Christmas in Dubai is an acquired taste. For newcomers, it can feel like a series of contradictions: carols in 25-degree sunshine and red bobble hats by the swimmingChristmas in Dubai is an acquired taste. For newcomers, it can feel like a series of contradictions: carols in 25-degree sunshine and red bobble hats by the swimming

What Dubai gets right (and wrong) at Christmas

2025/12/26 19:13

Christmas in Dubai is an acquired taste. For newcomers, it can feel like a series of contradictions: carols in 25-degree sunshine and red bobble hats by the swimming pool; kids in damp swimming gear gathered round the Filipino Santa’s gift sack.

For those of us who have been here a while, however, it has become a familiar ritual and one that the city does remarkably well. Mostly.

Start with the obvious advantage: the weather. While friends and family in Europe wrestle with storms, flight delays and the debate over how many layers to wear, Dubai offers clear skies, warm days and evenings cool enough for an outdoor dinner.

Christmas lunch on a terrace overlooking the sea, or even on the sand itself, remains one of the great pleasures of life in the Gulf.

Hotels, in particular, have perfected the festive formula. Dubai does Christmas as a hospitality exercise with industrial precision. I spent the day at the Jumeirah Beach Hotel, one of the city’s real treasures, and which, coming up to three decades of hospitality, has perfected the art of Christmas.

Our mixed-nationality party of about 15 enjoyed the traditional European menu – turkey, stuffing, pigs in blankets, mince pies – but were also able to sample cuisine from the four corners.

Levantine mezze sat happily alongside Yorkshire pudding, Asian seafood stations competed with French pâtisserie, and baklava was the alternative to Christmas pudding. It is festive without being parochial, which suits the city’s orientation. Christmas lunch in Dubai is a globalised affair.

What also works is the ease with which the city celebrates a holiday that is not officially its own. There is no awkwardness about celebrating Christmas in a Muslim country. On the contrary, Dubai treats it as another opportunity to showcase tolerance, cosmopolitanism and, of course, some serious shopping.

Supermarkets stock mince pies and Brussels sprouts with the same efficiency they apply to Ramadan dates and labneh. Restaurants offer mulled wine  with cheerful professionalism, regardless of the religious background of the staff serving it.

Service is impeccable, as ever. The machinery of Dubai’s hospitality sector hums along relentlessly through Christmas Day itself, because December 25 is not a public holiday here. Restaurants are full, the malls are packed, and taxis much in demand.

Then there is the sheer enthusiasm with which Dubai embraces the visual language of Christmas. Decorations go up early and come down late, while the malls transform into winter wonderlands. The hotels compete to build the tallest tree, the largest gingerbread house, or the most elaborate reindeer display. 

But it is precisely here that Dubai sometimes gets Christmas slightly wrong.

The decorations are impressive, but often curiously soulless. They are grand, expensive and technically flawless, yet also strangely bland and uniform. The same baubles, the same trees, the same orchestral versions of carols looped endlessly through malls.

Some of these seem to have been rewritten by a very woke algorithm. In one version I heard of the old standard “Winter Wonderland”, the snowman named “Parson Brown” was transformed into “a nice old guy”, no doubt to avoid the remote possibility of offending religious sensibilities.

There is also the small matter of traffic. Christmas Day may be a holiday elsewhere, but in Dubai it is business as usual for many, as roads around malls and beach hotels clog up and the leisurely festive lunch can begin with an hour spent staring at brake lights. (I’m talking about you, Sheikh Zayed Road.)

Perhaps the greatest absence, however, is silence. In Europe, Christmas morning carries a particular stillness: closed shops, empty streets, a collective pause. Dubai never quite stops.

That energy is usually one of its defining strengths, but at Christmas it can feel slightly at odds with the spirit of enforced idleness that many associate with the season. I do miss those hours of post-prandial dozing on a sofa with half an eye on “The Great Escape” – though paddling barefoot in the sea at sunset also has appeal. 

It is easy to love Christmas in Dubai. The city excels at hospitality, inclusion and convenience. For the thousands of expatriates who cannot or choose not to travel, Dubai offers a Christmas that is as easy and pre-prepared as the turkey lunches available for home delivery from virtually every hotel.

This year, as ever, Dubai got Christmas mostly right. The sun shone, the tables were full, the menus generous. My crowd left the JBH full of festive spirit and bonhomie.

Dubai does not try to recreate Christmas as it is in Europe or north America. It re-engineers it for a city that never really pauses, even for goodwill and cheer. For those of us who have chosen to make our lives here, this slightly odd, sun-drenched version of Christmas has become its own tradition.

