Two months in the UAE is not a holiday — it is a genuine residency of the temporary kind. Long enough to stop rushing from one landmark to the next and actually settle into the city's pace. Long enough to discover the Deira coffee houses that no tourist ever finds, to make the Hatta mountain kayaking trip you kept putting off, to sit at the same beachfront table at sunset three weeks in a row until the waiter knows your order.

The Dubai 60 Days Visa is the longest standard tourist visa available for the UAE, and it is designed for exactly this kind of visit — the extended exploration, the family reunion that takes weeks rather than days, the slow travel through the UAE's seven emirates, the regional journey through the Gulf that uses Dubai as a hub and returns to it repeatedly.

This guide covers everything you need to know about the 60-day Dubai visa — what it is, how the issue window and permitted stay work, the single versus multiple entry decision, exact document requirements, the step-by-step online application process, how to extend your stay if needed, a practical 60-day itinerary framework, and the most common mistakes that cause avoidable delays or complications.

Quick Summary: The Dubai 60 Days Visa is a UAE tourist e-visa permitting a stay of 60 days from the date of first entry. Available in single entry and multiple entry formats. Applied for entirely online through InstaDubaiVisa.com — no embassy visit. Approved e-visa delivered by email. Most applications approved within 24 to 48 hours. The visa is valid for 60 days from the date of issue in which to make your first entry.

What Is the Dubai 60 Days Visa?

The Dubai 60 Days Visa is a UAE tourist entry permit issued as an e-visa (electronic visa) that allows foreign nationals to enter the United Arab Emirates and remain for up to 60 consecutive days from the date of their first entry. It is applied for entirely online, requires no embassy visit at any stage, and is delivered as a PDF document to your registered email address.

Like all UAE tourist e-visas, the 60-day visa covers all seven UAE emirates — Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ajman, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah, and Umm Al Quwain — on a single approval. There are no internal UAE border controls and you can travel freely between all emirates on one document.

Understanding the Two Key Time Periods

There are two separate time periods governing the 60-day visa, and understanding the distinction between them is one of the most important pieces of information in this guide:

  • Issue validity — The 60-day visa is valid for 60 days from the date of issue (the date you receive it). This means you must make your first entry into the UAE within 60 days of receiving your approved visa. If your visa is issued on 1 April, you must enter the UAE no later than 31 May.
  • Permitted stay duration — Once you enter the UAE, your 60-day permitted stay begins from the date of first entry. If you enter on 15 May, your permitted stay runs until 14 July.

These are two completely separate periods. The issue validity is the window to make your first entry. The permitted stay is your allowed time inside the UAE once you have arrived. A 60-day visa does not mean 60 days from issue to departure — it means 60 days from entry to departure, with a 60-day window from issue date in which to arrive.

Calendar Example: Visa issued 1 April. You must enter UAE by 31 May. You choose to enter on 20 May. Your 60-day permitted stay runs from 20 May — you must depart by 19 July. Total UAE stay: 60 days.

Who Should Choose the 60-Day Visa Over the 30-Day Visa?

The 60-day visa is the right choice for a specific set of travellers and circumstances. Here is a direct comparison with the 30-day alternative to help you decide:

 

60-Day Dubai Visa

30-Day Dubai Visa

60 days stay from first entry

30 days stay from first entry

Higher flexibility — no rush to see everything

Tighter timeline for comprehensive visits

Avoid mid-trip extension application hassle

May need extension if plans change

Better value if staying more than 30 days

Better value for short, defined trips

Single and multiple entry options

Single and multiple entry options

Ideal for slow travellers, extended families

Ideal for standard holidays

Covers full UAE exploration at a relaxed pace

Covers main Dubai highlights with day trips

 

Specific Traveller Types Who Benefit Most from the 60-Day Visa

  • Extended leisure travellers — Those planning a comprehensive UAE exploration covering all seven emirates, multiple day trips to Abu Dhabi, Ras Al Khaimah, Hatta, and the East Coast, and wanting to do all of this without a time pressure that turns a holiday into a schedule.
  • Families visiting UAE-resident relatives — Extended family visits where the guest may not have a specific departure date and benefits from the flexibility of a longer permitted stay.
  • Remote workers and digital nomads — Professionals spending extended time in Dubai as a base, taking advantage of the city's infrastructure, climate, and connectivity while working remotely. Note that a tourist visa does not authorise any paid commercial activities within the UAE — remote work for an employer outside the UAE in a personal capacity is a different consideration from UAE-based employment.
  • Slow travellers using Dubai as a regional hub — Travellers whose itinerary includes Dubai plus Oman, Bahrain, Jordan, and other regional destinations, using Dubai as the in-and-out base for the broader journey.
  • Those uncertain about their departure date — The 60-day visa provides maximum flexibility for travellers whose plans may shift. Rather than applying for a 30-day visa and then discovering you need an extension (adding process, time, and uncertainty), the 60-day visa covers most realistic extended-stay scenarios upfront.

