Dubai has long been a transit hub for Singaporeans heading to Europe or Africa, and Emirates’ route network practically guarantees you’ll have a layover there at some point. The smarter move is to extend that layover deliberately — even a 24-hour stop is enough to see the city’s defining sights without affecting the broader trip.
Smart travellers know that Singapore to Dubai flights on Traveloka can usually be configured to include a 1-2 day Dubai stopover at no extra fare cost. The savings versus a separate Dubai trip are significant.

24-Hour Layover Plan
Land morning. Hotel near Burj Khalifa. Down to the Dubai Mall fountains in the afternoon. Up the Burj Khalifa at golden hour. Dinner at the mall’s restaurant level. Sleep, breakfast, and back to the airport. Compressed but doable.
48-Hour Layover Plan
Day 1: Burj Khalifa, Dubai Mall, the fountain show, Old Dubai (Bastakiya quarter, gold and spice souks). Day 2: Desert safari afternoon and BBQ dinner, ending the night with rooftop drinks somewhere with a skyline view. Two days is the sweet spot for a stopover.
The Burj Khalifa Reality Check
The world’s tallest building is impressive from below but the observation deck experience is genuinely worth it. Book the Sky lounge level (148th floor) rather than the basic At The Top level — the price difference is meaningful, the experience is much better. Time it for sunset and you get day, dusk, and night views all in one visit.
Old Dubai vs New Dubai
New Dubai is what you see on Instagram — Burj, Marina, mega-malls. Old Dubai — Deira, Bur Dubai, Bastakiya — is what existed before the construction boom. The contrast is striking. An hour wandering the spice souks gives texture to the more polished modern districts.
Desert Safari: Worth Doing Once
Touristy but genuinely enjoyable. Dune bashing in 4x4s, camel rides, henna, traditional BBQ dinner under the stars. The mid-range operators (Platinum Heritage, Arabian Adventures) deliver a polished experience. Book a half-day evening tour and you’re back in your hotel by 10pm.
Eating in Dubai
The food scene is genuinely strong now. Try Pierchic for seafood, Couqley for French casual, Operation Falafel for cheap Lebanese, Zuma for the long-running trendy Japanese. Mall food courts are surprisingly good. Avoid the hotel restaurants unless you specifically want them — there are better options outside.
Practical Notes
Metro is clean and efficient between major sights. Taxis are cheap. English is universal. Modest dress for old districts and mosques; anything goes in tourist zones. Cash and card both accepted everywhere.
Final Word
A deliberate 1-2 day Dubai stopover on the way to Europe is one of the best free upgrades available to Singaporean travellers. Set up the flights to allow for it via Singapore to Dubai flights on Traveloka — Emirates’ Dubai-Singapore route has built-in layover options that don’t cost extra.
When to Avoid Dubai Entirely
Skip Dubai in July and August. The heat (45°C+) makes outdoor activities miserable, and even the indoor mall-to-mall lifestyle gets exhausting. Ramadan affects daytime dining options and pace, though hotels and tourist-zone restaurants stay open. The sweet-spot months are November-February. The slightly less crowded but still pleasant March-April and October windows can be cheaper and equally enjoyable.