E-Scooter Confiscated Outside Dubai? Here’s What to Do in Every Emirate
If your scooter was confiscated in Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ajman or RAK — the Dubai process does not apply. Different emirate, different traffic authority, different impound location, different retrieval steps.
A lot of riders make the mistake of calling Dubai Police or checking the Dubai Police app when they were stopped somewhere else entirely. That wastes a day and gets you nowhere. This guide covers every emirate with the exact contacts, locations and steps you actually need.
Dealing with a Dubai confiscation? That’s covered separately: full Dubai confiscation guide · step-by-step collection at Warsan.
Abu Dhabi runs its own traffic system entirely separately from Dubai. No RTA permit system, no Warsan, no Dubai Police app. The authority here is Abu Dhabi Police working under Integrated Transport Centre (ITC) regulations.
The impound location
Retrieval process — Abu Dhabi
Abu Dhabi fines — 2026
| Violation | Fine | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Riding in a banned zone | AED 500 | Higher than Dubai’s equivalent |
| No helmet | AED 200 | Same as Dubai |
| Non-compliant scooter specs | Up to AED 2,000 | Highest penalty in the UAE — much stricter than Dubai |
| Riding against traffic | AED 200–500 | Strictly enforced under ITC rules |
Abu Dhabi’s non-compliant scooter fine of up to AED 2,000 is the harshest in the UAE. It applies if your scooter doesn’t meet ITC technical requirements: max height 165cm, max weight 35kg, max width 70cm, no seated e-scooters, no electric bikes with motors 700W or above. Modified or high-powered scooters are a specific target of Abu Dhabi’s 2026 “Safe Scooting” campaigns.
Abu Dhabi — no permit required, but rules still apply
Unlike Dubai, Abu Dhabi has no mandatory RTA-style online permit or training course. You don’t need to apply for anything before riding. But the ITC regulations are strict — in some ways stricter than Dubai:
- Minimum age: 14 years (lower than Dubai’s 16)
- Speed limit: 20 km/h in all designated areas
- Permitted zones: Reem Island, Maryah Island, Al Zahiyah, Al Dana, parts of Al Bateen, the Corniche, Marina, Yas Island, Khalifa City, Masdar City — and internal roads with speed limits under 40 km/h
- No seated e-scooters permitted anywhere in Abu Dhabi
- No motors over 700W
Checkpoint hotspots — Abu Dhabi 2026
Abu Dhabi Police have been running “Safe Scooting” field campaigns throughout 2026, specifically targeting:
Officers at these locations check: permit status (or lack thereof), helmet, front/rear lights, and specifically for rental scooters — GPS tagging and geo-fencing compliance. Modified scooters are being pulled aside for technical inspection on the spot.
Full Abu Dhabi e-scooter rules, zones and where to buy: Abu Dhabi complete guide 2026.
Sharjah’s process has an extra step that catches people out. You can’t go straight to the impound yard. You have to go to Traffic HQ first, get a Release Paper, then go to the yard. Skip that step and you’ve made a wasted trip to Al Zubair.
Two locations — both required
Retrieval process — Sharjah
Sharjah fines — 2026
| Violation | Fine | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| No helmet | AED 200+ | Can be higher than Dubai in practice |
| Riding on main road / prohibited area | AED 500 | Immediate confiscation — no warning |
| No permit | N/A | Sharjah has no permit system yet — violation is riding in wrong area |
| Night riding without reflective vest | Warning / fine | Sharjah Police started fining for this in 2026 |
Where you can ride in Sharjah
Sharjah is stricter than Dubai. E-scooters are primarily allowed only in parks and designated waterfront tracks. Main roads result in immediate confiscation — no warning. Sharjah Police and Sharjah Municipality conduct joint raids in high-density residential areas, specifically:
Local riders describe Sharjah’s retrieval process as noticeably more manual than Dubai’s — less digital, more in-person paperwork at each stage. The two-location requirement (Al Ramtha then Al Zubair) is consistent across reports. Budget a full day for the process, not half a day.