The Rule of Thumb: If there is any chance your stay will exceed 30 days, or if you are travelling with any flexibility in your return date, choose the 60-day visa. The additional coverage eliminates the need to manage a mid-trip extension application from within the UAE — which saves both time and administrative complexity.

Single Entry vs Multiple Entry: The Critical Decision

The 60-day visa is available in both single entry and multiple entry formats. This choice is as important as the duration decision and carries real consequences if made incorrectly:

 

60-Day Single Entry

60-Day Multiple Entry

One entry into the UAE

Unlimited entries during validity period

Exit = visa is permanently consumed

Exit and re-enter freely

Best for stay-in-UAE-only itineraries

Best for multi-country itineraries

Lower application cost

Slightly higher application cost

Fine for Abu Dhabi/other emirate day trips

Essential for Oman, Bahrain, Qatar visits

Risk: day trip to Musandam loses the visa

Full flexibility for regional travel

 

The Golden Rule for 60-Day Visitors

If your 60-day itinerary includes any possibility of leaving the UAE — a side trip to Oman's Musandam peninsula, a flight to Bahrain, a drive to Qatar, a brief visit to Jordan, any border crossing of any kind — you must choose the multiple entry visa. If you exit the UAE on a single entry visa, the visa is permanently consumed regardless of how many days of your permitted stay remain. You cannot re-enter on the same visa.

For a 60-day trip, the likelihood of cross-border travel is substantially higher than for a 7-day visit. The additional cost of the multiple entry version is modest relative to the cost of losing 30 remaining UAE days because of an unplanned Oman day trip. When there is any uncertainty at all about whether you will stay entirely within the UAE for the full 60 days, choose multiple entry.

Day Trips Are Border Crossings: A day trip to Oman's Musandam peninsula (3.5 hours by road from Dubai), a short flight to Doha or Manama, or an overland drive to Saudi Arabia are all international border crossings. Any of these, on a single entry 60-day visa, permanently ends the visa. If you are planning any of these — or if they are even in the 'possible' category — choose the 60-day multiple entry visa.

Documents Required for a Dubai 60 Days Visa

The document requirements for the 60-day visa are identical to those for a 30-day visa. Here is the complete checklist:

 

Document

Status

Valid passport (6 months+ validity)

MANDATORY

Passport bio page scan (colour, HD)

MANDATORY

Passport-size photograph (4.3 x 5.5 cm)

MANDATORY

Return / onward flight itinerary

MANDATORY

Hotel or accommodation booking

MANDATORY

Bank statements (last 3–6 months)

STRONGLY RECOMMENDED

Employment letter / income proof

STRONGLY RECOMMENDED

Travel itinerary

RECOMMENDED

 

1. Valid Passport

Your passport must have at least 6 months of remaining validity from your intended UAE entry date — not the application date. At least two blank pages. In good physical condition.

Check This First: Calculate 6 months forward from your planned UAE entry date. If your passport expires before that date, renew before applying. Insufficient passport validity is the most common outright rejection reason.

2. Passport Bio Page Scan

Full-colour, high-resolution scan of the page containing your photograph, name, passport number, and expiry date. All four corners fully visible. All text legible including the Machine Readable Zone. Minimum 300 DPI. JPEG or PDF format. Under 2MB. iPhone users: convert HEIC to JPEG before uploading.

3. Passport-Size Photograph

 

Specification

Requirement

Dimensions

4.3 cm x 5.5 cm (1.7 in x 2.2 in)

Background

Plain white — no grey, cream, or off-white

Head coverage

70% to 80% of total photo height

Face position

Front-facing, centred, no tilt

Expression

Neutral — mouth closed, eyes fully open

Glasses

Not permitted — remove all eyewear

Head coverings

Religious only; full face visible

Photo recency

Taken within the last 6 months

File format

JPEG or JPG preferred

File size

Under 2MB

 

Photo Note: UAE visa dimensions (4.3 x 5.5 cm) differ from most other passport photo standards. Specify UAE visa dimensions explicitly at any studio. The most common rejection reasons are a grey background instead of pure white, and visible glasses. Test your background against white printer paper. Remove all eyewear before the photo is taken.

