Five drivers, one breakdown lane: why the right response depends on who you are
Roadside assistance sounds like one service, but in the UAE it is at least five. The new arrival who collected keys to a used Pajero last week needs to understand what their insurance already covers before paying for anything twice. The tower renter whose car will not crank in a basement car park needs a technician who can physically reach the vehicle, not a tow truck that cannot clear a 2.1-metre height barrier. The villa owner who takes the family 4x4 into the dunes on Fridays needs desert recovery, which is a different trade with different equipment and different pricing. The daily commuter on E311 needs a safety protocol more urgently than a spanner. And anyone with a car that has sat unused for months, a landlord's runabout between tenants, a second car during a long summer abroad, needs to know why it will not start and what that means.
The reason this framing matters is that the wrong call wastes money and, on a motorway shoulder, can be genuinely dangerous. A city flatbed dispatched to soft sand will get stuck fifty metres from your car. A jump start on a battery that heat killed two summers ago buys you one trip to nowhere. A tow arranged before a police report is filed can void your insurance claim. Each scenario below covers what actually happens, in order, and where the typical AED 150-600 callout money goes.
One general note before the specifics: distance and time of day move prices more than the job itself. A 2am callout to Jebel Ali costs more than a 2pm callout in Deira because the vendor is driving further with fewer jobs to spread the trip across. When you compare vendor quotes, make sure each one is quoting for your actual location and hour, not a generic city rate.
The new arrival who just got keys: read the insurance card before you need it
If you bought comprehensive insurance with the car, there is a good chance roadside assistance is already bundled into it. Most UAE comprehensive policies include a basic package: a limited number of callouts per year, battery jump starts, flat tyre changes using your own spare, emergency fuel, and towing to the nearest garage or the insurer's approved workshop. The details live in the policy schedule, not the sales pitch, so find the assistance hotline number and the terms now, while the car still starts. Third-party-only policies, common on older cars and quick transfers, usually include nothing.
The bundled cover has real limits worth knowing in advance. Towing is often capped at a distance or restricted to the nearest workshop rather than the garage you trust. Off-road incidents are almost always excluded, so a desert extraction is never an insurance job. Callouts may be limited to three or four per policy year, and some insurers exclude vehicles over a certain age. When you hit one of these walls, that is when on-demand assistance takes over: you book a vendor directly, pay AED 150-600 depending on the job, and keep control of where the car ends up.
The smart move in your first month of ownership is a dry run on paper. Confirm whether your policy includes assistance and through which provider, save the hotline in your phone, check that the car actually has an inflated spare, a jack and a wheel brace, and locate the tow hook, which on most modern cars is a screw-in eye hidden in the boot foam. New arrivals from countries with automatic motorway assistance are often surprised that in the UAE the first responder to a breakdown is whoever you call, so decide who that is before the hard shoulder decides for you.
The tower renter: when the car dies four floors underground
The most common breakdown in Dubai and Abu Dhabi is not on a road at all. It is a car that will not start in a basement car park, usually after a week of short trips or a fortnight of not being driven, and usually because summer heat has quietly finished off a two-year-old battery. The good news is that this is the easiest callout there is: no traffic, no sun, no urgency. The complication is access. Tower basements have height barriers between 1.9 and 2.2 metres, which excludes every flatbed and most recovery trucks. What you need is a technician in a van or car with a booster pack and, ideally, a replacement battery on board.
Handle the building side before the vendor arrives. Security in most towers will ask who the visitor is and where they are going; some managed buildings want contractors to sign in with an Emirates ID. Tell the guard a vehicle technician is coming to bay so-and-so, and give the vendor your exact level and bay number plus the entrance to use, because in larger developments the car park entrance can be a ten-minute walk from the lobby. Booking through tamam helps here because the whatsapp coordination thread gives you a direct line to the driver for the last hundred metres of navigation, which in a Jumeirah Lakes Towers cluster is genuinely the hardest part of the job.
