The announcement of the new highway in Dubai comes as a relief for the thousands of commuters who spend hours every day stuck in jams. Motorists in the UAE have welcomed the latest government Dh170-billion infrastructure plan, including a fourth national highway that will connect the northern emirates to Abu Dhabi.
For UAE motorists such as Mohyeddin Yousef, the new highway announcement in Dubai is more than just infrastructure-it’s about possibly reclaiming precious family time. The 29-year-old math teacher spends three to four hours daily commuting across three emirates, and the new highway announcement in Dubai offers real hope for change.
Why UAE Motorists Really Need This New Highway Announcement in Dubai
Mohyeddin’s morning routine starts before sunrise. He lives in Ajman, drops kids at school in Sharjah, then drives to Dubai for work. That’s three emirates in one commute.
“Normally it’s an hour and a half, but if there’s an accident it stretches to two hours,” he said of his life before the new highway announcement in Dubai. “That means I spend three to four hours in traffic every single day”
He’s seen terrible accidents on the Dubai-Sharjah highway, twisted metal, fires, injuries. Three serious road accidents over the years have shaken him. By the time he reaches work, exhaustion sets in completely.
The new highway announcement in Dubai comes because vehicle ownership in the UAE keeps climbing, up eight percent annually, which is four times the global average. Schools and work hours overlapping has made peak traffic unbearable on federal and local roads.
What the New Highway Announcement in Dubai Actually Means
Emirates Road gets major work

- Three lanes expanding to five lanes in each direction
- 25-kilometer stretch from Al Badee Interchange to Umm Al Quwain
- Capacity increases 65 percent- 9,000 vehicles per hour instead of current numbers
- Six directional bridges totaling 12.6 kilometers at Interchange No. 7
The new highway announcement in Dubai promises 45 percent reduction in travel time for UAE motorists coming from Ras Al Khaimah through Umm Al Quwain and Sharjah to Dubai.
Fourth national highway connection

- Part of comprehensive Dh170-billion transport infrastructure plan
- Connects northern emirates directly to Abu Dhabi
- Better movement of people and goods
- Takes pressure off the E11 highway
Construction on the Emirates Road part starts September 2025 and should finish in two years. That’s real progress for UAE motorists stuck in daily gridlock.
How Real People Reacted to the New Highway Announcement in Dubai

Mohyeddin’s daily struggle
The long commute destroyed his family life before the new highway announcement in Dubai. “When I get home, I’m too tired to play with my kids,” he explained. “I usually sleep right after sunset just to recover, and by the time I wake up, my family is already asleep. I only really see them on weekends.”
He wants complementary solutions alongside the new highway announcement in Dubai, maybe an app mapping commuting patterns. He believes metro expansion would help more than anything else. Public transport could be faster and cheaper, he believes.
Rashid’s productivity concerns
Rashid Saif Al Bedwawi is 54, living in Dubai, and productivity suffers because of traffic. “We lose hours on the road every day. It delays meetings, appointments, and business opportunities.”
He praised the new highway announcement in Dubai but wants driver behavior improvements too. “The issue isn’t just the roads. It’s also about driver awareness. “Some old cars are still being driven and remain on the roads even if unsafe. Old and unsafe cars being driven on the roads are not the only issue as some drivers ignore basic safe driving rules.”
Stronger vehicle inspections and stricter enforcement could help alongside the new highway announcement in Dubai, he believes.
Jamila’s daily exhaustion
Jamila’s daily exhaustion Commute from Sharjah to Dubai to work is done by Jamila Ahmed. Prior to the new highway announcement in Dubai, her commute always took more than an hour each way. “The journey which should ideally be short, now consistently takes and hour each way and the traffic is so intense and turns a simple drive into a long and exhausting ordeal.”
At peak time, she has described the standstill traffic as predictability and honestly, stressful. “The time spent in traffic is so long and imposes so much stress and physical discomfort. It starts my day on a negative note and by the time I get home, I am exhausted. As a mother, I have so little time left to spend with my children.”
But the new highway announcement in Dubai changed her outlook. “It shows a real effort in trying to resolve the traffic issue, and it is needed in managing the ever-increasing amount of cars on the road. A shorter drive, and a less stressful one, means more time for myself and less anxiety for the day. It also means a better balance between my work and personal life.”
What Comes Next
The new highway announcement in Dubai represents the government’s commitment to solving the challenges of transportation facing UAE motorists
For people like Mohyeddin, Rashid, and Jamila, the new highway announcement in Dubai means mornings might finally include family breakfast instead of gridlock, and evenings could mean actual time with kids instead of exhaustion from hours behind the wheel.
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