Building an ecommerce website in Dubai costs anywhere from AED 5,000 to AED 300,000, and the build itself is the easy part [1][2]. The expensive surprises come after launch: the gateway fee Shopify quietly adds in the UAE, the trade licence you legally need before you can take a single payment, the VAT you have to show in your prices, and the Arabic store that looks fine and converts nothing. This guide covers all of it, because shipping the site and legally running a store in Dubai are two different jobs, and almost no cost guide covers the second.
We build commerce sites for UAE brands out of our Dubai and Bengaluru teams, so we see the quotes that look cheap until the gateway fees and the licence and the Arabic rebuild land. Here is the full picture, in the order you actually hit it.
How much does an ecommerce website cost in Dubai?
A basic store starts around AED 5,000, most SME stores land between AED 8,000 and AED 35,000, and complex custom builds or marketplaces run to AED 300,000 or more [1][3]. Here is the realistic 2026 spread by store size:
| Store type | Cost (AED) | Build time |
|---|---|---|
| Basic store (template, few products) | 5,000 to 20,000 | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Growth store (CMS, integrations) | 20,000 to 45,000 | 1 to 2 months |
| Advanced store (custom features) | 45,000 to 90,000 | 2 to 4 months |
| Custom platform | 90,000 to 180,000+ | 4 to 8 months |
| Multi-vendor marketplace | 180,000 to 300,000+ | 6+ months |
The spread is wide because agency "from AED 4,000" offers are template installs, while developer cost guides put a real bilingual store with payment and inventory integration at AED 25,000 to 90,000 [2][4]. Neither is lying. They are pricing different products. For the full breakdown of what moves a Dubai web quote, see our Dubai website cost guide.
Which platform should you build on in the UAE?
Choose Shopify for a fast launch, WooCommerce for ownership and lower running cost at scale, Salla or Zid for an Arabic-first local launch, and custom only when you have outgrown all three. The UAE adds one fact that changes the math, so read the next section before you commit.
| Platform | Best for | UAE catch |
|---|---|---|
| Shopify | Fast launch, under ~AED 1.5M sales | No Shopify Payments, 0.5 to 2% surcharge |
| WooCommerce | Ownership, Arabic SEO, scale | More upkeep, you manage hosting |
| Salla / Zid | Arabic-first, simple local launch | Saudi-built, lighter UAE footprint |
| Custom / headless | Unique features, large catalogues | AED 90,000+, 3 to 6 months |
We compare these in depth, with the trade-offs, in our Shopify vs WooCommerce vs custom guide. The short version: most first stores in Dubai should launch on Shopify or WooCommerce, not a custom build.
The Shopify fee nobody quotes you
Shopify Payments is not available in the UAE, so every Shopify store here must use a third-party gateway, and Shopify charges an extra 0.5 to 2 percent per transaction on top of the gateway's own fee [5][6]. This is the single most overlooked number in Dubai ecommerce.
Here is the math that quotes hide. On the Basic plan, Shopify's surcharge is 2 percent. Add a gateway like Telr at 2.9 percent, and your effective rate per sale is close to 4.9 percent. On a store doing AED 1.8 million a year, that Shopify surcharge alone is AED 18,000 to 36,000 [7].
Quick math: at AED 1.5 to 2 million in annual sales, Shopify's third-party gateway fees typically exceed WooCommerce's entire running cost [5]. Below that, Shopify's speed and simplicity are usually worth it. Above it, WooCommerce, which charges no platform transaction fee, starts to win on pure economics. The tipping point is real, and it is the right time to plan your platform around it before you cross it.
Payment gateways and BNPL
UAE card gateways charge roughly 2.49 to 2.9 percent plus a small per-transaction fee for local cards, with Telr, PayTabs, and Tap the common SME choices and Checkout.com for higher volumes [8]. Onboarding ranges from 24 to 48 hours for Stripe to 2 to 4 weeks for Network International. We cover the full comparison in our UAE payment gateway guide, so here is just the part most stores get wrong.
Add Tabby and Tamara. Buy-now-pay-later lifts average order value 20 to 40 percent, UAE shoppers expect it, and both are free to install and pay you in full upfront [9]. The merchant fee is around 2.99 to 3.99 percent. The one trap: install them directly, not through a gateway that marks the rate up. Some gateways charge 6.9 percent for the same Tabby transaction you could run at 3 percent direct.
Straight talk: Cash on Delivery is still 30 to 50 percent of UAE orders, but it is falling, from 40 percent in 2022 to around 25 to 30 percent in 2026 [10]. Offer it through a courier with an AED 10 to 15 surcharge, but do not build your whole model around it, because refused COD deliveries quietly drain your cash flow.
The part no cost guide covers: legally running the store
You cannot take a single payment legally without a trade licence, and selling online without one can bring fines from AED 50,000 [11]. This is the gap in almost every Dubai ecommerce article, and it is what actually blocks new stores, because the licence is what unlocks your bank account and payment gateway.
Here is the ladder:
- E-trader licence, from about AED 1,070, for UAE and GCC nationals selling through social media. Good for testing, not for a full international store [12].
- E-commerce licence, from roughly AED 6,500 to 15,000, for any investor running a real website. This is what most serious stores need.
- Free zone vs mainland. A free zone like Dubai CommerCity or IFZA gives 100 percent foreign ownership and lower cost. Mainland lets you sell directly into the local UAE market. Free-zone companies need a dual licence or a distributor to sell physical goods into the mainland [13].
Then there is VAT and consumer law. VAT registration is mandatory above AED 375,000 turnover, prices must be shown VAT-inclusive, and UAE consumer protection law (Federal Decree-Law 14 of 2023) makes your return and refund policy mandatory to display and makes "no returns" clauses unenforceable [14]. Build the VAT logic and the policy pages in from the start. Retrofitting them is more expensive than doing them once.