One warning specific to basements: if the battery is dead flat and the car is an automatic, it cannot be pushed or rolled out in neutral without power in some models, and it cannot be towed conventionally underground. If the jump start fails and the car needs a workshop, the recovery becomes a two-stage job, skates or a wheel-lift dolly to get the car to street level, then a flatbed. That is a bigger bill, which is one more reason to replace a battery on its way out instead of waiting for the morning it refuses.
Flat tyre on E311: the hard-shoulder protocol that keeps you alive
E311 and E611 carry heavy truck traffic moving at 120 km/h or more, and the hard shoulder is one of the most dangerous places in the country to stand. If a tyre lets go, do not stop in a live lane and do not stop on a left-hand shoulder if you can possibly avoid it. Signal early, ease across to the right, and keep rolling on the flat, slowly, hazards on, until you reach an exit, a petrol station or at least a wide section of shoulder well clear of a bend or an on-ramp. A destroyed tyre costs a few hundred dirhams; the alternative risk is not comparable.
Once stopped, the sequence matters. Turn the wheels away from traffic so the car cannot roll into the carriageway, get every passenger out through the doors on the barrier side, and stand behind the barrier, well behind the car, never between the car and oncoming traffic. Place your warning triangle far enough back that traffic sees it before it sees you, on a 120 km/h road that means much further than feels natural. At night, keep the hazards on and stay visible but off the tarmac. Stopping on the hard shoulder without a genuine emergency is itself a traffic offence in the UAE, so if police stop, explain the situation plainly.
Then decide honestly whether to change the wheel yourself. On a quiet street, changing a tyre is a fifteen-minute job. On the E311 shoulder with trucks passing an arm's length away, it is work for someone with a liveried vehicle, cones and practice, and a traffic-side rear puncture should almost never be a DIY job there. A callout to fit your spare typically runs AED 150-250, and many vendors can plug a simple tread puncture on the spot or bring a matching tyre for more. Modern cars with no spare at all, an increasing share of the market, take the decision out of your hands: you are booking a callout or a tow either way.
Out of fuel between exits: how petrol delivery actually works
Running dry is more common in the UAE than drivers admit, partly because distances between stations on newer stretches of E611 and the E65 towards Ras Al Khaimah are longer than the fuel gauge suggests, and partly because a digital range estimate collapses fast when the AC is working against 45-degree heat. Emergency fuel delivery is a standard roadside product: a vendor brings petrol or diesel in approved containers, typically 10-20 litres, enough to reach a station. Expect AED 150-300 including the fuel for a normal city or highway delivery, more late at night or far from town.
Two mechanical notes worth knowing. First, on a modern petrol car the fuel pump sits inside the tank and is cooled and lubricated by the fuel around it, so repeatedly running the tank to the last litre in summer shortens the pump's life; treat a quarter tank as empty from June to September. Second, after a true run-dry, the car may need several cranking cycles to re-prime, and some diesels will not self-prime at all, in which case the fuel delivery becomes a fuel delivery plus a technician. Say what the car is when you book so the vendor arrives prepared.
While you wait, the E311 shoulder rules above apply in full. An out-of-fuel car is legally and practically identical to a broken-down one, and a stationary car in the shade-free middle of the afternoon heats up fast. Take the water, take the children, and wait behind the barrier, not in the car with the windows up and no AC.
The villa owner with a weekend 4x4: desert recovery is a different trade
Getting stuck at Al Qudra, Al Badayer or Sweihan is not a towing job and it is a waste of money to book one. A city flatbed cannot leave tarmac; the driver will look at the sand, photograph your car from the road and leave. Desert recovery is done by someone in a capable 4x4 with a winch, kinetic rope, rated shackles, boards and, more important than any of it, sand judgement. The price reflects the drive out, the risk to their own vehicle and the skill: a straightforward pull-out near an access road might sit at AED 300-600, while a deep bog-down far off the track, at night, can go beyond any standard range and is quoted case by case.
What you do before the recovery arrives decides how easy it is. Stop digging the moment the wheels spin freely; every further attempt buries the chassis deeper. Drop tyre pressures hard if you have not already. Note a precise location, a dropped pin from your phone's map app is the single most useful thing you can send, along with which track or gate you entered from and a photo showing how deep the car sits. Stay with the vehicle. A car is visible from a distance in open desert; a person walking out in summer heat is in far more danger than a person waiting in shade beside a stuck car.