Read more from Frank Kane
  • As crude prices fall, Opec+ diplomats brace for an oil glut
  • Why I’m sitting out Cop30
  • Saudi Arabia reads the global room at FII9
Piyasa Fırsatı
Wink Logosu
Wink Fiyatı(LIKE)
$0.003213
$0.003213$0.003213
+0.37%
USD
Wink (LIKE) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen [email protected] ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

How to earn from cloud mining: IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform unlocks genuine passive earnings

How to earn from cloud mining: IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform unlocks genuine passive earnings

The post How to earn from cloud mining: IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform unlocks genuine passive earnings appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. contributor Posted: September 17, 2025 As digital assets continue to reshape global finance, cloud mining has become one of the most effective ways for investors to generate stable passive income. Addressing the growing demand for simplicity, security, and profitability, IeByte has officially upgraded its fully automated cloud mining platform, empowering both beginners and experienced investors to earn Bitcoin, Dogecoin, and other mainstream cryptocurrencies without the need for hardware or technical expertise. Why cloud mining in 2025? Traditional crypto mining requires expensive hardware, high electricity costs, and constant maintenance. In 2025, with blockchain networks becoming more competitive, these barriers have grown even higher. Cloud mining solves this by allowing users to lease professional mining power remotely, eliminating the upfront costs and complexity. IeByte stands at the forefront of this transformation, offering investors a transparent and seamless path to daily earnings. IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform With its latest upgrade, IeByte introduces: Full Automation: Mining contracts can be activated in just one click, with all processes handled by IeByte’s servers. Enhanced Security: Bank-grade encryption, cold wallets, and real-time monitoring protect every transaction. Scalable Options: From starter packages to high-level investment contracts, investors can choose the plan that matches their goals. Global Reach: Already trusted by users in over 100 countries. Mining contracts for 2025 IeByte offers a wide range of contracts tailored for every investor level. From entry-level plans with daily returns to premium high-yield packages, the platform ensures maximum accessibility. Contract Type Duration Price Daily Reward Total Earnings (Principal + Profit) Starter Contract 1 Day $200 $6 $200 + $6 + $10 bonus Bronze Basic Contract 2 Days $500 $13.5 $500 + $27 Bronze Basic Contract 3 Days $1,200 $36 $1,200 + $108 Silver Advanced Contract 1 Day $5,000 $175 $5,000 + $175 Silver Advanced Contract 2 Days $8,000 $320 $8,000 + $640 Silver…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/17 23:48
North America Sees $2.3T in Crypto

North America Sees $2.3T in Crypto

The post North America Sees $2.3T in Crypto appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Notes North America received $2.3 trillion in crypto value between July 2024 and June 2025, representing 26% of global activity. Tokenized U.S. treasuries saw assets under management (AUM) grow from $2 billion to over $7 billion in the last twelve months. U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs now account for over $120 billion in AUM, signaling strong institutional demand for the asset. . North America has established itself as a major center for cryptocurrency activity, with significant transaction volumes recorded over the past year. The region’s growth highlights an increasing institutional and retail interest in digital assets, particularly within the United States. According to a new report from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis published on September 17, North America received $2.3 trillion in cryptocurrency value between July 2024 and June 2025. This volume represents 26% of all global transaction activity during that period. The report suggests this activity was influenced by a more favorable regulatory outlook and institutional trading strategies. A peak in monthly value was recorded in December 2024, when an estimated $244 billion was transferred in a single month. ETFs and Tokenization Drive Adoption The rise of spot Bitcoin BTC $115 760 24h volatility: 0.5% Market cap: $2.30 T Vol. 24h: $43.60 B ETFs has been a significant factor in the market’s expansion. U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs now hold over $120 billion in assets under management (AUM), making up a large portion of the roughly $180 billion held globally. The strong demand is reflected in a recent resumption of inflows, although the products are not without their detractors, with author Robert Kiyosaki calling ETFs “for losers.” The market for tokenized real-world assets also saw notable growth. While funds holding tokenized U.S. treasuries expanded their AUM from approximately $2 billion to more than $7 billion, the trend is expanding into other asset classes.…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:07
What Happened With Bitcoin This Year? 2025 BTC Roundup

What Happened With Bitcoin This Year? 2025 BTC Roundup

Here’s how Bitcoin reached new highs this year, gained state support, saw record ETF inflows and ended with a heavy October crash. 2025 has now become a year few
Paylaş
LiveBitcoinNews2025/12/31 18:30