach you during a national emergency, evacuation, or natural disaster. Takes 5 minutes — do it before your first week is out.
The single most effective safety measure is a network of people who know you, where you are, and who to call if something seems wrong. Build this in your first week.
Register before your first week ends. Embassy staff can reach you in national emergencies, evacuations, and personal crises. Free, fast, and invaluable.
Identify colleagues who live nearby. Exchange personal mobile numbers — not just work contacts. These are your first responders in any emergency.
Most hospital compounds and apartment buildings have a residents' WhatsApp group. Join it early — it is your fastest channel for local information and help.
Arrange a mutual check-in with a colleague after night shifts — especially for the first few months. A simple "home safe" message takes three seconds and matters enormously.
Get the direct mobile number for your compound or building security — not just the main reception. Save it clearly in your phone as "Building Security" on day one.
Honest answers to the questions new nurses most commonly ask about safety in GCC.