For the villa household that does this most weekends, the honest advice is to build the relationship before the emergency. Vendors who do desert work advertise it specifically, and the same-vendor rebook in tamam means the recovery driver who pulled you out of Fossil Rock in March, and already knows your car and your usual area, is one tap away in April. Going out in convoy with at least one other 4x4 remains the rule that makes most recoveries unnecessary in the first place.
August overheating: why the needle climbs and what a callout can fix at the kerb
Summer breakdowns in the UAE cluster around cooling systems, and the pattern is predictable. A cooling system that was marginal in February, a slightly weak water pump, an ageing radiator fan, coolant a year past its change, has no headroom left when ambient temperature passes 45 degrees and the AC condenser is dumping its own heat in front of the radiator. Stop-start traffic is the killer, because airflow through the radiator drops to whatever the fans can pull. If the temperature needle climbs past its normal mark, turn the AC off, turn the cabin heater on full, which sounds absurd but bleeds engine heat into the cabin, and get off the road at the first safe opportunity.
Once stopped, the rule that protects you from a hospital visit: never open the radiator or coolant reservoir cap while the engine is hot. The system is pressurised and the escaping steam and coolant are well above 100 degrees. Let it cool for a genuine half hour. A roadside technician attending an overheating call, typically AED 200-400, will check for the visible causes: a split hose, a failed fan, a leaking radiator seam, low coolant with no obvious leak. A top-up and a fan diagnosis can put a mildly overheating car back on the road to a workshop under its own power, driven gently in the cool part of the evening.
What a kerb-side visit cannot fix is the damage overheating causes when ignored: a warped head or failed head gasket from driving on while the needle sat in the red. White exhaust smoke, coolant in the oil showing as a milky residue under the filler cap, or continuous bubbling in the reservoir are the signs the engine has crossed that line, and at that point the correct spend is a flatbed, not more coolant. This is the scenario where a cheap decision, driving one more exit, becomes a five-figure engine bill.
When you need a police report first: the tow that has to wait
A breakdown and an accident follow different rules, and mixing them up has real consequences. If the car stopped because of a mechanical failure, you can arrange assistance immediately, no report needed. If the car stopped because it hit something or something hit it, however minor, you need a police report before the insurance company will touch the claim, and in most cases a recovery vendor will not move an accident-damaged vehicle without one. Repair workshops are also required to see a report before starting accident repairs, so towing a dented car straight to a garage achieves nothing.
The mechanics of getting the report vary by emirate. In Dubai, minor accidents with no injuries are reported through the Dubai Police app, and you are expected to move the cars out of traffic first; blocking a lane for a scratch can itself attract a fine. In Abu Dhabi, Saaed units attend and document accidents. In Sharjah, Rafid performs the same role. In the Northern Emirates, you call 999 and wait for direction. Photograph everything before anyone moves: positions, damage, plates, the road context. Once the report or reference number exists, book the tow and tell the vendor it is an accident recovery, because a car with broken suspension or deployed airbags loads differently to a car that simply will not start.
One scenario sits in between: single-car damage with no other party, a kerbed wheel that snapped a control arm, a pothole impact, hitting a road object. If you intend to claim on comprehensive insurance, you still need a report. If the damage is minor and you will pay for the repair yourself, you can usually treat it as a breakdown, but when in doubt, get the reference number; an insurer can reject a claim weeks later for a missing report you can no longer obtain.
The landlord between tenants: the car that sat for three months
Every landlord with a runabout parked between tenancies, every family that summers abroad, and every household with a rarely driven second car meets the same cluster of problems. A parked car in UAE heat loses its battery fastest: parasitic drain from alarms and modules, accelerated by high ambient temperature, will flatten a healthy battery in four to eight weeks and finish a tired one in two. Tyres develop flat spots and slowly lose pressure. Brake discs grow a film of surface rust that makes the first few stops noisy. Fuel starts degrading meaningfully after several months. None of this is damage yet, but all of it shows up at once on the day you turn the key.