4. Return or Onward Flight Itinerary

A booking confirmation showing your intended UAE entry and departure dates. A free-cancellation fare or reservation is acceptable — you do not need a fully paid, non-refundable ticket before your visa is approved. Apply for your visa first, then book confirmed, non-refundable travel after your e-visa arrives.

5. Proof of Accommodation

A hotel booking confirmation, Airbnb reservation, or letter of invitation from a UAE-based host. For 60-day stays, you do not need to provide 60 days of confirmed accommodation at the time of application — an initial confirmed booking covering the first portion of your stay is acceptable. Use free-cancellation bookings during the application process.

6. Bank Statements

Official bank statements from the last 3 to 6 months demonstrating sufficient financial means for a 60-day UAE stay. Downloaded directly from your bank as a PDF. The balance should reflect comfortable means to support a two-month visit including accommodation, meals, and activities.

7. Employment or Income Proof

An employment letter on company letterhead confirming your name, job title, employment status, and approved leave for the travel period. For self-employed: business registration and bank statements. For students: enrollment letter and sponsor's financial documentation. This document demonstrates ties to your home country and financial stability — particularly important for a 60-day application.

How to Apply for a Dubai 60 Days Visa Online: Step by Step

The application process through InstaDubaiVisa.com is entirely online, takes under 15 minutes, and can be done from any device — desktop, laptop, tablet, or smartphone — from anywhere in the world:

  1. Visit InstaDubaiVisa.com — available 24/7 from any device.
  2. Select your nationality — all UAE visa options for your passport will be displayed.
  3. Choose 60-Day Tourist Visa — Single Entry or Multiple Entry based on your itinerary. If any cross-border travel is possible, choose multiple entry.
  4. Complete the online application form — enter all personal details exactly as they appear on your passport. Full legal name, date of birth, passport number, and expiry date must be precisely correct. Enter your email address twice and check it character by character — your approved visa will be delivered here.
  5. Enter your travel details — intended UAE entry date, departure date, accommodation, and purpose of visit. Ensure your entry date falls within 60 days of your anticipated visa issue date.
  6. Upload your supporting documents — passport scan, photograph, flight itinerary, accommodation proof, bank statements, employment letter. JPEG or PDF format, under 2MB each. iPhone users: confirm HEIC converted to JPEG.
  7. Review your complete application — read every field against your passport and documents before proceeding. Name, passport number, dates, email, and visa type.
  8. Complete secure payment — PCI-DSS certified encryption. All major cards accepted.
  9. Expert pre-screening review — InstaDubaiVisa.com's specialist team reviews your application before UAE immigration submission. Document issues identified and resolved before they reach immigration.
  10. Track your application — real-time status updates available through the portal using your unique reference number, 24/7.
  11. Receive your approved e-visa — delivered as a PDF to your registered email. Print at least two copies. Keep one in hand luggage and one in checked bag. Present printed copy at check-in and on arrival.

Apply at least 10 to 14 days before your departure. Standard processing is 3 to 5 working days with most approvals in 24 to 48 hours. The UAE works Sunday to Thursday — applications submitted late Thursday will not begin processing until Sunday morning UAE time. Apply early and remove any timeline pressure.

Dubai 60 Days Visa Extension

If your 60-day stay runs long and you need more time, extensions are available from within the UAE without the need to leave the country:

  • A 30-day extension is available and can be applied for up to twice, providing a maximum of 60 additional days beyond your original 60-day permitted stay.
  • The extension must be applied for before your current 60-day permitted stay expires — not after. An expired visa cannot be extended.
  • The extension process is completed entirely online through InstaDubaiVisa.com from within the UAE — you do not need to exit the country.
  • Your extension period begins the day after your original 60-day permitted stay expires — no days are lost even if approved early.
  • Apply for an extension at least 7 to 10 days before your current stay expires to ensure sufficient processing time.
  • Set a calendar reminder 10 days before your departure deadline as a prompt to apply for an extension or confirm your departure plans.

Overstay Consequences: Overstaying a UAE visa results in daily fines from the first day after your permitted stay expires. These fines accumulate and must be paid in full before departure. Overstaying may also affect future UAE visa eligibility. Always extend before expiry or depart on time.

