June 06, 2026 10:25 am
Bringing Professional Filming Equipment to Dubai: Temporary Import Guide
Temporary import procedure for professional filming equipment in Dubai
1. Use temporary admission, not an ATA Carnet
The UAE currently accepts ATA Carnets only for a narrow category of goods intended for exhibitions and similar events. For ordinary professional filming equipment, that means the ATA Carnet is usually the wrong tool unless the equipment is tied to a qualifying event and the required prior permit is in place.
For a standard film, commercial, documentary, corporate shoot, branded content shoot, or location recce, plan around temporary admission through Customs instead. Dubai Customs can process a Temporary Admission Customs Bill for eligible goods, and Dubai traveler guidance lists filming equipment for news, movies, or official events as controlled goods that may require permits.
Operationally, we recommend arriving through Dubai International Airport when carrying professional filming equipment, even if the shoot is later in another emirate. Abu Dhabi arrivals can be more complicated for film crews, and Abu Dhabi filming permits may become relevant even if the crew is only transiting with equipment.

Prepare the permit, pro forma invoice, serial-numbered equipment list, and packing list before landing in Dubai.
2. Prepare the documents before arrival
Before the crew travels, prepare a clean document pack. The core documents are a filming permit or relevant production authorization, a pro forma invoice for customs valuation purposes, and an equipment or packing list.
The pro forma invoice should describe the goods clearly and include today's realistic value for each item. For professional production kit, include serial numbers wherever possible, especially for cameras, lenses, monitors, wireless equipment, recorders, drones, batteries, and other high-value items.
This valuation matters. If an item is lost or stolen, the declared value and serial-numbered list can become part of the police report and insurance handling. Make sure the person travelling with the equipment has copies of the document pack, plus a passport copy for the person who will pay the deposit and be named on the customs bill.

At Dubai airport, declare the professional equipment to Customs and budget 10% of the declared value: 5% refundable customs deposit plus 5% refundable VAT deposit.
3. Declare the equipment and pay deposit plus VAT
On arrival at Dubai airport, declare the equipment at Customs and present the packing list and pro forma invoice. Customs will inspect the goods and process a Temporary Admission Customs Bill in the name of the person paying the deposit.
For professional filming equipment, budget 10% of the declared value at arrival: 5% as a refundable customs deposit and 5% as a refundable VAT deposit. Both deposits are returned when the equipment is properly re-exported and Customs can match the departing items to the original import documents.
In practice, card payment is not always available at the customs counter. Carry enough AED cash or be ready to use the nearby ATMs. Ask for the full expected amount before leaving the counter, including any administration or after-hours fee, so the crew does not have to make repeated ATM trips. Older operational guidance has mentioned an AED 200 administration fee for arrivals between 00:00 and 06:00, but fees and hours should always be confirmed before travel.

Return to Customs with the same equipment, original customs bill, and matching documents so both deposits can be refunded.
Before departure, bring the same equipment back to Customs with the original Temporary Admission Customs Bill and the same document pack used on arrival. Dubai Customs guidance says the goods are inspected and tallied against the earlier customs bill before the passenger deposit is refunded.
Both the 5% customs deposit and the 5% VAT deposit should be returned when the equipment is re-exported correctly and Customs can match the items. Any missing item, mismatch in quantity, wrong serial number, or unclear description can delay the refund or cause part of the deposit to be retained.
Keep copies of the customs bill, pro forma invoice, packing list, payment receipts, passport details for the named payer, and any refund evidence until the deposit process is fully closed.
Sharjah is one of the UAE’s strongest cultural and landscape emirates for filming. It can give a production old-town streets, museums, traditional markets, modern waterfronts, desert archaeology, mountain roads, beaches and mangroves without losing the UAE production infrastructure around it. The important part is planning the permit route before cameras roll. Public spaces, museums, art locations, roads, beaches, mangroves, private properties and any aerial work can all require different approvals. International crews should normally work through a UAE-based production partner who can coordinate the permit information, location access, crew, equipment, insurance and local logistics.Sharjah is one of the UAE’s strongest cultural and landscape emirates for filming. It can give a production old-town streets, museums, traditional markets, modern waterfronts, desert archaeology, mountain roads, beaches and mangroves without losing the UAE production infrastructure around it. The important part is planning the permit route before cameras roll. Public spaces, museums, art locations, roads, eaches, mangroves, private properties and any aerial work can all require different approvals. International crews should normally work through a UAE-based production partner who can coordinate the permit information, location access, crew, equipment, insurance and local logistics.ctical route is temporary admission through Customs, not an ATA Carnet.
Dubai Customs guidance confirms that some goods accompanying passengers can be processed under a Temporary Admission Customs Bill with a refundable deposit. In practice for professional filming equipment, crews should budget for 5% refundable customs deposit plus 5% refundable VAT deposit, meaning 10% of the declared equipment value, plus any applicable administration or after-hours fees.
Use this guide as a planning checklist, then confirm the current handling details with Dubai Customs, your customs broker, your UAE production partner, and the relevant film permitting authority before the equipment travels.
For most film crews bringing professional cameras, lenses, lighting, grip, audio, monitors, drones, wireless equipment, or other production kit into Dubai, the practical route is temporary admission through Customs, not an ATA Carnet.
Dubai Customs guidance confirms that some goods accompanying passengers can be processed under a Temporary Admission Customs Bill with a refundable deposit. In practice for professional filming equipment, crews should budget for 5% refundable customs deposit plus 5% refundable VAT deposit, meaning 10% of the declared equipment value, plus any applicable administration or after-hours fees.
Use this guide as a planning checklist, then confirm the current handling details with Dubai Customs, your customs broker, your UAE production partner, and the relevant film permitting authority before the equipment travels.
ATA Carnet Guide for Dubai Film Crews
Important update: based on official guidance received after our inquiry, the UAE currently accepts incoming ATA Carnets only for goods under category B1, meaning items intended for exhibitions and similar events.
Filming equipment is therefore not generally accepted for entry into the UAE on an ATA Carnet unless the equipment is intended for, or invited to participate in, a particular known event and the required prior permit has been obtained from the concerned authority.
For most film crews bringing cameras, lenses, lighting, grip, audio, monitors, drones, wireless equipment, or other production kit into Dubai, the practical customs route is temporary admission, not an ATA Carnet. See our temporary import guide for professional filming equipment in Dubai: How to import Professional Camera Equipment to Dubai Guide
For film crews, the carnet should be treated as a limited option, not the default customs route. Before shipping or travelling with production equipment, confirm the correct process with the relevant chamber, UAE Customs, your UAE production partner, and the relevant permitting authority.
The world of film production is fraught with complexities, and nowhere is this more apparent than in securing the necessary permits for specialized filming scenarios. Whether you're planning to capture aerial footage with drones over Dubai's iconic skyline, orchestrate a multi-camera reality show in Abu Dhabi's bustling airports, or scout locations for a feature film across the Emirates, the regulatory landscape can be overwhelming. This is where FilmingPortalUAE.com emerges as your indispensable partner, bringing unparalleled expertise to navigate these intricate challenges.
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