How to Buy a UAE Mobile Number from Abroad (2026 Guide)

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Aisha Karim
UAE telecom transactions specialist with 9+ years advising i...
May 26, 2026
25 min read
How to buy a UAE VIP mobile number from abroad 2026 — non-resident buyer guide
Last updated: 25 May 2026 · 14 min read · By Aisha Karim
2026 Non-Resident Buyer's Guide
How to buy a UAE VIP mobile number from abroad 2026 — non-resident buyer's guide
Non-residents can legally own a UAE VIP mobile number — three routes work, virtual VoIP numbers are not one of them

TL;DR — Buying a UAE Mobile Number from Abroad

  • Non-residents can legally own a UAE Etisalat, du or Virgin Mobile VIP number — but the SIM card itself must be activated through a UAE-resident's Emirates ID, then transferred to you.
  • Three working routes for international buyers: (1) Visit-visa transfer (you fly in for one day), (2) Power-of-attorney transfer (UAE lawyer represents you), (3) Resident-sponsor purchase (UAE family member/friend buys then transfers when you arrive).
  • VoIP "virtual UAE numbers" sold at $20–80/month are NOT real UAE numbers — they cannot receive UAE bank OTPs, cannot be transferred or sold, and have zero VIP/investment value.
  • Typical end-to-end timeline: 7–21 days. Total cost = VIP number price + AED 70 transfer fee + courier (if shipped) + visit-visa or power-of-attorney legalisation fees (if applicable).
  • The safest payment path is escrow through a regulated UAE marketplace with TDRA-witnessed transfer at the carrier outlet on the same day.
Quick answer: Non-residents can legally buy and own a UAE VIP mobile number. The number is initially registered to a UAE-resident SIM holder, then transferred to your name via TDRA's ownership-transfer process — either when you visit the UAE for one day, or remotely via a notarised power of attorney executed by a UAE-based lawyer. VoIP virtual numbers sold online are not real UAE numbers and cannot be transferred, traded, or used to receive UAE bank OTPs.

1. Yes — non-residents can own a UAE mobile number

A UAE mobile number registered to a non-resident is the same as one registered to a UAE resident — a real Etisalat, du, Virgin Mobile or DOMC SIM linked to an Emirates ID-verified ownership record. The TDRA (Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority) does not prohibit non-residents from owning UAE numbers; what it prohibits is the original SIM issuance to a non-resident, because every new SIM in the UAE must be activated against a valid Emirates ID at the moment of first activation.

The workaround that has existed legally for over a decade: the SIM is activated against a UAE resident's Emirates ID, then ownership is transferred to the international buyer through TDRA's standard transfer process. After transfer, the buyer holds the number in their own name on their passport — no Emirates ID required for ownership, only for first activation.

This route is used daily by:

  • UAE diaspora returning home with a beloved family number they want to keep
  • GCC residents (Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain) who do business in UAE and want a local line
  • Indian, Pakistani, Egyptian and Filipino expats who keep their UAE number after moving back
  • European, UK and US investors who buy UAE VIP numbers as alternative assets
  • International executives whose UAE-based companies prefer a local mobile for client trust
~12%Of UAE VIP listings sold internationally
7–21Days end-to-end timeline
AED 70TDRA transfer fee (any route)

2. VoIP virtual number vs. real UAE SIM — the critical distinction

A VoIP UAE virtual number is a routed phone number sold by an overseas VoIP provider for $20–80 per month. It forwards calls to your existing phone over the internet. A real UAE mobile number is a SIM-card or eSIM line on Etisalat, du, Virgin Mobile or DOMC, registered to an Emirates ID owner. These two products are not interchangeable, and conflating them is the single most expensive mistake international buyers make.

The difference matters more than most providers admit. Compare directly:

FeatureVoIP virtual +971 numberReal UAE SIM/eSIM number
Receive UAE bank OTPsNo — banks reject VoIPYes — fully supported
Receive UAE government SMS (UAE PASS, FAB, ADCB, ENBD)NoYes
Use WhatsApp Business with UAE verificationOften blockedNative UAE verification
Resellable as an assetNo — locked to provider subscriptionYes — fully tradeable
Appreciates as an investmentNoPremium patterns appreciate 5–15% p.a.
Pricing model$20–80 per month foreverOne-time AED 500–AED 7,000,000+
Survives provider shutdownNo — number gone if provider closesYes — TDRA-registered ownership
Roaming on real networksNoYes worldwide
Best use caseTemporary call routing for non-UAE businessLong-term ownership, VIP/investment, UAE business
VoIP virtual UAE number vs real UAE SIM/eSIM — features and use case comparison for international buyers
VoIP virtual UAE numbers and real SIM-based UAE numbers solve different problems — one is not a substitute for the other
"A virtual UAE number is a phone routing service that costs $50 a month forever. A real UAE VIP number is a one-time-purchase asset that holds or grows in value. The two products solve different problems and one cannot substitute the other for serious UAE-facing business."