What to Do with 60 Days in the UAE: A Practical Itinerary Framework

Two months is a genuinely generous amount of time in the UAE. Here is a week-by-week framework for making the most of every day:

 

Week

Focus

Week 1 (Days 1–7)

Dubai city — iconic landmarks and orientation

Week 2 (Days 8–14)

Dubai experiences — desert, culture, food

Week 3 (Days 15–21)

Day trips — Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah

Week 4 (Days 22–28)

East Coast, Hatta, Al Ain — deeper UAE

Week 5 (Days 29–42)

Regional travel (Oman, Bahrain) + Dubai revisits

Week 6–8 (Days 43–60)

Slow living — slow Dubai, repeat favourites, rest

 

Week 1 and 2 — Dubai City Foundations

Use your first two weeks to experience Dubai's iconic attractions at a truly unhurried pace. The Burj Khalifa at different times of day — the observation deck at sunrise and again at sunset a week later. The Gold Souk and Spice Souk in Deira on a quiet morning. The Dubai Creek at night from a private abra. Al Fahidi Historic District explored over two different visits with different moods. The desert safari evening that most visitors rush, experienced properly at midnight. The Museum of the Future. The Dubai Fountain. The Marina at dawn when the towers reflect alone in the water.

Two weeks for the city that most visitors compress into five days means you get to actually be in it rather than photographing it from a moving vehicle.

Week 3 and 4 — The Wider UAE

Weeks three and four are for the UAE beyond Dubai:

  • Abu Dhabi — The Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque (an entire morning), the Louvre Abu Dhabi (a full afternoon), Qasr Al Watan, the Corniche evening. Return a second time for Yas Island (Ferrari World, Warner Bros. World) if the first Abu Dhabi day was not enough — it rarely is.
  • Sharjah — 30 minutes from Dubai. The Museum of Islamic Civilisation and the Heritage Area deserve a full day.
  • Ras Al Khaimah — Jebel Jais mountain road, Jais Flight zip-line, Dhayah Fort. One of the most dramatically different UAE experiences from the coastal city.
  • Fujairah East Coast — Two hours across the Hajar Mountains to the Indian Ocean. Bidiyah Mosque, Snoopy Island snorkelling, quieter beaches.
  • Hatta — Mountain kayaking on the dam reservoir, mountain biking, Heritage Village. Ninety minutes from Dubai and rarely visited by short-stay tourists.
  • Al Ain — The UNESCO Al Ain Oasis, Jebel Hafeet mountain, the ancient falaj irrigation system, Jahili Fort. Two hours from Dubai and worth every minute.

Week 5 and 6 — Regional Travel (Multiple Entry Visa Holders)

For 60-day visitors with a multiple entry visa, weeks five and six open up the broader Gulf and region:

  • Oman — The Musandam peninsula (3.5 hours by road, dramatic khorfakkan fjords and dhow cruises) for 2 days. Or the Oman mainland route: Al Ain to Buraimi border crossing, then Muscat (5 hours from Dubai), with Jebel Akhdar, Nizwa, and Wadi Bani Khalid on the return journey.
  • Bahrain — A 1-hour flight from Dubai to Manama. Ancient Dilmun civilisation sites, the Bahrain Formula One circuit, Souq Waqif, the modern Museum of Islamic Art.
  • Jordan — A 3-hour flight from Dubai. Petra, Wadi Rum, the Dead Sea, and Amman. A meaningful 4 to 5 day trip entirely feasible within a 60-day UAE base.

Week 7 and 8 — Slow Living and Final Discoveries

Use the final two weeks for the things you have been meaning to do but kept rescheduling. Return to the places that meant the most. Eat at the restaurants that become your regular tables. Walk the streets you have not yet explored. Watch the sunset from somewhere new. Go back to Al Fahidi on a different kind of day than the first time. Be in the city rather than visiting it.

The difference between a 60-day UAE stay and a 7-day visit is not simply duration. It is depth — the gradual replacement of tourist experience with something closer to resident familiarity. The second month is where that shift happens.

60-Day Visa for Different Traveller Types

Extended Family Visits

For families visiting UAE-resident relatives, the 60-day visa removes the pressure of the 30-day window. Extended family visits — wedding celebrations, post-childbirth visits, elderly parent care — benefit most from the longer stay that the 60-day visa provides. The UAE resident does not need to sponsor the visitor's tourist visa (that is only for the separate family visit/sponsored visa category) — the standard tourist visa is applied for independently by the visitor.