The efficient answer is a single mobile callout rather than a tow. A technician can jump start or replace the battery in the parking bay, check and inflate all four tyres plus the spare, and give the fluids a quick look, and the car leaves under its own power. AED 150-250 covers a jump start; a supplied-and-fitted battery is its own purchase on top, and if the car needs one, fit it there rather than gambling that a deep-discharged battery will recover, because after weeks at zero charge it usually will not hold. Drive at least thirty minutes afterwards, on a jump-started battery a school-run loop puts back less than the start took out.
If you know the car will sit, prevention costs almost nothing. Ask whoever has access, a watchman, an agent, a neighbour, to start it and let it idle for fifteen minutes weekly, or better, drive it around the block. Park out of direct sun if there is any choice; a shaded bay meaningfully slows both battery and tyre ageing. And leave the handbrake off with the transmission in park in humid coastal areas like Ajman or Fujairah, where brake shoes can seize to the drum over a long idle period.
Choosing the truck: flatbed, wheel-lift and where the car is allowed to go
When a tow is unavoidable, the equipment matters. A flatbed carries the whole car on a tilting deck and is the safe default for everything: automatics, AWD and 4x4 vehicles, low cars, accident damage. A wheel-lift truck raises one axle and tows on the other two wheels, which is cheaper and fine for a front-wheel-drive car lifted at the front, but towing an automatic or AWD car on its driven wheels for any distance damages the transmission. If your car is an automatic, and most cars in the UAE are, ask for a flatbed by default and mention anything unusual: lowered suspension, a roof box, a basement extraction, a car that cannot be shifted out of park.
Distance drives the price. A within-city flatbed move typically runs AED 200-450 depending on the emirate and hour, while inter-emirate tows, Dubai to a Sharjah workshop, Abu Dhabi to Al Ain, run AED 350-600 and up for the long legs. Decide the destination before the truck arrives, not during the drive: the workshop you trust, the agency if the car is under warranty, or home if you want time to compare repair quotes. A tow to your own parking followed by a considered workshop choice is often cheaper than an urgent tow to whichever garage the driver suggests, and drivers do suggest.
Legitimacy is worth thirty seconds of checking. Recovery operators in the UAE need commercial licensing, and the truck that simply appears beside a breakdown on E311 offering help may be neither licensed nor insured for your car; a scratched bumper loaded by an uninsured operator is your problem alone. Booking through tamam sidesteps this because the vendors are verified before they are listed, the quote is recorded in the app rather than renegotiated on the shoulder, and payment happens in-app so there is no cash discussion at the drop-off with your car still on the deck.
What it costs and why the range is a range
Roadside work in the UAE prices on four variables: the job itself, the distance the vendor covers to reach you, the hour, and the equipment required. A daytime jump start in central Dubai sits at the bottom of the market; a 3am flatbed from a Fujairah beach road to a Dubai workshop sits at the top. Most everyday callouts land inside AED 150-600 all-in, and anything quoted far below that range deserves suspicion, because a serious vendor cannot cover fuel, insurance and a night driver at pocket-change rates, and the difference tends to reappear as an on-the-spot renegotiation once your car is already on their truck.
The bundled assistance inside a comprehensive insurance policy changes the calculation but does not replace it. Use the included callouts for the simple jobs they cover well, jump starts, tyre changes, short tows to an approved garage, and use on-demand vendors for everything the policy excludes: desert recovery, tows to the workshop you actually want, a fourth callout after three are used up, or a car registered to a family member whose policy has no cover. Knowing in advance which side of that line your situation falls on is most of the game.
what it costs
Roadside pricing in the UAE moves with distance, hour and equipment more than with the nominal job. The ranges below reflect the typical on-demand market across the emirates; night callouts, remote locations and heavy or low vehicles push towards the top of each band.
| job | typical range |
|---|---|
| Battery jump start (callout) | AED 150–250 |
| Flat tyre change, fitting your spare | AED 150–250 |
| Emergency fuel delivery, incl. 10–20 litres | AED 150–300 |
| Car lockout assistance | AED 150–350 |
| Overheating attendance and coolant top-up | AED 200–400 |
| Flatbed tow, within the same city | AED 200–450 |
| Desert recovery, accessible soft-sand pull-out | AED 300–600 |
| Inter-emirate flatbed tow | AED 350–600 |
Treat these as orientation, not quotes: final pricing comes from comparing the live vendor quotes for your exact location, vehicle and time in the tamam app.