If your intent is short-term call forwarding for a non-UAE company, a virtual number is fine. If your intent is to own a UAE number for life, receive UAE bank OTPs, or invest in a VIP pattern — only a real SIM-based UAE number works. The rest of this guide covers the real-number path.

3. The three transfer routes for international buyers

Every legal route to non-resident ownership of a real UAE mobile number reduces to one of three transfer methods. Choose the one that matches your travel ability, budget and timeline.

Three transfer routes for international UAE VIP mobile number buyers — Visit Visa, Power of Attorney, Resident Sponsor
Three legal routes for non-resident UAE VIP number ownership — each suits a different buyer profile

Route A — Visit-visa transfer (most common, fastest)

You apply for a 30-day or 90-day UAE visit visa (or use visa-on-arrival if your country qualifies — over 80 nationalities including UK, US, EU, GCC, India for eligible passports), fly to the UAE for one day, and complete the TDRA ownership-transfer at any Etisalat, du or Virgin Mobile outlet alongside the seller. The transfer takes 30–60 minutes including queueing. You leave the same day with the SIM in your name.

This is the cleanest route and what most international buyers use. Round-trip flight + hotel for one night from major hubs typically costs USD 300–700 — small compared to the savings of in-person verification.

Route B — Power-of-attorney transfer (no UAE visit required)

You appoint a UAE-licensed lawyer as your representative through a notarised Power of Attorney (PoA) executed in your home country, then attested by the UAE Embassy/Consulate in your country, then re-attested by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs after the document arrives in the UAE. The lawyer visits the carrier outlet with the seller on your behalf and completes the transfer in your name.

This route exists and works but is the slowest (typically 14–21 days due to attestation timelines) and most expensive (legalisation fees USD 200–500, lawyer fee AED 1,000–3,000). Use it only when you genuinely cannot travel.

Route C — Resident-sponsor purchase, transfer-on-arrival

A trusted UAE-resident family member or close friend buys the number on your behalf using their Emirates ID, holds it for you, and transfers ownership when you next visit the UAE. This is the route many GCC and South Asian families use. Cleanest within trust networks; risky outside them because the sponsor technically owns the number until transfer.

Trust risk warning

In Route C the number is legally owned by your sponsor until the formal transfer. If the relationship breaks down before transfer day, you have no legal recourse — TDRA recognises only the registered owner. Use Route C only with immediate family or a sponsor you would trust with the equivalent cash amount.

4. Document checklist by route

UAE carriers require document parity at the transfer outlet — both seller and buyer must present originals on the same day. Bring everything in this list relevant to your route, with at least one photocopy of each.

DocumentRoute A (Visit)Route B (PoA)Route C (Sponsor)
Your passport (original)YesLawyer brings notarised copyYes (at transfer day)
UAE visa stamp / visit visaYes — entry stamp under 30 days oldNot requiredYes (any valid UAE entry)
Seller's Emirates ID + passportYesYesYes
Notarised Power of AttorneyNot requiredYes — fully attested chainNot required
Carrier ownership transfer formProvided at outletProvided at outletProvided at outlet
Proof of payment to sellerBank receipt or escrow releaseBank receipt or escrow releaseInternal (family/sponsor)
UAE residential addressHotel address is acceptedLawyer's office addressSponsor's address until transfer

5. Cross-border payment — how to pay without losing money

Cross-border payment for a UAE VIP number is the second-highest-risk moment of the transaction (the first being verifying the number exists). The seller wants money first; the buyer wants the number first; trust must be bridged across countries with different banking systems and consumer-protection rules.

Three payment paths work safely:

  • Escrow through a regulated UAE marketplace. Marketplaces like MobileNumber.ae hold your funds until the TDRA transfer is confirmed at the carrier outlet, then release to the seller. This is the only path that protects both parties without legal intervention. Fees are typically 1–3% of the transaction.
  • Wise (formerly TransferWise) multi-currency transfer. Lower FX fees than banks, but no escrow protection. Use only when the seller is a verified business with a UAE trade licence and you have signed a written sale agreement.
  • SWIFT bank transfer. Standard international bank wire. Slow (2–5 business days), expensive ($30–80 fees plus FX spread), no buyer protection. Use only when the seller is your sponsor or a known business.
Never pay this way from abroad

Western Union, MoneyGram, crypto-to-cash, or any "pay first, number after" arrangement with a stranger you found on social media. The UAE VIP number market has organised fraud rings targeting international buyers exactly because the legal recourse from abroad is impractical. If a deal looks too cheap for the pattern, it is. For a deeper safety framework, see our guide on how to buy and sell VIP mobile numbers safely in the UAE.