Full Sharjah e-scooter rules and zones: Sharjah e-scooter laws 2026 · Sharjah — where to buy and how rules differ.
The northern emirates have less documented community experience with e-scooter confiscations — but they do happen, and each has its own traffic department. The general process mirrors Sharjah: pay fine, get release approval from traffic department, collect from impound yard. The key is having the right phone number so you’re not calling Dubai Police for a Fujairah confiscation.
Whatever emirate you were stopped in — call the local police traffic department first with your fine reference number. Don’t go to any impound yard without calling ahead. The processes are less standardised than Dubai, and showing up without confirmation wastes the trip. The numbers above are your starting point.
All Emirates — Side by Side
| Emirate | Impound location | No helmet | Prohibited road | Auction after |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dubai | Emirates Parkings, Warsan 2 | AED 220 | AED 320–520 | 30 days |
| Abu Dhabi | Baniyas West Impoundment Yard | AED 200 | AED 500 | Not confirmed |
| Sharjah | Al Zubair yard (via Al Ramtha HQ first) | AED 200+ | AED 500 | 3 months |
| Ajman | Al Jurf impound yard | AED 200 | Varies | Not confirmed |
| RAK | Contact RAK Police HQ | AED 200 | Varies | Not confirmed |
| Fujairah | Contact Fujairah Traffic Dept | AED 200 | Varies | Not confirmed |
Dubai has the most standardised, digital-first process — pay online, go to Warsan, done in one location. Sharjah requires two separate trips to two separate locations. Abu Dhabi has the harshest specs fine (AED 2,000) and stricter technical enforcement. Northern emirates have less published process but the fundamentals — call first, pay fine, collect with Emirates ID and proof of ownership — apply everywhere.
FAQ
Whichever emirate the officer was from when they stopped you. Check the fine notice — it will show the issuing authority. Abu Dhabi Police fine notices show the Abu Dhabi Police logo. Dubai Police fines show Dubai Police branding. The authority on the notice determines which process and which impound location you use.
No. Abu Dhabi does not have a mandatory online permit or training course equivalent to Dubai’s RTA permit. However, ITC regulations are strict — minimum age 14, helmet required, no seated scooters, no motors over 700W, designated zones only. The absence of a permit requirement doesn’t mean Abu Dhabi is more relaxed — in some ways it’s stricter.
Each emirate sets its own unclaimed property timelines. Sharjah’s longer window has been confirmed by municipality announcements — they’ve publicly urged owners to collect within that period before auction. That said, don’t assume 3 months means you can relax — storage fees in Sharjah run approximately AED 500/month, so a 3-month delay costs AED 1,500 in storage before the scooter goes to auction.
No. Each emirate has its own fine payment system. Abu Dhabi fines are paid via tamm.abudhabi or the Abu Dhabi Police app. Sharjah fines via portal.shjmun.gov.ae. Ajman via ajman.ae. The Dubai Police app only covers Dubai Police-issued fines.
Sharjah Police started issuing fines (not just warnings) for riding at night without a reflective vest in 2026. It’s not a clearly codified statutory requirement the way helmet laws are, but enforcement is happening. If you ride in Sharjah after dark, wear one. They cost AED 15–30 and the risk of a fine or confiscation stop is not worth it.
Abu Dhabi: Pay via tamm.abudhabi → call 800-3333 → collect from Baniyas West. Watch for the AED 2,000 non-compliant specs fine. No permit required but ITC rules are strict.
Sharjah: Pay via portal.shjmun.gov.ae → Traffic HQ in Al Ramtha (get Release Paper) → Al Zubair yard. Two trips, not one. Budget a full day.
Ajman: +971 6 703 4000 · Al Jurf impound · can submit release online at ajman.ae.
RAK: +971 7 235 6666 · Strictly monitored at Manar Mall and Al Qasimi Corniche.
Fujairah: +971 9 222 4411 · Coastal road monitored · immediate confiscation for riding against traffic.
Whatever emirate — call the local traffic department first with your fine reference number before travelling anywhere. The Dubai process does not apply outside Dubai.




