

The United Arab Emirates aims to develop a model that focuses on people, trust, and clear rules. As of February 2026, the UAE "AI Vision" is now a real system that helps workers instead of replacing them. This plan ensures AI becomes a huge part of the national economy by 2030.
The UAE strategy focuses on collaboration between machines and people. While the ongoing layoffs have raised concerns about AI replacing humans for cost cutitng, the UAE has clarified its stance on ensuring the technology asists humans and lets them focus on strategies and planning. High-level leaders emphasize that AI must explain why it made a specific choice.
"The Future of AI Governance report translates high-level ethical aspirations into actionable strategies for risk management, oversight, and regulatory alignment. It provides practical tools and methodologies to embed human-centric, transparent, and accountable governance systems across the AI lifecycle," according to a KPMG and World Governments Summit whitepaper.
This implies that the UAE is building a system to check every AI tool for mistakes or unfair bias. This is especially important in hospitals and banks where decisions change lives.
The national vision on AI has charted actual costs that local businesses might incur when implementing the technology in their workflows. Using AI appropriately requires cleaning up outdated data and educating staff. Businesses also need to follow new laws to ensure data privacy and security.
The table below shows what different businesses might have to spend to follow the UAE AI Ethics Principles and Guidelines:
"UAE businesses implementing these most powerful AI tools consistently report remarkable improvements: 60% reduction in manual administrative tasks" notes industry analysis from Mahad IT.
Local companies now need to pick tech partners carefully; they need to choose vendors that can prove their tech solutions follow the law.
The UAE is leading the world in responsible AI usage. The country’s goal is to maintain ‘human touch’ while using the best tech available. Over the next six months, the main challenge involves equipping small shops and startups with tools to ensure fair use of AI and design policies that make the technology affordable.