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Restaurant Insurance in the UAE: Every Cover You Need in 2026
Restaurant Insurance in the UAE: Every Cover You Need in 2026

What Restaurant Insurance UAE Actually Covers

Restaurant insurance UAE is a collective term for several distinct policies — some legally required, others strongly recommended — that together protect your staff, customers, physical premises, equipment, and revenue stream. No single policy covers everything; owners typically hold three to five separate covers working as a coordinated safety net.

UAE restaurants face a concentrated set of risks: high staff turnover, open commercial kitchens, food handling liability, and dense customer footfall. A kitchen fire, a customer slip-and-fall, or a foodborne illness claim can expose an uninsured operator to costs that far exceed the annual premium of a bundled policy. The legal environment compounds this — two classes of cover are now compulsory across the UAE, and non-compliance triggers fines and visa-processing blocks that can stall your entire operation.

This guide walks through every relevant cover type, the AED cost you should budget in 2026, the legal framework behind each requirement, and practical guidance on building the right policy stack for your venue. If you are still in the planning stage, our full guide on how to open a restaurant in Dubai covers the broader licensing and setup process, while our UAE labour law for restaurant staff page explains your wider employment obligations.

Legally Mandatory Insurance for UAE Restaurants

Two categories of insurance are compulsory for UAE restaurant operators: workmen’s compensation insurance, mandated under federal labour law, and employee health insurance, which became nationwide mandatory from January 2025. Failure to maintain either policy exposes you to fines ranging from AED 500 to AED 1,000,000 and can block visa processing for new hires.

Workmen’s Compensation Insurance

Workmen’s compensation (WC) insurance is mandated by Federal Law No. 8 of 1980, updated by Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 and Cabinet Resolution No. 33 of 2022. It covers every employee on your payroll regardless of nationality. Annual premiums run AED 600–750 per worker depending on your industry risk classification — restaurants typically sit in a mid-range band given commercial kitchen hazards.

Benefits under a compliant WC policy include:

  • Death or Permanent Total Disability: 24 months of the employee’s basic salary, with a floor of AED 18,000 and a ceiling of AED 200,000.
  • Medical expenses: Up to AED 50,000 per incident.
  • Repatriation costs: AED 10,000–25,000 per person.
  • Wage replacement: Full pay for the first six months of incapacity, half pay for the following six months.

Non-compliance fines for WC violations range from AED 100,000 to AED 1,000,000 under the updated labour framework. For a detailed breakdown of your employer obligations, see our page on UAE labour law for restaurant staff. If you need a licensed PRO to handle insurance registration alongside your trade licence renewals, our restaurant PRO services team can manage the full compliance cycle.

Employee Health Insurance

Health insurance for all employees became a nationwide mandate from January 2025, harmonising requirements across all seven emirates. Before that date, Dubai had enforced its own mandate since 2016 and Abu Dhabi since 2006; the 2025 federal rule closed remaining gaps in the Northern Emirates.

Minimum coverage levels and costs vary by emirate:

  • Dubai (DHA Essential Benefits Plan): AED 500–700 per year for employees earning AED 4,000 per month or less. Higher earners require more comprehensive plans. Group plans for restaurant staff typically sit in this band.
  • Abu Dhabi (DoH/Daman framework): More comprehensive cover; mandatory extension to the employee’s spouse and up to three children under 18. Abu Dhabi premiums are generally higher than Dubai’s basic tier.
  • Northern Emirates (Sharjah, Ajman, Ras Al Khaimah, Umm Al Quwain, Fujairah): Basic plans start at AED 320–600 per year under the 2025 federal minimum standards.

Mid-range comprehensive plans cost AED 1,500–4,000 per employee per year; high-end or VIP coverage reaches AED 5,000–15,000 or more. Group plans available for restaurant teams of five or more are typically 40–60 percent cheaper than individual policies of equivalent coverage — a significant saving when you have twenty or thirty staff. Non-compliance penalties include fines of AED 500–150,000, an additional AED 1,000 per uncovered employee per year in Dubai specifically, and blocked visa processing.

