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Palm Jumeirah, United Arab Emirates
Palm Jumeirah

Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Palm Jumeirah

A first stay on Dubai's palm-shaped island for UK travellers: which 'frond' to book, what Atlantis and the beach clubs actually cost, how the monorail and taxis work, and whether the island bubble suits your trip.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

In short

Palm Jumeirah at a glance

Palm Jumeirah is the reclaimed palm-shaped island off Dubai's Marina coast โ€” a single trunk road, an outer crescent breakwater and seventeen residential 'fronds' between them, built almost entirely as resorts, apartments and beach clubs. It's a where-to-stay decision more than a sightseeing one: you come for a private beach, Atlantis and the Aquaventure water park, not for landmarks. The whole island is about 5 km across, the monorail runs the length of the trunk in roughly 10 minutes, and the rest is taxis. Treat it as a self-contained beach base for 3โ€“5 nights and pair it with Downtown for the icons, rather than trying to sightsee daily from out here.

Palm Jumeirah looks, from the aeroplane window, like the cleverest hotel district ever drawn โ€” a sixteen-frond palm of beach resorts dropped into the Gulf. On the ground itโ€™s quieter and more residential than the photos suggest: most of those fronds are villas, the showpiece beach clubs and the Atlantis fireworks all sit out on the curving Crescent, and the single trunk road threads everything together. The mistake first-timers make is treating it as a place to sightsee. It isnโ€™t. Itโ€™s a where-to-stay decision, and a good one โ€” but you book it for a private beach and a water park, not for landmarks.

The trap is the bubble. The island is gorgeous and self-contained, which is exactly why people who plan to do the Burj Khalifa, Old Dubai and the souks every day end up frustrated, because each of those is 20 to 40 minutes and a taxi away once youโ€™ve left the trunk. So be honest about your trip: if itโ€™s beach-first, base on the Palm and dip into the city on a couple of days. If itโ€™s sightseeing-first, stay in Downtown or the Marina and visit the Palm for an afternoon. And whatever you do, keep a few dirhams aside for the monorail โ€” your Nol card, which works on everything else in Dubai, pointedly does not work on it.

The route

A relaxed 3-night skeleton that treats the Palm as a beach base and dips into the rest of Dubai by metro and taxi, rather than trying to do everything from the island. Transfer times are off-peak road estimates from the West Crescent; Sheikh Zayed Road traffic can double them in the evening rush.

  1. Day 1

    Settle in on the Crescent

    Arrive from DXB โ€” about 35โ€“45 minutes and AED 80โ€“110 (~ยฃ16โ€“ยฃ22) by taxi to a West Crescent resort. Spend the afternoon on your hotel's private beach, then walk or take the buggy to The Pointe waterfront for the evening Palm Fountain show, free and on the hour after dark.

  2. Day 2

    Atlantis and Aquaventure

    A full day at Atlantis: the Aquaventure water park (~AED 345 / ยฃ70) and The Lost Chambers Aquarium (~AED 165 / ยฃ34), a 10-minute monorail ride from the Gateway station at the trunk's base. Book a timed Aquaventure slot online; it sells out on winter weekends and the gate price is higher.

  3. Day 3

    Off the island โ€” Downtown and Marina

    Taxi or monorail-plus-tram across to the mainland: 20โ€“30 minutes to Dubai Marina and JBR beach, or 30โ€“40 minutes to Downtown for the Burj Khalifa and Dubai Mall. The Palm tram interchange at Gateway connects to the Marina, so you can do this without a car.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

The Trunk (Shoreline / The Pointe)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The spine of the island and the only genuinely walkable part: mid-range apartment hotels along the Shoreline, Nakheel Mall and The Pointe's restaurants and fountain. The monorail's Gateway station is here, so it's the easiest base for getting on and off the island. Less of a private-beach feel, but far better value than the Crescent.

Best for: Value seekers, walkability, getting on and off the island

Browse hotels Trunk, by Gateway monorail

West Crescent (Atlantis / luxury resorts)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The outer breakwater holding the big-name resorts โ€” Atlantis The Palm and Royal, Waldorf Astoria, FIVE โ€” with the broadest private beaches and the headline pools and beach clubs. This is the special-occasion choice, but it's a taxi for everything: there's no walking off the Crescent.

Best for: Resort holidays, private beach, special occasions

Browse hotels Outer crescent, taxi-only

The Fronds

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The seventeen residential leaves between trunk and crescent are mostly villas with a handful of villa-rental and serviced stays โ€” quiet, private and on the water, but the least connected: no shops, no monorail, taxi or car for everything including a pint of milk. Best for a longer family stay where you want a pool and space over convenience.

Best for: Families and longer stays wanting space and quiet

Browse hotels Mid-island fronds, taxi/car only

Getting around Palm Jumeirah

The Palm Monorail is the one piece of public transport on the island: it runs the trunk from Gateway Towers (where it meets the Dubai Tram for the Marina and metro) up to Atlantis Aquaventure in about 10 minutes, at AED 20 (~ยฃ4) single or AED 30 (~ยฃ6) return โ€” and crucially your Nol card does not work on it, so you pay separately. Beyond the trunk, you're on taxis: cream RTA cabs are metered and cheap, and Careem/Uber both cover the island, with a typical hop within the Palm running AED 20โ€“35 (~ยฃ4โ€“ยฃ7). There's no metro stop on the Palm itself; the nearest is at the Marina via the tram interchange. From DXB airport allow 35โ€“45 minutes and AED 80โ€“110 (~ยฃ16โ€“ยฃ22) by taxi. A hire car only makes sense if you're staying on a frond or touring beyond Dubai โ€” parking at the resorts and malls is easy, but they drive on the right and the trunk's single road clogs on weekend evenings.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

Compare car hirevia DiscoverCars

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo
See the full United Arab Emirates guide

Palm Jumeirah FAQs

Where should you stay on Palm Jumeirah?
Pick by budget and how mobile you want to be. The Trunk โ€” the Shoreline apartments, The Pointe and Nakheel Mall โ€” is the cheapest and the only walkable part, with the monorail on your doorstep for getting off the island. The West Crescent holds the big resorts (Atlantis, Waldorf Astoria) with the best private beaches but is taxi-only. The residential fronds suit a longer, quieter family stay if you don't mind a taxi for everything.
How do you get around Palm Jumeirah without a car?
The Palm Monorail runs the trunk from Gateway station to Atlantis in about 10 minutes (AED 20 / ~ยฃ4 single), and connects to the Dubai Tram at Gateway for the Marina and the wider metro. Note your Nol card does not work on the monorail. For everything off the trunk you'll use metered RTA taxis or Careem/Uber, around AED 20โ€“35 (~ยฃ4โ€“ยฃ7) for a hop within the island.
Is it worth staying on Palm Jumeirah or in Downtown Dubai?
It depends on your trip. The Palm is a self-contained beach bubble โ€” superb for a resort holiday with a private beach and Atlantis on hand, but it's 20โ€“40 minutes and a AED 30โ€“50 (~ยฃ6โ€“ยฃ10) taxi to the Burj Khalifa and Old Dubai. If you want to sightsee every day, Downtown or the Marina is more practical; the Palm is better for a beach-first stay paired with a couple of days exploring the rest of the city.

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