Career Breakers and Sabbatical Travellers

For professionals on a career break, sabbatical, or extended leave who have chosen the UAE as part of a broader travel period, the 60-day visa provides the longest standard tourist stay available. Combined with a multiple entry option, it covers most reasonable two-month-in-the-Gulf itinerary configurations.

Families with Children

For families travelling with children, the 60-day visa's relaxed timeline means you can experience Dubai's outstanding family attractions — Aquaventure, Legoland, Global Village, Kidzania, Wild Wadi, Ski Dubai — without racing through them. Children experience Dubai very differently when they have time to return to their favourite places rather than fitting everything into a compressed week.

Frequent Gulf Travellers

For travellers who visit Dubai regularly and make 2 to 3 separate trips within a short period, the 60-day multiple entry visa can serve all of these trips on a single application — subject to the total UAE stay duration not exceeding 60 days across all trips combined. Rather than applying for a fresh visa for each return visit, one 60-day multiple entry visa covers the full cycle.

Common Mistakes to Avoid with the Dubai 60 Days Visa

These are the errors that most frequently cause delays, complications, and avoidable costs for 60-day visa applicants:

 

Common Mistake

How to Avoid It

Choosing single entry when planning cross-border travel

Use multiple entry for any Oman/Bahrain trip

Booking non-refundable flights before visa approval

Apply for visa first; book travel after

Passport expiring within 6 months of UAE entry date

Check expiry before applying — renew if needed

Blurry or cropped passport bio page scan

Scan at 300 DPI+; all four corners visible

Non-white background in photograph

Pure white only — test against white paper

Glasses in photograph

Remove all eyewear before photo is taken

HEIC file uploads from iPhone

Convert to JPEG before uploading

File size over 2MB per document

Compress using iLovePDF or Squoosh

Applying too close to departure date

Apply minimum 10–14 days before travel

Not tracking cumulative UAE days on multiple entry

Track every entry and exit date carefully

Waiting until last day to apply for extension if needed

Apply for extension 7–10 days before expiry

 

Frequently Asked Questions: Dubai 60 Days Visa

What is the Dubai 60 Days Visa?

The Dubai 60 Days Visa is a UAE tourist e-visa that allows a stay of 60 days from the date of first entry into the UAE. It is applied for entirely online through InstaDubaiVisa.com — no embassy visit required. The approved e-visa is delivered as a PDF to your email. It covers all seven UAE emirates on a single document. Available in single entry and multiple entry formats.

Is the Dubai 60 Days Visa the same as a 3-month visa?

No. The Dubai 60 Days Visa permits a stay of exactly 60 days — approximately 2 months. It is not a 3-month (90-day) visa. No standard UAE tourist visa provides a 90-day permitted stay. The 60-day visa is the longest duration standard tourist visa available through InstaDubaiVisa.com.

How is the 60-day permitted stay calculated?

The 60-day permitted stay is counted from the date of your actual first entry into the UAE — not from the date your visa was issued. If you enter on 15 May, your 60-day stay expires on 14 July. The visa is also valid for 60 days from the date of issue in which to make your first entry. These are two separate time periods — the issue window and the permitted stay.

Should I choose the single or multiple entry 60-day visa?

Choose single entry if your 60-day itinerary is entirely within the UAE with no cross-border travel planned or possible. Choose multiple entry if there is any chance your itinerary will take you outside the UAE — even a day trip to Oman, Bahrain, or Qatar. Exiting the UAE on a single entry visa permanently consumes it regardless of remaining stay days. When there is any uncertainty, choose multiple entry.

Can I extend a 60-day Dubai visa?

Yes. A 30-day extension is available and can be applied for up to twice — providing up to 60 additional days beyond your original 60-day permitted stay. The extension must be applied for before your current stay expires, from within the UAE, without needing to exit. Contact InstaDubaiVisa.com support for guidance on the extension process. Apply at least 7 to 10 days before your expiry date.

How long does it take to process a 60-day Dubai visa?

Standard processing through InstaDubaiVisa.com takes 3 to 5 working days. Most applications are approved within 24 to 48 hours. Apply at least 10 to 14 days before your departure. Note that UAE immigration operates Sunday through Thursday — applications submitted late Thursday will not begin processing until Sunday morning UAE time.

What documents do I need for the Dubai 60 Days Visa?

