I ditched the UK to move to Dubai but it's nowhere near as glamorous as you would think

I ditched the UK to move to Dubai but it's nowhere near as glamorous as you would think
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I ditched the UK to move to Dubai but it's nowhere near as glamorous as you would think
Published: Feb, 14 2025 11:10

Thousands of Brits have ditched the UK for sunnier climes in Dubai - drawn by the promise of luxury living and city glamour. But for Emma Flicc, who works in marketing, the reality of life in the city is often very different to how she imagined. Though the 31-year-old says she would 'never' move back to London, she said that living in the UAE is 'very different' to how it's portrayed on Instagram. Emma said that the vast majority of people she knows in Dubai - including influencers - still work regular Monday to Friday jobs and commute to work.

 [Emma will eat lunch in her car as there's 'nowhere' nearby and her office is 'claustrophobic']
Image Credit: Mail Online [Emma will eat lunch in her car as there's 'nowhere' nearby and her office is 'claustrophobic']

As for her own situation, she works in a 'claustrophobic' box room next to a work house and will either need to drive half an hour to a food court for lunch, or bring her own food and sit in the car. Taking to her TikTok account, where she has more than 100,000 followers, Emma filmed herself eating leftover takeaway from the night before on her lunch break. She explained in the video: 'People just associate Dubai with people who have obscene amounts of wealth.

Image Credit: Mail Online

'But I would like to remind you that obscene amounts of wealth exist everywhere in the world. If you've worked in big metropolitan cities - London, Paris etc, you can see that quite easily. Emma Flicc, 31, says her move from the UK to Dubai was not as glamorous as she thought. 'The vast majority of us work Monday through Friday in our office jobs. We commute to work - whether that's driving or getting the metro. And then after work we're hanging out with friends or loved ones, going to the gym whatever.

Image Credit: Mail Online

'That's it - that's my real Dubai and that's the real Dubai for everyone I know.'. Emma has lived in Dubai for more than two years after moving in the middle of 2022 and 'falling in love' with it. But for residents, the reality of daily life in the city is not how it's generally portrayed online. She added: 'I don't wake up and shower myself in gold and then go ride out on a camel and get picked up by a Lamborghini and lounge out by the pool at the Bulgari. We're just in a place that's not viewed as normal in the media.'.

Image Credit: Mail Online

Viewers soon rushed to the comments to share their own experiences of living in Dubai, with some branding it 'hell' and a 'dump'. They wrote: 'I really don't like Dubai at all. Didn't enjoy it at all';. 'You’ve really sold it to me! Dubai is hell';. 'Same where I work. There is no proper food. So I end up going out';. Here’s how I’m spending my lunch hour working in Dubai in Marketing. Sat in my car making a TikTok #Dubai #DubaiLife #LifeInDubai #marketing #DITL.

Image Credit: Mail Online

Emma will eat lunch in her car as there's 'nowhere' nearby and her office is 'claustrophobic'. Viewers soon rushed to the comments to share their own experiences of living in Dubai, with some branding it 'hell' and a 'dump'. 'Not a fan of dubai- all that glitters isn’t gold, it’s like an amped up Disney land';. 'As much as everyone glamourises Dubai as in luxury terms etc. In my eyes, it just doesn’t have a soul';.

 [Viewers soon rushed to the comments to share their own experiences of living in Dubai, with some branding it 'hell' and a 'dump']
Image Credit: Mail Online [Viewers soon rushed to the comments to share their own experiences of living in Dubai, with some branding it 'hell' and a 'dump']

'Dubai is a dump.'. Moving from the UK to the United Arab Emirates has become a well-trodden path for Britons in recent years looking for a glitzy relocation and a better quality of life. Aside from feeling safer, Britons are also attracted by a range of factors such as the warm climate, tax-free income and high-end restaurants, property and shops. More than 240,000 British expats are now estimated to live in Dubai, with many attracted to the city by the 5,000 British companies now operating in the UAE.

 [Dubai is seen attractive thanks to factors such as tax-free income and high-end restaurants (stock image)]
Image Credit: Mail Online [Dubai is seen attractive thanks to factors such as tax-free income and high-end restaurants (stock image)]

There has been a 420 per cent rise in the five years to 2024 in enquiries from UK nationals wanting to relocate to the country, according to John Mason International Movers – with a 45 per cent surge in the 12 months to March last year alone. Dubai is seen attractive thanks to factors such as tax-free income and high-end restaurants (stock image). Luxury restaurants are a major draw in Dubai, including this one near Burj Khalifa Lake.

 [Luxury restaurants are a major draw in Dubai, including this one near Burj Khalifa Lake]
Image Credit: Mail Online [Luxury restaurants are a major draw in Dubai, including this one near Burj Khalifa Lake]

However, prices in Dubai have risen 124 per cent since 2020 according to Knight Frank - with some British expats said to have been priced out as property is bought up by wealthy Russians after Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Emma also believes that the UAE is 'more accommodating' to Westerners as she's allowed to go to drink alcohol and go 'wherever' she wants, including pubs and clubs.

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