6. The 7-step procedural playbook

Run any international UAE VIP number purchase through these seven steps in order. Skipping a step is the most common reason cross-border deals fail.

The 7-step international buyer playbook for purchasing a UAE VIP mobile number from abroad
The international buyer's 7-step playbook — skipping any step is the #1 cause of cross-border deal failure
  1. Verify the number exists and is transferable. Ask the seller for a video call showing the SIM in their hand, with the current date written on paper. Confirm the carrier, prefix and that the line has no port-out lock or unpaid contract balance.
  2. Verify the seller's identity. Request a clear photo of their Emirates ID front and back. Cross-check the name against their listing profile and bank account holder name. Mismatched names are the #1 fraud signal.
  3. Agree price in writing on WhatsApp. Confirm: final figure, currency, who pays the AED 70 TDRA fee, who covers escrow/Wise/SWIFT fees, courier responsibility (if any), and the target transfer date.
  4. Choose your route. Visit-visa (Route A), Power of Attorney (Route B), or Resident-sponsor (Route C). Tell the seller which one and start that path's preparation in parallel.
  5. Open escrow or arrange secure payment. If using MobileNumber.ae escrow, both parties register the deal and you fund escrow. If using direct payment, sign a written sale agreement first.
  6. Travel or send your representative. On transfer day, you (Route A) or your lawyer (Route B) or your sponsor (Route C) meet the seller at the agreed Etisalat, du or Virgin Mobile outlet. Verify the number on the seller's phone one last time before completing the form. For the underlying TDRA flow, see our UAE mobile number ownership transfer guide.
  7. Complete the TDRA transfer and release payment. The carrier representative completes the ownership transfer in the system. You receive an SMS confirmation. The SIM card is reissued to you (or sent by courier per your earlier agreement). Once the SMS lands, release escrow or sign the receipt.
Pro tip — same-day check before payment

Even after the carrier completes the transfer in their system, wait until you have called the number from a second phone and received the call on the new SIM (or have seen the SMS confirmation from TDRA on the new SIM) before releasing escrow. Carrier system delays of 10–60 minutes are normal. Anything longer than 24 hours is a red flag.

7. Timeline and total cost breakdown

The end-to-end timeline and budget depend almost entirely on which route you choose. Here are realistic figures for a buyer in India, Pakistan, UK or Europe purchasing a mid-tier AED 10,000–50,000 UAE VIP number in 2026.

Cost itemRoute A (Visit)Route B (PoA)Route C (Sponsor)
VIP number priceAED 10,000–50,000AED 10,000–50,000AED 10,000–50,000
TDRA transfer feeAED 70AED 70AED 70
Flight (return economy)USD 300–700USD 300–700 (at transfer day)
Hotel (1 night)USD 80–200
UAE visit visaUSD 0–150 (varies by nationality)
Power-of-attorney attestation chainUSD 200–500
UAE lawyer representation feeAED 1,000–3,000
Escrow fee (1–3%)AED 100–1,500AED 100–1,500Internal (no fee)
Courier (if SIM shipped)USD 40–90USD 40–90USD 40–90 (at transfer day)
End-to-end timeline7–10 days14–21 daysVariable (depends on travel)

For a typical AED 15,000 (~USD 4,100) VIP number on the 050 prefix, Route A's total all-in cost is around USD 4,800–5,500 including travel. Route B comes in around USD 4,800–5,200 (lower flight saved, higher legalisation paid). Route C is usually USD 4,300 plus eventual travel cost.

8. Shipping the SIM internationally — what carriers allow

After the TDRA transfer, you have three options for getting the physical SIM (or eSIM activation QR code) to you abroad.