What a mobile callout looks like, minute by minute
Most roadside jobs are mobile by definition, but the mechanics are worth knowing because your preparation halves the visit time. When you book, the vendor needs three things stated precisely: where the car is, a dropped pin plus the level and bay number if it is a car park, what the car is, make, model, year, petrol or diesel, automatic or manual, and what happened, in plain words. "Cranks slowly then clicks" sends a technician with a battery in the van; "will not crank, dash dead" might be the same fix; "cranks fine but will not fire" is a different problem and possibly a tow. The more specific the description, the more often the first visit is the only visit.
A typical technician arrives in a van or car, not a truck, carrying a booster pack, a multimeter, common battery sizes, a compressor, tyre plugs, basic hand tools, coolant and fuel containers. A jump start takes ten minutes; a battery replacement twenty to thirty; a tyre change fifteen on a driveway and longer on a highway shoulder where safety setup comes first. In gated communities and towers, warn security that a technician is coming and confirm whether they need to sign in; in villa areas, switch on the outside lights for a night callout and clear anything blocking access to the bonnet.
Your part is small but real: be reachable on the number you booked with, have the key with you, and know where the bonnet release and the locking wheel nut key are, the latter lives in the boot toolkit or glovebox and stops the job dead if missing. Payment and the record of what was done sit in the tamam app, which matters more than it sounds at midnight on a road shoulder, where nobody should be negotiating cash, and the same-vendor rebook means the technician who learned your basement's quirks once is the one who comes back.
how it plays out emirate by emirate
dubai
Dubai has the deepest vendor pool in the country, which means fast attendance in the city core but real variation in quality, so verified listings matter more here, not less. Minor accidents are reported through the Dubai Police app and you are expected to clear the carriageway before filing. Tower-basement callouts dominate in the Marina, JLT and Downtown, where height barriers rule out trucks and bay-number navigation is half the job. RTA rules govern recovery trucks stopping on major roads, and on Sheikh Zayed Road specifically, police may move a broken-down car themselves if it obstructs traffic, so call for help immediately rather than deliberating.
abu dhabi
In Abu Dhabi, accident scenes are handled by Saaed patrols rather than regular police attendance, and their report is what your insurer will ask for. Distances are the defining factor: the E22 to Al Ain and the E11 towards the western region have long empty stretches where a quarter tank is genuinely low, and callout times outside the island and Khalifa City reflect the geography. Al Ain itself has a solid workshop scene around Sanaiya, so a breakdown there rarely justifies a 160-kilometre tow back to the capital. Mussafah is where most of the city's recovery trucks and repair capacity actually live.
sharjah
Sharjah's roadside picture is shaped by the commute: enormous morning and evening flows towards Dubai mean a breakdown on the E311 or Al Ittihad Road at peak hour is both more likely and more dangerous, and attendance times stretch when the vendor is stuck in the same traffic you are. Accident reporting goes through Rafid, Sharjah Police's dedicated service, not the Dubai app. The emirate's industrial areas hold some of the country's most competitive workshops and tyre shops, which makes Sharjah a common tow destination even for Dubai-registered cars, and weekend desert callouts cluster around Al Badayer, where city trucks cannot follow you off the tarmac.
ajman
Ajman is compact enough that nowhere in the emirate is far from help, but much of that help is actually based over the border in Sharjah's industrial areas, so quoted arrival times depend on which side of the boundary the vendor starts from. The high share of older, third-party-insured cars here means fewer residents have any bundled assistance at all, and battery and overheating callouts are correspondingly common. Coastal humidity is a specific factor: cars parked long-term near the corniche suffer terminal corrosion faster, and handbrakes seize to drums over an idle summer more often than inland.
