Emirate of Sharjah
Sharjah
The UAE's self-styled cultural capital works as a dry, family-friendly half-day from Dubai, built around the Islamic Civilization museum and Heart of Sharjah; the alcohol ban here is absolute. Check FCDO advice before booking.
Best as
A half- or full-day trip from Dubai
From Dubai
30โ40 km; 35 min off-peak, up to 90 min in rush hour
Alcohol
Completely dry โ none sold, served or permitted anywhere
Standout sight
Sharjah Museum of Islamic Civilization (~ยฃ2 / AED 10)
In short
Sharjah at a glance
Before anything else: the FCDO currently advises against all but essential travel to the whole UAE, Sharjah included, over the risk of regional escalation in the Gulf โ check the live advice and your insurance before you book (GOV.UK). If you do go, Sharjah is the UAE's self-styled cultural capital and, for most UK visitors, a half- or full-day trip from Dubai rather than a base in its own right. The draw is heritage Dubai has bulldozed: the restored Heart of Sharjah lanes, the standout Museum of Islamic Civilization, the Al Noor Mosque, and the family-friendly Al Majaz Waterfront and Al Qasba on the lagoon. Two things shape the whole visit. First, Sharjah is completely dry โ no alcohol is sold or served anywhere, and bringing it in (even a sealed bottle in your boot) is an offence, not a grey area. Second, the 30โ40 km drive from Dubai is one of the Gulf's most congested commutes, so the difference between a 35-minute hop and a 90-minute crawl is entirely about timing. Go for the culture and the value, not for a night out.
The short version
- Check the FCDO advice first: it currently warns against all but essential travel to the UAE, and ignoring it can void your travel insurance (GOV.UK).
- Treat Sharjah as a day trip from Dubai, not a base โ the sights cluster, and there's no nightlife to keep you for an evening.
- Sharjah is 100% dry: no alcohol is sold, served or permitted anywhere, and carrying it in can mean a fine, detention or deportation (GOV.UK).
- The Museum of Islamic Civilization is the one paid ticket worth buying โ about ยฃ2 (AED 10) and the best museum in the emirate.
- Time the DubaiโSharjah drive around the 7โ9am and 5โ7pm commuter peaks, or you'll lose an hour each way at the border.
- Visit NovemberโMarch; JuneโSeptember tops 40ยฐC and the heritage walks become unbearable.
- Dress more conservatively here than in Dubai โ Sharjah enforces its modesty 'Decency Law' more visibly.
One thing to settle before you read any further: the FCDO currently advises against all but essential travel to the whole UAE, Sharjah included, over the risk of regional escalation in the Gulf. That can shift either way, so check the live advice for the United Arab Emirates and confirm your insurance still covers you before you book โ going against the advice can void the policy. The guide below assumes youโve done that and decided the trip is on.
Sharjah is the emirate that kept what Dubai knocked down. A 20-minute hop up the coast from its glassy neighbour, it leans into heritage and culture: the restored coral-stone lanes of the Heart of Sharjah, the genuinely good Museum of Islamic Civilization in a domed former souk, the lagoon-side Al Noor Mosque, and an arts scene that has made the emirate a UNESCO-recognised cultural hub. For UK visitors it works best as a half- or full-day trip from a Dubai base, not a destination you sleep in โ partly because the sights cluster neatly into a day, and partly because there is nothing to keep you in the evening.
That second point is the one to plan around. Sharjah is the UAEโs only completely dry emirate: no alcohol is sold or served anywhere โ not in hotels, not in restaurants โ and bringing your own in, even a sealed bottle in the boot of a taxi, is an offence rather than a grey area. It also enforces its modesty rules more visibly than Dubai. None of that should put you off the day; it just means you come for the heritage and the value, eat well without a bar bill, and head back to Dubai if you want a drink with dinner.
The other variable is the drive. The 30โ40 km DubaiโSharjah corridor is one of the busiest commutes in the Gulf, so the gap between a breezy 35-minute run and a 90-minute crawl is almost entirely about timing. Go mid-morning, dodge the 7โ9am and 5โ7pm peaks and Friday afternoons, and youโll wonder what the fuss was about. The structured guide below โ what each museum costs in pounds, where the clusters are, and how to handle the transfer โ picks up from here.