Why Arabic stores quietly fail
Around 60 percent of UAE shoppers prefer Arabic, and a proper right-to-left store can lift conversion 25 to 40 percent, but most Arabic stores are half-built and lose customers silently [15]. The shoppers do not complain. They just leave, so the damage never shows up in your support inbox, only in a conversion rate you cannot explain.
The mistake is treating Arabic as a translation toggle. Real Arabic is a full layout-direction flip, with the navigation, columns, and icons mirrored, native copy written by a person rather than machine-translated, and Arabic fonts like Cairo or Tajawal. A machine-translated overlay reads as broken to a native speaker and kills trust instantly. Our Arabic-first website guide covers how to do it properly. If your buyers are Emirati or Khaleeji, this is not optional polish, it is half your market.
What separates a good build from a cheap one
Speed, mobile-first design, a short trustworthy checkout, proper Arabic, multiple local payment options, and SEO baked into the structure [16]. A one-second speed improvement can lift conversion around 8 percent, 79 percent of UAE shopping happens on mobile, and 61 percent of shoppers abandon a cart over surprise fees or trust concerns at checkout [17]. A cheap template makes you look like a thousand other dropshipping stores and costs you sales you never see in the data.
Common mistake: buying the cheapest bid. In ecommerce it almost always becomes the most expensive choice, because a slow, insecure, hard-to-rank store gets rebuilt within two years. The store that wins is rarely the cheapest to build. It is the one that loads fast, checks out cleanly, and was set up legally from day one.
How this played out for three clients
Real situations from our commerce work. Names and details changed for privacy.
Maya's beauty brand (Dubai). Maya launched on Shopify Basic and could not understand why her margins were thin. Her effective payment cost was 4.9 percent: 2.9 percent to her gateway plus 2 percent to Shopify for not using Shopify Payments. We moved her to WooCommerce as her sales crossed AED 2 million, cutting her annual payment cost by about AED 30,000. "Nobody told me about the Shopify surcharge," she says. "Run the all-in rate before you pick a platform."
A Sharjah homeware store. They had a beautiful Arabic site that converted at a third of the English version. The Arabic was machine-translated text dropped into an English left-to-right layout. We rebuilt it as a true RTL store with native copy, and Arabic conversion rose to match English within two months. "We thought Arabic was a checkbox," the founder says. "It was half our customers."
Omar's electronics startup (Business Bay). Omar built the store first and tried to take payments before sorting his licence. His gateway application was rejected because his licence type did not match his activity, and he lost three weeks. We sequenced it properly for his relaunch: licence, bank, gateway, then store. "Get the licence right first," he says. "The website is the part that works. The paperwork is what stops you."
How SKIMBOX builds commerce sites
We start by sequencing the licence, bank, and gateway so you are not blocked at launch, then build for the platform that fits your sales stage rather than the one with the best margin for us. The store is mobile-first, properly bilingual, set up with the right local payment and BNPL options at the real all-in rate, and yours to own and move. If you want a transparent, scope-first proposal, see our digital commerce solutions and web development services, or contact us.
References
[1] Lucidly - Ecommerce website cost in the UAE by platform. lucidly.ae/blog/ecommerce/ecommerce-website-cost-uae [2] Cubix - Ecommerce development cost in Dubai by store size. cubix.co/ae/blog/ecommerce-development-cost-in-dubai [3] Daiyra - How to build an ecommerce website in Dubai, costs and platforms 2026. daiyra.ae/blog/how-to-build-an-e-commerce-website-in-dubai [4] IMG Global - Ecommerce website development companies and pricing, Dubai. imgglobalinfotech.com/blog/ecommerce-website-development-companies-dubai [5] Wisdom IT - Shopify vs WooCommerce vs Adobe Commerce, UAE total cost. wistech.biz/shopify-vs-woocommerce-vs-adobe-commerce [6] ChampX Digital - Why Shopify charges an extra fee in the UAE. champxdigital.ae [7] Right Media - Shopify vs WooCommerce for UAE ecommerce, fee tipping point. rightmedia.ae/blog/shopify-vs-woocommerce-for-uae-e-commerce [8] SKIMBOX - UAE payment gateway comparison (Telr, Stripe, Checkout, PayTabs, Tap). skimbox.co/en/resources/blogs/uae-payment-gateway-comparison-telr-stripe-checkout [9] Huptechweb - Tabby vs Tamara on Shopify UAE, BNPL fees 2026. huptechweb.com/blogs/tabby-vs-tamara-shopify-uae-bnpl-2026 [10] Ramsha Home / EasySell - UAE ecommerce statistics and the decline of COD. ramshahome.ae/blogs/blog/uae-ecommerce-statistics [11] Shopify UAE - You need a trade licence to sell online in the UAE. shopify.com/ae [12] Radiant Biz - E-trader vs e-commerce licence in the UAE. radiantbiz.com [13] Choose UAE / IFZA - Free zone vs mainland for an ecommerce business. ifza.com [14] u.ae / FTA - VAT registration thresholds and UAE consumer protection law (Federal Decree-Law 14 of 2023). u.ae [15] EasySell / Webcastle - Arabic ecommerce conversion in the UAE. webcastle.ae/blog/creating-arabic-english-bilingual-websites-for-the-uae-market [16] Shopify - Common ecommerce mistakes. shopify.com/ae/blog/ecommerce-mistakes [17] Royex - Why UAE shoppers abandon carts and how to recover sales. royex.ae [18] SKIMBOX - Internal project experience building and migrating ecommerce stores for UAE brands across beauty, homeware, and electronics, 2026. skimbox.co