ras al khaimah
RAK adds a mountain to the usual list of scenarios. The Jebel Jais road produces its own breakdown genre: brakes overheated on the descent by drivers riding the pedal instead of using low gear, and underpowered cars boiling coolant on the climb in summer. Recovery from the switchbacks is specialist work and priced accordingly. Elsewhere, the E611's northern reaches are quiet at night with long gaps between services, so fuel discipline matters, and the emirate's growing camping scene around Wadi Shawka and the mountain fringes generates soft-ground recoveries that need a 4x4 operator, not a flatbed.
fujairah
Fujairah sits on the far side of the Hajar mountains, and that geography defines assistance there: a Dubai-based vendor is 90 minutes away on the E84 through the tunnels, so local operators matter and their smaller number shows in both availability and price at night. The E99 coast road carries heavy port and fuel-terminal truck traffic, which raises the stakes for any shoulder stop. Wadi routes towards Masafi and the mountain villages produce washed-gravel and soft-ground extractions after rain, a rarity elsewhere in the country, and the humid east-coast air is unforgiving to batteries and electrics in cars parked near the sea.
umm al quwain
Coverage in Umm Al Quwain is corridor-based: recovery trucks stage along E611 and E11 out of Ajman and RAK bases, so breakdowns on the highways get picked up quickly while a dead battery deep in the old town waits a little longer. Summer overheating on the Dubai commute is the classic call-out. Save your exact pin location, get the quoted arrival window in writing in the app, and for desert tracks toward Falaj Al Mualla say so explicitly — a city flatbed cannot follow you onto sand.
Before you drive far, and before you book: the ten-point check
- Save your insurer's roadside hotline in your phone and note how many callouts your policy includes
- Confirm the car actually carries an inflated spare, a jack, a wheel brace and the locking wheel nut key
- Locate the screw-in tow eye, usually buried in the boot foam, and the bonnet release
- Keep a warning triangle, a torch and drinking water in the boot from May to September especially
- Treat a quarter tank as empty on E611, the E65 north and any summer drive between emirates
- When booking, send a dropped pin plus car park level and bay number, never just an area name
- State make, model, year, fuel type and transmission so the vendor arrives with the right kit
- Describe the symptom in plain words: slow crank, no crank, cranks but will not fire, needle in the red
- For basements and gated communities, warn security a technician is coming before the arrival
- Ask for a flatbed by default if the car is automatic, AWD, lowered or accident-damaged
mistakes to avoid
Standing beside the car on a highway shoulder
The instinct after a breakdown is to hover near the car, inspect the damage and wait by the driver's door. On E311 or E11 that puts you a metre from traffic passing at 120 km/h. Exit on the barrier side, get behind the barrier, and stand well back from the car so that if it is struck you are not part of the collision.
Towing the car before the police report exists
Moving an accident-damaged car to a workshop before filing feels efficient and quietly kills the insurance claim, because insurers and repairers both require the report. Photograph the scene, file through the Dubai Police app, Saaed or Rafid depending on the emirate, get the reference number, and only then book the recovery.
Opening the coolant cap on a hot engine
A pressurised cooling system holds coolant well above boiling point, and cracking the cap releases it as scalding spray. It is the most common self-inflicted roadside injury there is. Switch off, wait a genuine thirty minutes, and let the attending technician judge when the system is safe to open.
Booking a city tow truck for a desert or beach recovery
A flatbed cannot drive on sand, so the booking fails at the point where tarmac ends and you pay for a wasted callout. Stuck in dunes or on wet beach sand, book desert recovery explicitly, send a pin, describe how deep the car sits, and stop spinning the wheels while you wait.
Serial jump starts on a battery that is finished
A battery past its second or third UAE summer that needed one jump will need another within days, and each deep discharge weakens it further. Paying AED 150–250 per rescue several times over costs more than replacing the battery in the bay on the first visit, and it strands you somewhere worse each time.
Letting the tow decide the workshop
Agreeing mid-tow to the driver's suggested garage hands your negotiating position to a stranger with your car on his deck. Decide the destination before the truck arrives, your trusted workshop, the agency under warranty, or your own parking while you compare repair quotes, and confirm the full price to that destination in writing in the app before loading.
frequently asked questions
Does my UAE car insurance already include roadside assistance?