  • Carry it back personally (Route A only). Cheapest, fastest, no shipping risk. You insert it into your phone before boarding the flight home and confirm coverage on arrival.
  • DHL / FedEx / Aramex tracked courier. Allowed for SIM cards in most jurisdictions when correctly declared. Cost USD 40–90 to most destinations. SIM cards under 50 grams typically clear customs without duty. Insure for the SIM activation cost, not the number value.
  • eSIM activation QR code by email. Available on Etisalat, du, Virgin Mobile and DOMC for compatible iPhones, Pixels and Samsung devices. The seller emails you the QR code after transfer; you scan it on your phone and the line activates instantly. See our eSIM and VIP mobile numbers guide for full eSIM transfer mechanics — this is now the preferred route for over 60% of international buyers in 2026.
Original insight

If your destination phone supports eSIM (iPhone XS or newer, Pixel 4 or newer, Galaxy S20 or newer), insist on eSIM activation rather than physical SIM courier. You avoid shipping risk entirely, the transfer completes in minutes not days, and the seller can email the QR code directly from the carrier app after the TDRA transfer is confirmed.

9. Country-specific notes for top buyer markets

UAE consulate attestation chains, visa requirements and shipping rules vary by buyer country. These are the practical notes for the largest international buyer markets in 2026.

India

UAE visit visa is straightforward (USD 100–150 through approved channels, 3–7 day processing) or visa-on-arrival for certain passport categories. SIM shipping via DHL Mumbai/Delhi is reliable. Power-of-attorney chain: Notary → Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) → UAE Embassy New Delhi → UAE MoFA. Most popular routes: A and C.

Pakistan

UAE visit visa available but processing varies. Power of attorney attestation chain: Foreign Office Islamabad → UAE Embassy Islamabad → UAE MoFA. SIM shipping via Aramex Karachi. Route C is most common given large UAE diaspora.

United Kingdom

UAE visa-on-arrival for UK passport holders (free 30-day stamp). Power of attorney through UK notary → FCDO apostille → UAE Embassy London (additional attestation may be required). Route A overwhelmingly preferred — direct flights are cheap and timeline is fast.

United States and Canada

UAE visa-on-arrival or e-visa available. PoA chain: Notary → Secretary of State apostille → UAE Embassy Washington/Ottawa. Distance makes Route A more expensive; Route B is more common than from UK.

Saudi Arabia and other GCC

GCC nationals enter UAE with national ID only (no visa). Same-day transfer possible by driving across the border. Route A is universally used.

10. Scam warnings unique to international buyers

International buyers face all the standard UAE VIP number scams (fake listings, identity-mismatched sellers, port-out locks) plus several patterns that specifically target distance and currency-conversion confusion.

  • The "send the SIM first" reversal. A scammer offers to courier the SIM to you before payment "as a gesture of trust." The SIM may arrive but the number is still registered to them — they later trigger a remote port-out or report it lost. Always insist on the TDRA transfer being completed FIRST, then SIM delivery.
  • The currency-confusion overpay. A scammer quotes AED but invoices in USD using a fake conversion rate, or vice versa. Always confirm the final figure in BOTH currencies in writing on WhatsApp before sending payment.
  • The fake escrow site. A scammer directs you to an "escrow service" that is actually their own website. Only use escrow through a verified UAE marketplace with a published TDRA number, real office address and a UAE landline you can call.
  • The "expedited transfer" upcharge. Mid-transaction, the seller claims they need extra fees for "fast-track" TDRA processing. TDRA does not offer this. The standard transfer fee is AED 70, always.
  • The dual-listing. Same number listed on three marketplaces at three different prices. Always cross-check the number on multiple platforms before paying. For more on safe buying mechanics, see our where to buy VIP mobile numbers in the UAE guide.

Browse 19,000+ verified UAE VIP numbers — list, search and contact sellers directly

International buyer? Use the free value calculator to validate price ranges before opening a conversation. Then filter by prefix, carrier and pattern.

Browse VIP numbers → Free value calculator

11. Frequently asked questions

Can a non-resident legally own a UAE mobile number?

Yes. UAE telecom regulation permits non-residents to own SIM-based mobile numbers on Etisalat, du, Virgin Mobile or DOMC. The original SIM activation must happen against a UAE-resident's Emirates ID, but ownership can then be transferred to a non-resident through TDRA's standard ownership-transfer process. Once the transfer completes, the non-resident's name and passport sit on the carrier's ownership record permanently — no Emirates ID renewal is required to maintain ownership.

Do I need a UAE bank account to receive my SIM?

No. A UAE bank account is not required for SIM ownership. You only need a UAE bank account if you plan to use the number as a recipient for UAE banking SMS OTPs — and even then, the number must be linked to your account, which requires a UAE residence visa, not just a SIM. For pure ownership and investment purposes, no UAE bank account is needed at any point.

Will my UAE number work in my home country?

