Loading…
Loading…
3.6725 AED
The UAE Dirham has been pegged to the US Dollar at 3.6725 since 1997, giving the UAE the same dollar-linked monetary stability as its Gulf neighbors. The rate is fixed by the Central Bank of the UAE, not determined by market trading.
Widely used by the UAE's large expatriate population sending remittances, businesses invoicing in either currency, and travelers — Dubai and Abu Dhabi's status as global trade and tourism hubs makes this one of the most-searched Gulf currency pairs.
Because AED is pegged, the 3.6725 figure barely moves — a rate quoted by a bank, exchange counter, or card issuer that differs from it reflects that provider's own spread, not a real currency shift.
Banks and exchange counters typically quote a rate one to three percent away from 3.6725 to cover their costs and margin — the gap is usually wider at airport or hotel kiosks than at a bank branch or licensed exchange house.
Card networks convert close to the peg rate, but your card issuer may add its own foreign transaction fee on top — commonly one to three percent — so check your card's terms rather than assuming 3.6725 applies in full.
For transfers between the US and the UAE, the peg removes exchange-rate risk from the equation — the real differences between remittance providers are the transfer fee and the small spread each applies, so compare those two costs rather than 'the rate'.
The rate shown here is a continuously updated reference tracked against the official 3.6725 peg — it reflects the benchmark, not the exact rate any specific bank or remittance service will apply to your transaction.
How stable is the AED-USD peg?
Very — it's held at exactly 3.6725 since 1997 without a single formal devaluation or revaluation.
Why does the UAE peg to the dollar?
Like Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the UAE's oil-and-trade economy is dollar-denominated, so pegging removes currency risk from its largest revenue streams.