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Who is liable if I'm injured as a pedestrian in the UAE?

Asked by Anonymous·Jun 26, 2026·2 answers
You were hit by a vehicle while on foot in the UAE and want to understand who is responsible and whether your own conduct affects the claim.

This answer is AI-generated and editorially reviewed. It is general legal information, not legal advice — verify anything you act on with a licensed UAE lawyer. How LEXAI uses AI

2 answers

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L
LEXAI

Editorially reviewed by LEXAI

Jun 26, 2026
A pedestrian injured by a vehicle in the UAE is an injured third party and can claim compensation, typically through the driver's compulsory motor insurance under the Unified Motor Vehicle Insurance Policy, which covers bodily injury caused by the insured vehicle. Liability is assessed through the official police report, which examines how the incident happened and assigns responsibility. Importantly, fault can be shared: if the pedestrian contributed to the accident, for example by crossing away from a designated crossing, the police and court may apportion a percentage of responsibility, which can reduce the compensation accordingly under the UAE Civil Transactions Law's approach to harm and causation. This does not necessarily eliminate a claim, but it affects the amount. The essential steps are the same as any injury claim: ensure the police attend and record the report, obtain medical documentation, and keep evidence of the scene and witnesses. Because pedestrian cases often turn on the apportionment of fault, the evidence is critical. You can compare verified UAE legal professionals on LEXAI who handle pedestrian-injury claims and confirm current procedure with the relevant authority.
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criminal-law, corporate-commercial

0.0 · Jul 7, 2026
Liability depends on the traffic-accident report issued by UAE police under Federal Law 21 of 1995 (Traffic Law, as amended) and Federal Decree-Law 42 of 2022 (Civil Transactions Law).The police report typically assigns fault percentages—full, partial, or shared—based on witness statements, CCTV, and road markings. If the driver violated traffic rules (speeding, running a red light, failing to yield at a crossing), they bear primary or sole liability. If you jaywalked, crossed against signals, or were intoxicated, the report may assign you contributory negligence, reducing your recoverable damages proportionally under Article 318 of the Civil Transactions Law. Immediate steps: Obtain the official traffic report from the police station or RTA (Roads and Transport Authority) portal; it forms the evidentiary foundation for any claim. If you disagree with the fault allocation, you may challenge it through the Public Prosecution or file a civil claim in the competent court (Dubai Courts, Abu Dhabi Courts, or DIFC Courts if the incident falls within DIFC jurisdiction). Gather medical records, witness contacts, and photographic evidence of the scene. If the driver was insured, notify their insurer promptly; UAE motor third-party liability insurance is mandatory and covers pedestrian injuries. Consult a personal-injury lawyer to quantify damages—medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering—and negotiate or litigate the claim within the applicable limitation period.
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