
Quick answer: The US stock market opens at 5:30 PM UAE time from mid-March to early November, and at 6:30 PM UAE time for the rest of the year. Regular trading on the NYSE and Nasdaq runs from 9:30 AM to 4:00 PM Eastern Time, Monday to Friday. The UAE stays on Gulf Standard Time (GST, UTC+4) all year, so the local open time shifts only because the US observes daylight saving.
If you have ever set an alarm for the opening bell and found the market already an hour into the session, daylight saving time is almost certainly the reason. Here is the full picture, in Dubai time.
The US market open time in UAE depends entirely on which clock New York is running.
Session | Eastern Time | UAE time (GST) |
Pre-market | 4:00 AM – 9:30 AM | 12:00 PM – 5:30 PM |
Regular session | 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM | 5:30 PM – 12:00 AM |
After-hours | 4:00 PM – 8:00 PM | 12:00 AM – 4:00 AM |
Session | Eastern Time | UAE time (GST) |
Pre-market | 4:00 AM – 9:30 AM | 1:00 PM – 6:30 PM |
Regular session | 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM | 6:30 PM – 1:00 AM |
After-hours | 4:00 PM – 8:00 PM | 1:00 AM – 5:00 AM |
In 2026, US daylight saving began on 8 March and ends on 1 November. So for most of the year, including now, the opening bell rings at 5:30 PM Dubai time and the trading session close time is midnight.
The UAE does not observe daylight saving time. Gulf Standard Time sits at UTC+4 every day of the year, which is one of the small mercies of trading from Dubai or Abu Dhabi.
The United States does observe it. New York runs on Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4) in summer and Eastern Standard Time (UTC-5) in winter. That changes the gap between the two cities:
Summer: New York is 8 hours behind the UAE
Winter: New York is 9 hours behind the UAE
A quick note on terminology, since it trips people up: GST here means Gulf Standard Time, not to be confused with GMT. GMT vs GST is a 4-hour difference, so if a broker quotes market hours in GMT, add 4 hours to get UAE time.
Both major US exchanges keep identical regular sessions: 9:30 AM to 4:00 PM Eastern, Monday to Friday. The Nasdaq opening bell and the NYSE opening bell ring at the same moment, so a single EST to GST time conversion covers both. Holiday closures also match across the two exchanges.
Regular hours are only part of the day. Extended trading hours bracket the main session on both sides.
Pre-market trading runs from 4:00 AM Eastern, which is midday to early afternoon in the UAE. This window matters more than many new investors expect, because US companies typically release earnings either before the open or after the close. A results announcement at 7:00 AM New York time lands at 3:00 PM in Dubai, and the share price will already be reacting in pre-market before the official open.
After-hours trading runs until 8:00 PM Eastern, deep into the UAE night. Earnings released just after the closing bell hit at around midnight Gulf time.
Extended sessions come with real trade-offs. Volumes are thinner, bid-ask spreads are wider, and prices can move sharply on relatively little activity. Many long-term investors simply ignore these windows and place orders during regular hours, where liquidity is deepest. Whether extended hours are available to you at all depends on your broker or platform.
The NYSE and Nasdaq close for ten holidays a year. Remaining closures in 2026:
Labour Day: Monday 7 September
Thanksgiving: Thursday 26 November
Christmas Day: Friday 25 December
Two early-close days remain, where the market shuts at 1:00 PM Eastern (9:00 PM UAE time on the winter schedule): Friday 27 November, the day after Thanksgiving, and Thursday 24 December, Christmas Eve.
Earlier in the year, the market closed for New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Washington's Birthday, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Juneteenth and Independence Day (observed Friday, 3 July, since 4 July fell on a Saturday).
Note that US market holidays follow the American calendar, not the UAE one. The market trades as normal during Eid, UAE National Day and other local holidays, and closes for Thanksgiving while UAE offices are open.
US exchanges close on Saturday and Sunday, New York time. Because of the time difference, Friday's session actually ends at midnight or 1:00 AM UAE time on Saturday morning, and the next session opens Monday evening Gulf time. For UAE residents whose working week runs Monday to Friday, this now lines up neatly: the market's weekend is your weekend.
The time difference is arguably an advantage. The US market opens in the UAE evening, after most people have finished work. You can review your portfolio, read the day's news and place orders during the most liquid hours of the session without touching your working day.
For long-term investors, though, the opening bell matters less than it seems. If you are investing in diversified portfolios with a horizon of years rather than days, the exact minute the market opens has little bearing on outcomes. Timing the open is a trader's concern; consistency is an investor's.
If you would rather not watch the clock at all, CUSP Wealth offers wealth advisory services built around long-term, globally diversified portfolios, including Shariah-compliant portfolios available, screened and built to perform. Cusp Wealth Ltd is regulated by the DFSA. As with any investment, capital is at risk: the value of investments can fall as well as rise, and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.
5:30 PM during US daylight saving (March to November) and 6:30 PM the rest of the year. Dubai and the wider UAE share the same time zone, so this applies across the Emirates.
Midnight during US summer time, 1:00 AM during US winter time.
Yes, unless the date happens to coincide with a US holiday. The exchanges follow the American calendar only.
No. Both run from 9:30 AM to 4:00 PM Eastern and share the same holiday schedule.
Only in the pre-market, which begins at midday UAE time in summer. Liquidity is thinner, and spreads are wider than in the regular session, and availability depends on your platform.
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