Key Highlights
The UAE is home to more than 200 nationalities, and sponsoring a spouse for a UAE residence visa is one of the first major moves expats make once they get settled.
The process is accessible, the rules are clear, and 2026 has brought updates that make it more straightforward than before.
One thing worth knowing upfront: there’s no official document called a “spouse visa” in the UAE.
What you’re applying for is a family residence visa, also called a UAE dependent visa, issued under the UAE’s family sponsorship framework.
It’s the same result. Knowing the right terminology just helps you navigate official portals and paperwork without confusion.
Getting your spouse to the UAE sounds simple until you sit down to actually start the process. That’s when the questions pile up fast. What salary do you need? Does your job title matter? Does your marriage certificate need attestation? Should your spouse fly in on a tourist visa first?
These aren’t edge-case questions. They’re the questions that fill UAE expat forums daily, and getting even one of them wrong can set your timeline back by weeks or cost you fees you didn’t plan for.
According to the official UAE government portal, both employers and employees with valid UAE residence visas can now sponsor their families regardless of job title under current federal rules. But the other details, such as documents, entry sequence, and salary thresholds, still trip people up consistently.
That’s exactly what this guide is for.
Any expat with a valid UAE residence visa, whether you’re on a mainland employment visa, a free zone visa, or a business owner visa, can sponsor your spouse for a UAE family residence visa. Here’s what the current rules require:
Sponsor Type | Minimum Salary Requirement |
Salaried employee, no employer accommodation | AED 4,000 per month |
Salaried employee; employer provides accommodation | AED 3,000 per month |
UAE national sponsoring foreign spouse | No salary requirement |
Green Visa holder sponsoring spouse | Eligible as first-degree relative |
Golden Visa holder sponsoring spouse | No standard salary threshold under the Golden Visa framework |
The removal of job-title restrictions is worth highlighting. Previously, certain roles weren’t eligible to sponsor dependents. That barrier no longer applies under current UAE government guidelines.
A few other rules to keep in mind. Your own residence visa must be active before you can sponsor anyone. The dependent visa issued for your spouse also can’t have a validity that goes beyond your own visa’s expiry date.
The marriage certificate attestation is the step most people underestimate. If your certificate was issued outside the UAE, it has to go through official attestation in your home country first, then verification by the UAE embassy there, before the Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs, and Port Security (ICP) will accept it.
Non-Arabic documents also need a certified Arabic translation. A notarized copy from your home country isn’t the same thing, and submitting one without proper attestation is the most common reason applications get rejected before they even begin.
Here’s the full document checklist:
Document | Key Requirement |
Sponsor’s valid residence visa and Emirates ID | Must be active at time of application |
Sponsor’s passport copy | Clear, valid |
Salary certificate or employment contract | Must confirm minimum income threshold |
Ejari/tenancy contract or employer accommodation letter | Mandatory if earning AED 3,000 with employer-provided housing |
Attested marriage certificate | Officially attested; certified Arabic translation required if not originally in Arabic |
Spouse’s valid passport | Minimum 6 months’ validity |
ICP-compliant passport photo | White background, recent |
Health insurance for spouse | Mandatory under ICP rules, not optional |
Medical fitness certificate | Required for spouses aged 18 and above |
The order of these steps isn’t a suggestion. Getting Step 2 wrong is the most expensive mistake expats make in this whole process.
Step 1: Apply for an entry permit.
You, as the sponsor, apply for an entry permit for your spouse through the UAEICP app or the ICP website.
Step 2: Your spouse enters the UAE on the entry permit, not a tourist or visit visa.
This is the step that costs people money when they get it wrong. If your spouse flies in on a regular tourist or visit visa and then tries to change their status from inside the country, it triggers a separate status-change procedure with additional fees. That cost is entirely avoidable. Arrange the entry permit first, and your spouse travels on that.
Step 3: Medical fitness test.
Your spouse completes a medical fitness test at a health center approved by the Dubai Health Authority (DHA), Department of Health Abu Dhabi (DoH), or Emirates Health Services (EHS), depending on the emirate. This applies to all sponsored individuals aged 18 and above.
Step 4: Emirates ID biometrics.
First-time applicants complete their Emirates ID biometrics in person at an ICP-authorized center.
Step 5: Residence visa stamp.
Once medical clearance and biometrics are complete, the residence visa is stamped in your spouse’s passport.
Processing times vary depending on document completeness and application volume. Having all your documents fully prepared and correctly attested before you begin is the most reliable way to avoid delays.
One more important note: if you ever need to cancel your own UAE residence visa, you must cancel your spouse’s dependent visa before cancelling yours. Failing to follow this sequence puts you in breach of your sponsorship obligations.
If you hold a UAE Golden Visa, the family sponsorship framework works more favorably.