Insurance Types Every UAE Restaurant Should Carry

Beyond the two mandatory covers, four additional insurance types are widely considered essential for UAE restaurant operations: public liability, product and food liability, property and fire insurance, and business interruption cover. Equipment breakdown protection is a further recommended add-on. None of these are currently mandated by federal law, but their absence creates uninsured exposure that can exceed hundreds of thousands of dirhams from a single incident.

Public Liability Insurance

Public liability insurance protects your business when a customer, supplier, or other third party suffers injury or property damage on or directly because of your premises. For restaurants, the most common triggers are slip-and-fall incidents on wet kitchen floors or entrance areas, food poisoning claims, and accidental damage to a customer’s property. A standard policy covers legal defence costs in addition to any judgment or settlement awarded against you.

For a small restaurant or café, premiums typically run AED 1,000–5,000 per year. The final figure depends on your seating capacity, annual turnover, delivery operations, and the specific activities covered. This policy is separate from employee WC cover — WC addresses staff injuries; public liability addresses third-party claims.

Product and Food Liability Insurance

Product liability (often called food liability) covers claims arising from contaminated, allergen-mislabelled, or improperly prepared food served at your venue or through delivery. It is structured as a standalone policy or as a rider added to your public liability cover. It is especially important for operators running large buffets, catering operations, or high-volume delivery services.

Property and Fire Insurance

A comprehensive property policy protects your commercial kitchen equipment, furniture, fixtures, inventory, and the building itself (or your leasehold improvements and tenant improvements if you are renting). UAE commercial kitchens represent concentrated asset values — a full kitchen fit-out for a mid-range restaurant can run AED 300,000–800,000. Fire is the most catastrophic risk, but property policies also cover flood, burst pipes, and malicious damage.

Note that your Civil Defence approval for your restaurant is a prerequisite for lawful operation and is typically required by insurers before issuing a property policy. Ensure your Civil Defence compliance is current before seeking quotes.

Business Interruption Insurance

Business interruption (BI) insurance compensates for lost revenue and ongoing fixed costs — rent, staff salaries, utilities, and loan repayments — during a period when your restaurant cannot trade because of an insured event. A kitchen fire that triggers a Civil Defence shutdown can close a restaurant for three to six months; without BI cover, all those fixed costs accumulate against zero income.

Standard BI policies for restaurants offer a 12-month indemnity period, covering lost revenue, rent obligations, staff salaries, utility standing charges, and reasonable relocation costs. BI cover is almost always sold alongside a property policy — the property policy pays to rebuild; the BI policy pays for what you lose during the rebuild.

Equipment Breakdown Insurance

Commercial kitchen equipment — refrigeration units, combi-ovens, dishwashers, POS systems — is expensive to replace at short notice. Equipment breakdown cover (also called machinery breakdown or boiler and machinery cover) pays repair or replacement costs when mechanical or electrical failure occurs, and is usually added as a rider to the property policy at modest additional premium. It is particularly relevant for restaurants operating high-value cold-chain equipment where a refrigeration failure can also trigger a food spoilage claim.

AED Cost Breakdown: What to Budget for Restaurant Insurance

The table below summarises 2026 annual premiums for each cover type relevant to a small-to-mid-sized UAE restaurant or café. Actual premiums depend on headcount, location, cover limits, claims history, and chosen insurer — use these ranges as budget benchmarks, not binding quotes.

Cover Type Mandatory? AED Range (Annual) Who It Protects
Workmen’s Compensation Yes — federal law AED 600–750 per worker All employees (injury, death, disability)
Employee Health Insurance Yes — nationwide since Jan 2025 AED 320–15,000+ per employee All employees; dependants in Abu Dhabi
Public Liability No (strongly recommended) AED 1,000–5,000 Customers and third parties on premises
Product / Food Liability No (strongly recommended) Bundled with public liability or rider Customers affected by food served
Property and Fire No (strongly recommended) AED 8,000–25,000 (full package) Building, equipment, inventory, fit-out
Business Interruption No (strongly recommended) AED 3,000–8,000 Lost revenue and fixed costs during closure
Equipment Breakdown No (recommended add-on) Rider to property policy Commercial kitchen and refrigeration equipment

For a 15-staff restaurant in Dubai with a full property and liability package, a realistic total annual insurance spend is AED 35,000–55,000 when mandatory covers are combined with the recommended suite. Larger operations or those with delivery fleets will pay more. The mandatory health insurance cost alone for 15 employees at the Dubai DHA basic tier runs AED 7,500–10,500 before any group discount. Our F&B business setup package can help you model these costs as part of a full pre-opening financial plan.

