The Foreign Office has dropped its advice against travelling to Dubai, opening the way for British holidaymakers to return to one of their favourite destinations after the US and Iran reached an agreement to end their war.
But the government cautioned that the region remains volatile. The travel advice page for the United Arab Emirates warned that despite the peace deal, "attacks could resume at short notice".
“Foreign Office drops 'do not travel' warning for Dubai after US-Iran peace deal, but warns situation remains unpredictable.”
The announcement comes after thousands of Britons were left stranded in the Middle East when the conflict erupted in early 2026. Many airlines suspended flights to major travel hubs, leaving travellers scrambling for alternatives.
More than 1.4 million Brits visited Dubai last year, and the city has become a major holiday and business destination. Lifting the "do not travel" advice means that people travelling to the UAE will no longer risk invalidating their travel insurance.
Yet early signs suggest some carriers will be slow to restart services. Virgin Atlantic suspended flights until winter 2027 after the war started, and a spokesperson said on Thursday that this "remains the case". British Airways said earlier in June that it would not resume flights to the UAE until October 2026. Emirates, which is owned by the state, has still been operating flights to the region during the conflict.
Mark Tanzer, the chief executive of Abta, the industry group for travel agents, said he expected to see a "positive impact" on travel to the region. "This is the most important development for tourism to and through the Middle East in some time, we know the government won't have taken this decision lightly," he said.
"We know from our research that people have been delaying booking their summer holiday because they wanted to see what happened with the conflict in the Middle East, and that the government travel advice is an important factor in confidence to travel."
Tanzer added: "While we're not out of the woods yet, hopefully this change will open up the market more broadly – there are some very competitively priced holidays for this summer, so if you're still to book, now is the time to do it."
The Foreign Office advice said: "The US and Iran have announced a memorandum of understanding in relation to the conflict in the Middle East. The situation remains unpredictable and attacks could resume at short notice."
It continued: "Before the 8 April ceasefire, the Iranian regime had stated its intention to target locations in the Gulf associated with the United States and Israel. This included US or Israeli-linked organisations, businesses, facilities and institutions. Iran has previously targeted civilian infrastructure across the region such as ports, hotels, roads, bridges, energy facilities, oil production sites, water systems, and airports."