The ICP confirms that the Golden Visa enables holders and their families to reside in the UAE for extended periods with no need for a traditional sponsor arrangement. This means no standard salary threshold applies to sponsoring your spouse under the Golden Visa framework.
There’s another meaningful advantage. Golden Visa holders aren’t restricted by standard residency re-entry requirements, meaning their long-term UAE residency remains intact regardless of how long they spend abroad. That same stability extends to family members sponsored under the Golden Visa.
This question comes up constantly in UAE expat communities, and it deserves a straight answer.
Your spouse’s dependent visa is directly tied to the legal status of your marriage. Once a divorce is finalized, the marriage declaration underpinning the dependent visa becomes invalid.
Gaurav Keswani, founder of JSB Incorporation, addressed this directly on a live Talk 100.3 FM broadcast, describing the situation for the dependent spouse after divorce as “a little challenging.”
Here’s what that means practically for your spouse:
Children have stronger protections than the dependent spouse in this situation. Their residency is tied to custody arrangements rather than to the marriage itself:
“In both cases, children would be able to sustain their visa,” Gaurav confirmed during the same broadcast. What changes is that the primary sponsoring parent shifts from both parents jointly to whichever parent holds custody.
Your spouse’s dependent visa is linked to your own residence permit. That matters when life takes unexpected turns.
If your residence visa is cancelled, your spouse receives a 6-month grace period from the date of cancellation or expiry to secure alternative residency. Don’t wait to start exploring options for your spouse the moment you know your own visa is at risk.
As the sponsor, you’re also financially liable for fines if a dependent visa isn’t renewed or cancelled on time. Since February 2026, the ICP has unified overstay fines across all UAE visa categories at AED 50 per day, effective from the first day after expiry or the end of any applicable grace period.
If you’re a woman living in the UAE on your husband’s residence visa and you become divorced or widowed, the UAE government grants a 1-year residence visa extension. Here’s exactly how it works:
To apply, you’ll need proof of divorce or death, proof of housing, and evidence that you can financially support yourself. You can process this through an Amer center in Dubai or directly at an ICP office.
These are real, consistently reported errors in UAE expat communities, and each one is avoidable:
Q1: What is the minimum salary to sponsor a spouse in the UAE?
The minimum salary to sponsor a spouse in UAE is AED 4,000 per month. If your employer provides accommodation, that drops to AED 3,000 per month. There’s no job-title restriction under current 2026 UAE government rules.
Q2: Can a wife sponsor her husband in the UAE?
Yes. Both male and female UAE residents who meet the salary threshold can sponsor their spouse for a UAE family residence visa. Gender isn’t a restriction.
Q3: Does the marriage certificate need attestation for a UAE spouse visa?
Yes. It must be officially attested, and if it’s not in Arabic, a certified Arabic translation is required before the ICP accepts it.
Q4: Can I work in UAE on a dependent visa?
No. A UAE dependent visa doesn’t include work authorization. You’ll need a separate work permit or employment-linked residence visa to work legally in the UAE.
Q5: What happens to my spouse’s visa if I lose my job in UAE?
If your residence visa is cancelled, your spouse receives a 6-month grace period from the date of cancellation to secure alternative residency, as confirmed on the official UAE government portal.
Q6: What happens to a spouse’s visa after divorce in the UAE?
The dependent visa is tied to the legal marriage. After divorce, your former spouse must independently pursue a new residency pathway. Women on a husband’s visa at the time of divorce receive a 1-year residence extension, renewable once, with no new sponsor required.
Q7: Can a Golden Visa holder sponsor a spouse without a salary requirement?
Under the Golden Visa framework, the ICP confirms that holders and their families can reside in the UAE without requiring a traditional sponsor arrangement, meaning no standard salary threshold applies.
If you want to move through this without second-guessing every document or worrying about whether you’ve missed a step, the team at JSB Incorporation is worth a conversation.
Based at Regal Tower, Business Bay, Dubai, JSB has helped expats and international entrepreneurs across every visa category and UAE jurisdiction navigate exactly this process.
Whether you’re a salaried employee, a free zone business owner, or a Golden Visa holder, their team handles the paperwork, the sequencing, and the strategy so nothing falls through the cracks. Their pricing is transparent and their support is end-to-end, from first document check to final visa stamp.
Book your free consultation call today with the experts of JSB Incorporation to learn more.
Also Read:
What Are the Conditions to Keep the UAE Golden Visa Active?
How to Fix Document Errors in Your UAE Golden Visa Application (2026 Official Process)
Golden Visa UAE: 5 Categories Nobody Talks About in 2026
Dubai Just Unified Its Golden Visa, Property, and Retiree Residency Into One System
Can Under Market Value Property Qualify for a Golden Visa in the UAE?
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