Healthcare apps are one of the most regulated categories of software a UAE founder can build. The opportunity in 2026 is real: telemedicine consultations are now a normal patient expectation across Dubai and Abu Dhabi, insurance covers virtual consults under most plans, and clinics actively want digital channels to fill empty appointment slots. But the regulatory layer (DHA in Dubai, DoH in Abu Dhabi, MOHAP federally) is unforgiving, and most first-time founders underbudget the compliance work by 40 to 60 percent.
A clean telemedicine MVP in the UAE starts at AED 25,000. A simple patient-communications app without consults or records starts at AED 12,000. Everything in between depends on which regulator you fall under, which health information exchange you plug into, and whether insurance is in scope at launch.
Three categories of healthcare app
Patient-communications app: AED 12,000 to AED 25,000
Branded patient experience for a single clinic or small group. Appointment booking, doctor profiles, reminders, in-app messaging, clinic location. No video consults, no e-prescription, no clinical records. Four to six weeks. Best for clinics that want a digital front door without the regulatory load.
Clinic and doctor app: AED 30,000 to AED 80,000
Tools for the clinic side: appointment management, patient queue, basic EMR view, billing, doctor schedules, simple reporting. Often paired with an existing EMR rather than replacing it. Eight to twelve weeks. The most common build for clinic groups that already have software but want a better daily-use experience.
Full telemedicine platform: AED 50,000 to AED 200,000
Two-sided app with patient consult booking, video, e-prescription, payment, insurance claim, NABIDH or Malaffi integration, lab orders, and pharmacy delivery. Three to seven months. Required if you are building a standalone telemedicine business rather than a clinic add-on.
| Category | Build cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Patient-communications app | AED 12,000 to 25,000 | 4 to 6 weeks |
| Clinic and doctor app | AED 30,000 to 80,000 | 8 to 12 weeks |
| Full telemedicine platform | AED 50,000 to 200,000 | 3 to 7 months |
What the regulation actually requires
DHA telehealth licence
In Dubai, any paid medical consult delivered remotely needs a DHA telehealth licence attached to a licensed medical facility. Each consulting doctor also needs telemedicine privileges added to their DHA practitioner licence. Plan AED 6,000 to AED 15,000 in fees and four to eight weeks of approval. The app vendor does not hold the licence; the facility does.
NABIDH and Malaffi integration
NABIDH is Dubai's health information exchange. Any clinic seeing Dubai patients pushes encounter data into it. Malaffi is the Abu Dhabi equivalent. Integration is HL7 FHIR. Build cost AED 12,000 to AED 35,000 per exchange. A telemedicine app that ignores NABIDH at launch will be told by DHA to fix it within 30 to 90 days of operating.
PDPL and health data
Health data is special-category data under UAE PDPL. Storage must be inside the UAE for licensed facilities, encryption is mandatory, access must be logged, and consent must be explicit. PDPL work adds AED 8,000 to AED 20,000 to an honest healthcare MVP.
What changes the quote most
Video consult infrastructure
Twilio Video, Agora, or Daily.co are the common choices in 2026. Recording requires consent and UAE-resident storage. Per-consult video cost: AED 2 to AED 6 per minute depending on provider and volume.
E-prescription
Done correctly, e-prescription routes through DHA Sahatna or NABIDH and lets any UAE pharmacy fulfil the script. Build cost AED 10,000 to AED 25,000. Skipping this means doctors hand-write scripts and fax them, which kills the experience.
Insurance integration
eClaimLink (Dubai) and Shafafiya (Abu Dhabi) are the claim submission rails. Direct TPA APIs (Nextcare, Neuron, MedNet, NAS) let you do real-time eligibility and copay. Integration is AED 15,000 to AED 40,000. Most MVPs ship with one TPA and add the rest in phase two.
Doctor onboarding and verification
Onboarding doctors is more work than onboarding patients. Every practitioner needs DHA, DoH, or MOHAP licence verification, telemedicine privilege confirmation, malpractice insurance proof, and a facility association. A clean admin flow that handles this without a spreadsheet is AED 6,000 to AED 14,000. Plan for manual review of the first 50 to 100 doctors before any automation is worth building.
Arabic and RTL
Healthcare is the one app category in the UAE where Arabic is not optional at launch. Patients consult in Arabic, doctors document in Arabic when patients speak it, and a single-language UI gets flagged in DHA's app review. Proper bilingual design with RTL layout testing is AED 4,000 to AED 10,000 done at the start. Adding it later usually costs three to four times that.
A realistic AED 50,000 telemedicine build
For a single-clinic telemedicine MVP with video, e-prescription, payment, and NABIDH push, the AED 50,000 budget typically splits as:
| Line item | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Discovery and DHA licensing prep | AED 4,000 to 7,000 |
| Bilingual design (Arabic + English) | AED 7,000 to 11,000 |
| Patient app (React Native or Flutter) | AED 10,000 to 14,000 |
| Doctor and clinic web app | AED 8,000 to 12,000 |
| Video consult infrastructure | AED 4,000 to 7,000 |
| E-prescription and consent flow | AED 6,000 to 10,000 |
| NABIDH FHIR integration | AED 8,000 to 14,000 |
| PDPL hardening and audit logs | AED 3,000 to 6,000 |
Ongoing costs
Realistic 2026 numbers for a live UAE telemedicine app at small scale (under 1,000 consults per month):
- UAE-resident hosting (AWS Bahrain or G42): AED 1,200 to AED 4,500 per month
- Video consult minutes: AED 2 to AED 6 per minute, charged per consult
- NABIDH and Malaffi connectivity: AED 800 to AED 2,500 per month
- SMS and WhatsApp notifications: AED 400 to AED 1,800 per month
- Monitoring, error tracking, audit log storage: AED 600 to AED 1,500 per month
- App maintenance retainer: 20 to 30 percent of build cost per year
Total monthly burn excluding consult volume: AED 3,000 to AED 10,000.
App store approval realities
Apple and Google both apply extra scrutiny to medical apps. Expect to provide the DHA facility licence, proof that consulting doctors are licensed practitioners, a clear privacy policy mapped to UAE PDPL, and screenshots showing the consent flow. First-time submissions are rejected around 40 percent of the time, usually for missing licence proof or unclear data handling. Budget two to three weeks for the review cycle and have the licence paperwork ready before you submit.
Common reasons UAE healthcare apps stall
- Building the product before securing a licensed facility partner.
- Treating NABIDH or Malaffi as a phase-two problem.
- Picking a global video provider without UAE data residency.
- Skipping Arabic and RTL until after launch.
- Underestimating doctor onboarding friction; manual verification for the first 100 practitioners is the right answer.
Closing thought
UAE healthcare apps reward founders who treat compliance as core product work rather than as a phase-two box to tick. The MVPs that ship cleanly in 2026 are the ones that started the DHA conversation before writing the first line of code, signed a licensed facility partner before designing screens, and budgeted real money for NABIDH from week one.
If you want a transparent quote for a healthcare app in Dubai or the UAE, Skimbox builds telemedicine platforms, clinic apps, and patient portals for operators across the region. Send what you have and we will tell you the shortest compliant path to launch.