If the policy is comprehensive, very often yes: a limited number of callouts per year covering jump starts, tyre changes, emergency fuel and towing to the nearest or approved garage. Third-party policies almost never include it. Check the policy schedule for the assistance provider's hotline and the callout limit, and save the number before you need it.
Is it safe to change my own tyre on E311 or Sheikh Zayed Road?
On the traffic side of the car, no, and on the shoulder side only with real caution. Trucks pass the E311 hard shoulder at 120 km/h an arm's length from where you would kneel. Roll slowly on the flat to an exit or petrol station if at all possible; if not, wait behind the barrier and pay AED 150–250 for someone with a liveried vehicle and cones to do it.
Can a normal tow truck recover my car from the desert?
No. Flatbeds and wheel-lift trucks cannot leave tarmac and will get stuck themselves. Desert recovery is done by an operator in an equipped 4x4 with a winch, kinetic rope and sand experience. Book it as desert recovery explicitly, send a dropped pin, and expect AED 300–600 for an accessible pull-out, more for deep or remote extractions.
Do I need a police report before towing my car after an accident?
Yes, if there is accident damage and you intend to claim, or if another party is involved. Insurers will not process a claim and workshops will not start accident repairs without a report, and most vendors will not move accident-damaged cars without one. In Dubai use the Dubai Police app for minor accidents, in Abu Dhabi Saaed attends, in Sharjah it is Rafid.
My car overheated. Can I just top up the coolant and keep driving?
Only after finding out why it overheated. Wait a genuine half hour before opening the pressurised cap, then look for the cause: a split hose, a dead fan, a leak. If a technician finds and fixes a simple cause, a gentle drive to a workshop is reasonable. If the needle went deep into the red or there is white smoke or milky oil residue, take the flatbed; driving on risks the engine.
What does running out of fuel do to the car?
Usually nothing permanent, but the in-tank fuel pump is cooled by the fuel around it, so habitually running near empty in summer shortens its life. After a true run-dry the car may need several cranking cycles, and some diesels need manual priming. A delivery of 10–20 litres typically costs AED 150–300 including the fuel.
Why did my battery die after the car sat for a few weeks?
Parasitic drain from alarms and electronics flattens a battery in four to eight weeks of standing, faster in summer heat and faster still if the battery was already past its second UAE summer. A deeply discharged battery often will not recover even after a jump start, so if the car sat for months, budget for a replacement fitted in the parking bay rather than repeat jump starts.
Can my automatic or AWD car be towed on its wheels?
It should not be, except for very short repositioning. Towing an automatic on its driven wheels or an AWD car on any two wheels for distance damages the transmission because parts rotate without lubrication. Ask for a flatbed by default; almost every car in the UAE market qualifies for one.
How do I get a dead car out of a basement car park?
First try the simple fix where it stands: basements are ideal for a jump start or in-bay battery replacement since there is no sun or traffic. If the car genuinely needs a workshop, height barriers keep trucks out, so it becomes a two-stage job with skates or a wheel-lift dolly to street level and then a flatbed. Give the vendor the level, bay number and barrier height when booking.
Should I accept help from a recovery truck that just pulls up beside me?
Be careful. An operator you did not call may be unlicensed or uninsured for your vehicle, and shoulder-side prices have a way of changing once the car is on the deck. Unless you are in immediate danger, book a verified vendor with a recorded quote, or use your insurer's hotline, and wait behind the barrier.
What should I do first when my car breaks down at night far from the city?
Get the car as far off the carriageway as it will roll, hazards on, everyone out on the barrier side and behind the barrier. Share a dropped pin when you book, mention that it is a night highway job, and state the nearest exit number or landmark. On quiet stretches of the E611 or E99, an accurate pin cuts more time off the wait than anything else you can do.
Does roadside assistance cover motorbikes and vans too?
Many vendors handle motorbikes, vans and light commercial vehicles, but not all trucks are equipped for them, so state the vehicle type clearly when booking. Bikes generally travel on a flatbed with straps and wheel chocks, and heavier commercial vehicles may need a bigger recovery unit priced above the standard passenger-car ranges.
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