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Heart of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
Heart of Sharjah

Emirate of Sharjah

Heart of Sharjah

A restored old-town quarter of coral-stone lanes, the Al Hisn fort and the free Sharjah Art Museum. It is the walkable, atmospheric core of the city โ€” best tackled in the morning before the heat builds.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Sharjah, United Arab Emirates

Opening hours

The lanes are open access to walk at any time. Individual museums and the Al Hisn fort keep their own daytime hours, typically with a midday or Friday-morning break, and these shift seasonally and during Ramadan, so confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Free โ€” wandering the restored lanes and visiting the Sharjah Art Museum cost nothing. You only pay a small fee, roughly AED 10 (about ยฃ2) each, to enter the Al Hisn fort and some of the individual heritage museums.

Time needed

A half-day, or one to two hours if you just want a wander and the Art Museum.

In short

Visiting Heart of Sharjah

Heart of Sharjah is the restored historic quarter near Sharjah Creek: coral-stone lanes, courtyards, the Al Hisn fort and the free Sharjah Art Museum. Wandering the streets and visiting the Art Museum cost nothing; the fort and individual heritage museums charge a small fee of roughly a few dirhams each โ€” around ยฃ2.

The walkable old town

Near Sharjah Creek, the Heart of Sharjah is the cityโ€™s restored historic quarter โ€” a grid of coral-stone lanes, shaded courtyards and wind-tower houses that has been carefully done up rather than over-polished. It is the atmospheric core of Sharjah and, unlike much of the modern emirate, itโ€™s genuinely walkable: you wander between the buildings rather than driving from car park to car park.

The anchor sights are the Al Hisn fort, the old seat of the ruling family, and the Sharjah Art Museum, one of the largest in the Gulf and usually free to enter. Around them sit a cluster of small heritage and themed museums, a calligraphy square and the souks. The walking, the courtyards and the Art Museum cost nothing; the fort and the individual heritage museums charge a small fee โ€” roughly ยฃ2 each โ€” so you can dip into the ones that interest you and skip the rest.

When to go and how to play it

Go in the morning. The lanes are open and largely unshaded, and by midday โ€” especially in summer โ€” the heat is punishing and the area empties out. Early on itโ€™s cooler, quieter and far better for photographs. From late autumn to early spring the temperatures ease enough to linger into the afternoon.

Plan around the hours: museums here often run split daytime sessions with a midday break, shift on Fridays, and change during Ramadan, so check the official site before relying on a specific opening. Dress modestly โ€” Sharjah is more conservative than Dubai โ€” and bring water.

Realistically this is a half-day, or one to two hours if you just want a wander and the Art Museum. It wonโ€™t dazzle anyone chasing skyscrapers and malls, but if you like old towns with real texture and almost no entry cost, itโ€™s the most rewarding corner of the city.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Sharjah city guide.

More to see in Sharjah

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Heart of Sharjah FAQs

What is actually free in Heart of Sharjah?
Walking the restored old-town lanes and courtyards is free at any hour, and the Sharjah Art Museum generally has free entry. The Al Hisn fort and several of the smaller heritage and themed museums charge a small admission, usually only a couple of pounds each, so you can pick and choose.
When is the best time to visit?
Go in the morning, before the heat builds โ€” the open lanes have little shade by midday, especially in summer. Early in the day is also quieter and better for photographs. From late autumn to early spring the temperatures are far more forgiving and you can comfortably linger into the afternoon.