Yes, through international roaming. The number behaves like any UAE-registered SIM abroad — incoming calls and SMS work everywhere with cellular coverage, though receiving-party-pays charges apply on the UAE side. For data roaming, the UAE carriers have standard roaming agreements with 200+ countries. Many international owners use the number only for WhatsApp and inbound SMS verification, which works fine on any Wi-Fi connection without active roaming.

How long does the actual transfer at the carrier outlet take?

The actual TDRA transfer at an Etisalat, du or Virgin Mobile outlet takes 30 to 60 minutes including queueing time, assuming both buyer and seller present originals of all required documents. The system update at TDRA propagates within 1–2 hours, after which the new SIM is fully active in the buyer's name. Plan to arrive at the outlet 30 minutes after opening to minimise queue time.

What happens if I never visit the UAE again?

Nothing — once the transfer is complete in your name, the number is yours indefinitely. Ownership does not require ongoing UAE presence. You will need to keep the SIM topped up periodically to prevent number recycling (typically 6–12 months of dormancy triggers carrier reclaim). For the full retention mechanics see our guide on UAE mobile number expiry rules and recycling.

Can I use the UAE number to receive UAE bank OTPs from abroad?

Yes, provided you have an active UAE bank account linked to that number. UAE banks send OTPs via SMS to the registered number regardless of where the SIM is currently roaming. The number must be on a real SIM, not a VoIP virtual line — banks explicitly reject VoIP for OTP delivery. This is why diaspora customers maintain their UAE numbers for years after leaving the country.

What is the safest way to pay from abroad?

Escrow through a regulated UAE marketplace is the safest path. Funds are held in escrow until the TDRA transfer is confirmed at the carrier outlet, then released to the seller. This protects both parties without requiring cross-border legal action. For larger transactions (above AED 50,000), consider an additional written sale agreement signed by both parties before escrow is funded. Avoid all "pay first, number after" arrangements with private sellers you have not verified.

Are VoIP UAE numbers a cheaper alternative to a real SIM?

Only if your needs are very limited. VoIP +971 numbers cost USD 20–80 per month and work only for call forwarding from non-UAE callers. They cannot receive UAE bank OTPs, government SMS, WhatsApp Business UAE verification, or be transferred or resold. A real UAE VIP number is a one-time purchase that holds and often appreciates in value. The math favours a real number for any horizon longer than 18 months.

Which carrier should I choose as a non-resident?

Etisalat (now e&) offers the strongest international roaming agreements and the largest VIP number selection on the prestige 050 prefix. du has the strongest 055 prefix and competitive packages. Virgin Mobile UAE offers eSIM-first activation which is ideal for non-residents avoiding physical SIM shipping. DOMC is a specialised niche. For most international buyers, Etisalat or du are the best starting points. For a full comparison see our Etisalat vs du vs Virgin Mobile guide.

12. Verdict and next steps

Owning a real UAE mobile number from abroad is legal, well-documented, and within reach for any buyer willing to either fly to the UAE for one day or execute a notarised Power of Attorney. The three routes each suit different buyer profiles: visit-visa for the time-flexible, power-of-attorney for the truly remote, and resident-sponsor for those with trusted UAE family.

Three actions you can take today:

  1. Browse listings to set your target price. Use the free value calculator to validate the market range for the pattern you want.
  2. Choose your route and start the paperwork in parallel. Visit visa, PoA attestation chain, or sponsor agreement — initiate immediately because attestation chains take 7–14 days.
  3. Open a conversation with two or three sellers. Compare patterns, listing age and negotiation flexibility. For tactical guidance see our UAE VIP mobile number negotiation playbook.

Ready to start? Browse the largest UAE VIP number marketplace.

Filter by Etisalat, du, Virgin Mobile, DOMC. Contact sellers directly. Pay through escrow. International buyers welcome.

Browse VIP numbers → 2026 market prices
AK

Aisha Karim — UAE Telecom & Cross-Border Transactions Specialist

UAE-based telecom transactions specialist with 9+ years advising international buyers on UAE mobile number purchases. Has facilitated VIP number transfers for clients in 35+ countries including India, Pakistan, UK, Saudi Arabia and the US. Tracks TDRA regulatory changes weekly and writes for MobileNumber.ae on non-resident telecom ownership.

Last updated: 25 May 2026 · Reviewed by the MobileNumber.ae editorial team

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About the Author

Aisha Karim

UAE telecom transactions specialist with 9+ years advising international buyers on UAE mobile number purchases. Tracks TDRA regulatory changes weekly and writes on non-resident telecom ownership across 35+ buyer markets.

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