A valid passport with 6+ months remaining validity from your UAE entry date, a full-colour high-resolution passport bio page scan, a UAE visa passport photograph (4.3 x 5.5 cm, white background, no glasses, JPEG under 2MB), a return or onward flight itinerary, proof of accommodation, bank statements (strongly recommended), and an employment or income letter (strongly recommended). All files in JPEG or PDF format, under 2MB each.

Does the 60-day visa cover Abu Dhabi and other UAE emirates?

Yes. The UAE 60-day tourist e-visa covers all seven emirates — Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ajman, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah, and Umm Al Quwain — on a single approved document. There are no internal UAE border controls. You can travel freely between all emirates throughout your 60-day stay.

Can I work in the UAE on a 60-day tourist visa?

No. A UAE tourist visa — including the 60-day option — does not authorise any form of paid employment, freelance work, or formal commercial activities within the UAE. Tourist visas are for leisure, family visits, and non-commercial purposes only. If you intend to work in the UAE, you need an appropriate employment visa through an authorised UAE employer.

What happens if I overstay my 60-day Dubai visa?

Overstaying results in daily fines from the first day after your 60-day permitted stay expires. These fines accumulate and must be paid in full at the airport before departure. Overstaying may also affect your eligibility for future UAE visa applications. Always depart before your permitted stay expires or apply for a 30-day extension at least 7 to 10 days before the expiry date.

Pre-Application Checklist for the Dubai 60 Days Visa

Before starting your application through InstaDubaiVisa.com, confirm every item:

Decision Confirmed

  • 60-day duration chosen — confirmed (trip will exceed 30 days or flexibility preferred)
  • Single or multiple entry selected based on itinerary — confirmed

Mandatory Documents

  • Passport valid for 6 months from UAE entry date — confirmed
  • Passport has at least two blank pages — confirmed
  • Passport bio page scan: full colour, 300 DPI+, all corners visible, JPEG or PDF, under 2MB — ready
  • UAE visa photograph: 4.3 x 5.5 cm, pure white background, no glasses, JPEG, under 2MB — ready
  • Flight itinerary showing entry and departure dates — prepared
  • Accommodation confirmation — prepared

Strongly Recommended Documents

  • Bank statements: last 3 to 6 months, official PDF — prepared
  • Employment or income letter — prepared

Technical Requirements

  • All files in JPEG or PDF format — confirmed
  • All files under 2MB each — confirmed
  • iPhone users: HEIC files converted to JPEG — confirmed
  • No non-refundable travel bookings made before visa approval — confirmed

Every item confirmed? You are ready to apply. A complete, accurately prepared application reviewed by InstaDubaiVisa.com's expert pre-screening service is the fastest route to your approved 60-day UAE e-visa.

Why Apply Through InstaDubaiVisa.com

For your Dubai 60 Days Visa, InstaDubaiVisa.com delivers:

  • Expert Document Pre-Screening — Every application reviewed by a specialist before UAE immigration submission.
  • 100% Online — No embassy visits, no paper forms, no queues. Apply from anywhere on any device.
  • Fast Processing — Most applications approved within 24 to 48 hours. Standard: 3 to 5 working days.
  • Real-Time Application Tracking — Monitor your visa status 24/7 using your reference number.
  • 24/7 Human Support — WhatsApp, live chat, and email. Round the clock in multiple languages.
  • Transparent All-Inclusive Pricing — No hidden fees. Total cost displayed before payment.
  • PCI-DSS Certified Secure Payments — All transactions and document uploads fully encrypted.
  • Trusted by Over 10 Million Travellers — Proven platform across 180+ nationalities.

Conclusion

The Dubai 60 Days Visa is the most flexible and comprehensive standard tourist visa available for the UAE — two months of permitted stay, single or multiple entry, all seven emirates, applied for entirely online and delivered to your email within 24 to 48 hours of submission.

For travellers whose trip exceeds a month, whose plans include regional exploration beyond the UAE's borders, or who simply want the security of a generous stay window without mid-trip administrative pressure, the 60-day visa is the right choice. Choose single entry for UAE-only itineraries and multiple entry for anything that involves leaving and returning.

Apply through InstaDubaiVisa.com at least 10 to 14 days before departure, prepare your documents carefully, and let the expert pre-screening service ensure your application is complete and correct before it reaches UAE immigration. Then enjoy two months in one of the world's most extraordinary places — at a pace that actually does it justice.

Apply for your Dubai 60 Days Visa today at InstaDubaiVisa.com — expert review, fast processing, and your approved e-visa delivered by email.