How to Choose the Right Restaurant Insurance in the UAE

Choosing the right restaurant insurance UAE package requires matching cover limits to your actual asset values and revenue exposure, not simply buying the cheapest policy that satisfies the regulatory minimum. The four steps below will guide most operators to a sound decision without overpaying.

Work with a Licensed UAE Insurance Broker

The UAE Insurance Authority (now integrated into the Central Bank of UAE) licenses brokers who are authorised to place business on your behalf. A licensed broker has access to multiple underwriters and a duty to find appropriate terms for your operation. Ask for proof of licensing and request quotes from at least three insurers before binding any policy.

Set Cover Limits Based on Real Asset Values

Under-insuring your kitchen equipment to save on premium is a common mistake. If your fit-out cost AED 500,000 and your policy limit is AED 200,000, you carry AED 300,000 of uninsured exposure after a total loss. Maintain a current asset register and update declared values at each renewal. For public liability, AED 1,000,000–5,000,000 cover limits are standard for mid-size restaurants.

Bundle Covers Where Possible

Many UAE insurers offer combined commercial package policies that bundle property, business interruption, public liability, and equipment breakdown into a single premium with a reduced combined rate. Bundling simplifies administration, eliminates coverage gaps, and typically costs less than purchasing each cover individually. Always confirm that bundling does not reduce any individual limit below what you need.

Read Exclusions Carefully Before Signing

UAE commercial policies frequently exclude: wilful negligence, pest infestation damage, gradual deterioration, war and civil unrest, and losses not reported within specified timeframes. Food liability policies may exclude known allergen exposure where no allergen labelling was in place. Property policies may void cover if your Civil Defence compliance was not current at the time of loss. Read the exclusions clause — not just the coverage summary — before binding any policy.

FAQ

Is public liability insurance legally required for restaurants in the UAE?

Public liability insurance is not currently mandated by UAE federal law for most restaurant categories, though certain premises — particularly those in free zones or with specific municipality permits — may require it as a licence condition. Despite not being universal in law, it is strongly recommended: a single slip-and-fall claim or foodborne illness lawsuit can generate legal costs and damages that far exceed the AED 1,000–5,000 annual premium. Most commercial landlords in Dubai and Abu Dhabi also require public liability cover as a condition of your lease.

How much does workmen’s compensation insurance cost per employee in the UAE?

Workmen’s compensation insurance in the UAE typically costs AED 600–750 per employee per year for restaurant-sector workers in 2026. The precise premium depends on the insurer, the nature of the role (kitchen staff are rated at higher risk than front-of-house), and the declared wage base. Premiums are calculated on basic salary, so higher-paid employees increase the policy cost. The mandatory policy must be in place from the employee’s first working day.

What is the penalty for not providing health insurance to restaurant staff in the UAE?

From January 2025, health insurance is mandatory for all employees across the UAE. In Dubai, the fine is AED 1,000 per uncovered employee per year, with overall penalties ranging from AED 500 to AED 150,000. In addition, visa processing for new employees can be blocked until compliance is demonstrated. Abu Dhabi has enforced similar penalties since its mandate was introduced. Non-compliant operators risk both financial penalties and operational disruption if they cannot hire because visa applications are frozen.

Does a restaurant’s property insurance cover business interruption automatically?

Business interruption cover is not automatically included in a standard UAE property policy — it must be added explicitly, either as a separate policy or as a rider to the property policy. Many operators assume their property policy will compensate lost revenue during a rebuilding period; it will not unless BI cover has been specifically purchased and the indemnity period agreed. When buying property insurance, always confirm whether BI is included, check the indemnity period (12 months is standard for small businesses), and verify that the maximum indemnity amount reflects your actual monthly revenue and fixed cost obligations.

Related guide: This article is part of our complete restaurant compliance and food safety guide.

Make My Restaurant

Make My Restaurant is a UAE-based turnkey restaurant-services company — design, fit-out, MEP, compliance, cleaning and back-office support across all seven emirates.

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