Plan your Sharjah trip
Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.
Top things to do in Sharjah
Sharjah Museum of Islamic Civilization
Housed in a restored domed former souk on the Sharjah Corniche, this museum runs through Islamic faith, science, astronomy and the arts across several well-lit galleries, with calligraphy and scientific-instrument collections as the highlight. Admission is only a few dirhams โ roughly ยฃ2 for adults โ so the small fee should never be the reason to skip it.
Heart of Sharjah
Heart of Sharjah is the restored historic quarter near Sharjah Creek: coral-stone lanes, courtyards, the Al Hisn fort and the free Sharjah Art Museum. Wandering the streets and visiting the Art Museum cost nothing; the fort and individual heritage museums charge a small fee of roughly a few dirhams each โ around ยฃ2.
Where to stay first
The areas that make a first visit easier โ not an exhaustive directory.
Stay in Dubai, day-trip to Sharjah
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe honest default. With no nightlife and a strict dry rule, almost no UK leisure visitor sleeps in Sharjah by choice โ base in Dubai (Deira is closest, 20โ30 minutes off-peak) and come for the day.
Best for: Almost everyone โ culture by day, Dubai by night
Al Majaz / Al Khan (Sharjah lagoon)
ยฃ valueIf you do stay, the lagoon-front hotels near Al Majaz put you beside the waterfront and museums. Rooms are noticeably cheaper than equivalent Dubai stays, but expect no minibar and a quiet evening.
Best for: Budget travellers who don't want a drink
Deira (Dubai side, nearest base)
ยฃ valueIf you want to minimise the commute, Dubai's old quarter sits right on the Sharjah border โ the shortest, cheapest taxi or bus hop into the museums, and you keep Dubai's bars and the metro.
Best for: Day-trippers who want the shortest drive
Airport to city centre
| Option | Time | Cost | Book ahead? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Via Dubai (DXB) โ taxi to Sharjah | 35-90 min depending on traffic | AED 40-70 (~ยฃ8-14) from Deira | How most UK visitors arrive โ fly to DXB |
| Inter-emirate bus from Dubai (Union/Al Ghubaiba) | 45-75 min | a few dirhams (~ยฃ1-2) | Cheapest, but hits the same traffic |
| Sharjah Airport (SHJ) taxi to Sharjah city | ~20-25 min | AED 50-70 (~ยฃ10-14) | SHJ is Air Arabia's hub; no UK direct flights |
| Pre-booked private transfer | Door to door | from ~ยฃ30-45 | Easiest with luggage or a family |
When to go
Sweet spot: November to March is the only sensible window for Sharjah: daytime highs of 21โ28ยฐC make the heritage walks and waterfront pleasant, and evenings are mild. December to February is the comfortable peak. April and October are warm but doable shoulder months.
Summer (JuneโSeptember) is brutal here โ 40ยฐC-plus with high humidity, and Sharjah's appeal is largely outdoors (old-town lanes, the Corniche, Al Majaz), so the season writes off the best of it. Winter is the time to come. During Ramadan, daytime eating, drinking and smoking in public are off-limits and museum hours shift, and Sharjah enforces this more strictly than Dubai โ check whether your trip overlaps.
What it costs
There are no direct UKโSharjah flights, so UK travellers almost always fly to Dubai (DXB, ~7 hours nonstop, return economy roughly ยฃ350โยฃ550) and reach Sharjah by road. Sharjah's own airport (SHJ) is the hub for budget carrier Air Arabia, but routes from the UK are indirect via Cairo, Istanbul or the Gulf and rarely cheaper once you add the connection.
Daily budget per person
All dirham figures use ยฃ1 โ AED 4.9 (June 2026). Sharjah is genuinely cheap by UAE standards: museums are AED 5โ10, food is unflashy and good value, and there's no alcohol to inflate the total. Card and Apple/Google Pay work everywhere; keep AED 100 for taxis and small entries.
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Sharjah FAQs
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