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Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
Sharjah

Where to stay in Sharjah

Check the FCDO advice first, then weigh the Al Majaz lagoon by the museums against Al Nahda on the Dubai border โ€” or skip a dry, nightlife-free Sharjah hotel and day-trip from Deira.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Sharjah

Be honest with yourself first: Sharjah is completely dry and has no nightlife, and the FCDO currently advises against all but essential travel to the whole UAE โ€” check the live advice and your insurance before you book (GOV.UK). If you still want a Sharjah hotel, stay by the Al Majaz lagoon โ€” it puts you on the Al Majaz Waterfront beside Al Qasba and a short taxi from the Museum of Islamic Civilization, and rooms run noticeably cheaper than equivalent Dubai stays. Choose Al Nahda, right on the Dubai border, if you want Sharjah prices but a fast hop into Dubai's metro and bars. Pick Al Khan for beach-side calm near the lagoon mouth. Many UK visitors skip a Sharjah base entirely and day-trip in from Dubai's Deira instead.

The short version

  • Best Sharjah base overall: Al Majaz, beside the lagoon and a short taxi from the Museum of Islamic Civilization.
  • Best for keeping Dubai close: Al Nahda, straddling the border โ€” Sharjah room rates, but Dubai's metro and bars two stops away.
  • Best for quiet and beach: Al Khan, by the lagoon mouth and Al Mamzar beach.
  • Old-town atmosphere is in the Heart of Sharjah, but there are almost no hotels there โ€” sightsee, don't sleep.
  • Remember Sharjah is 100% dry: no minibar, no hotel bar, no nightcap anywhere in the emirate (GOV.UK).
  • If a drink with dinner or any nightlife matters, base in Dubai's Deira (20โ€“30 min off-peak) and day-trip to the museums.
  • 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).

Best areas to book

Al Majaz

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The cleanest Sharjah-hotel pick: the lagoon-front district wrapped around Al Majaz Waterfront, with the 100-metre musical fountain and Al Qasba's canal on the doorstep, and the Museum of Islamic Civilization a short taxi around the Corniche (the sights sit in clusters rather than one walkable strip, so plan to ride between them rather than walk in the heat). Mid-range towers here cost noticeably less than Dubai equivalents โ€” just expect no minibar and a genuinely quiet evening.

Best for: First-timers who want a Sharjah base near the museums

Browse hotels Central Sharjah, by the lagoon

Al Nahda

ยฃ value

The cross-border district that sits half in Sharjah, half in Dubai. Book the Sharjah side for cheaper rooms, then walk or take a short taxi across to Dubai's Stadium/Al Nahda metro for the bars and the rest of Dubai. The trade-off is heavy through-traffic on Al Ittihad Road during the morning and evening peaks.

Best for: Value-seekers who still want Dubai within reach

Browse hotels On the Dubaiโ€“Sharjah border

Al Khan / Al Mamzar

ยฃยฃ mid-range

By the lagoon mouth on the coast, this is the calmer, beach-leaning corner โ€” handy for Al Mamzar beach park and the aquarium, and a 10-minute drive from the museums. Quieter than Al Majaz at night, but you'll rely on taxis to reach the heritage core.

Best for: Families and a quieter, beach-side stay

Browse hotels Coast, 10 min from the museums

Heart of Sharjah (Al Qasimia old town)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The coral-stone heritage quarter is the prettiest place to walk, but it's a museum district, not a hotel one โ€” bar a couple of boutique heritage guesthouses there's almost nothing to book. Come here for the morning sightseeing and sleep in Al Majaz or Dubai.

Best for: Atmosphere by day โ€” not an overnight base

Browse hotels Old city, by the Corniche

Deira (Dubai side โ€” the day-trip base)

ยฃ value

The honest alternative for most UK leisure visitors. Dubai's old quarter sits right against the Sharjah border, so it's the shortest, cheapest taxi or bus hop into the museums (20โ€“30 min off-peak) while you keep Dubai's bars, restaurants and metro for the evening.

Best for: Anyone who wants nightlife and the shortest commute

Browse hotels Dubai side of the border

The simple choice

Decide one thing first: do you want to drink in the evening or have any nightlife? If yes, don't book a Sharjah hotel at all โ€” base in Dubai's Deira and day-trip to the museums, because the whole emirate is dry. If you're happy with a calm, alcohol-free stay, filter for Al Majaz for the walkable lagoon-and-museums setting, and only drop to Al Nahda if you want to shave the price and don't mind crossing into Dubai for the buzz.

Noise, traffic and the commute

The thing that ruins Sharjah stays isn't safety โ€” petty crime is low and the streets feel calm โ€” it's traffic noise. Al Nahda and anywhere on Al Ittihad Road absorb the full Dubaiโ€“Sharjah commuter crush during the 7โ€“9am and 5โ€“7pm peaks, so ask for a room facing away from the main road. Al Majaz by the lagoon and Al Khan on the coast are markedly quieter at night.

What a Sharjah hotel is โ€” and isn't

Sharjah rooms are cheaper than Dubai's, but the dry rule changes the product: no hotel bar, no minibar, no room-service wine, and pools and dress codes are more conservative than across the border. Sharjah enforces its modesty rules more visibly than Dubai under its 'Decency Law', so cover shoulders and knees in public areas and keep beachwear to hotel pools and beaches (GOV.UK). If that suits the trip, the saving is real; if it doesn't, the 30โ€“40 km hop back to Dubai is short enough to stay there instead.

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Before you book

This sits under a live FCDO advisory: as of June 2026 the FCDO advises against all but essential travel to the whole UAE, Sharjah included, on regional-security grounds, and travelling against that advice can invalidate your travel insurance (GOV.UK). Reconfirm the live position on the GOV.UK page for the United Arab Emirates before you commit to a hotel, and treat everything above as advice for once you've checked the current guidance and decided to go.

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Where to stay in Sharjah FAQs

Is it better to stay in Sharjah or Dubai?
For most UK leisure visitors, Dubai โ€” because Sharjah is completely dry, has no nightlife and clusters its sights into a half-day. Stay in Dubai's Deira, right on the border, and day-trip to the Sharjah museums in 20โ€“30 minutes off-peak. Choose a Sharjah hotel only if you specifically want the cheaper, quieter, alcohol-free stay, in which case Al Majaz by the lagoon is the pick.
Which area of Sharjah should a first-timer stay in?
Al Majaz. It sits on the lagoon with the Al Majaz Waterfront and Al Qasba on the doorstep and the Museum of Islamic Civilization a short taxi around the Corniche, the rooms are good value, and it's quieter at night than the border districts. Al Nahda is cheaper still but noisier and aimed at people who want quick access back into Dubai.
Can you drink alcohol in a Sharjah hotel?
No. Sharjah is the one fully dry emirate โ€” there's no hotel bar, no minibar and no alcohol served or sold anywhere, including in restaurants, and carrying it in can mean a fine, detention or deportation (GOV.UK). If a drink with dinner matters, base in Dubai and visit Sharjah as a daytime trip.
Is Al Nahda a good place to stay?
It's the value play. The Sharjah side of Al Nahda has the emirate's cheaper rooms while sitting one or two metro stops from Dubai's bars and centre, so it suits travellers who want Sharjah prices without giving up Dubai's evenings. The catch is traffic: Al Ittihad Road carries the full border commute, so pick a room away from the main road and avoid the rush-hour peaks.

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