Dubai scored 9.1 on the everycity index in 2026. Miami scored 8.4. The independent side by side on the cost stack, the safety read, the salary math, and the lifestyle axes that decide the relocation.
Two cities, the same 12 section methodology, the same May 2026 data window. The verdict comes from the index plus the per axis breakdown.
Dubai takes the headline by 0.7 of a point on the everycity index, off the 0 percent personal income tax against the US federal plus Florida combined 24 to 37 percent marginal stack, the 9 percent corporate tax floor against the 21 percent US federal corporate rate, the 10 year Golden Visa pathway against the US H1B and EB5 lottery, and the safer street rating. Miami pushes back on the absolute climate comfort (cooler summers, the 84F July high versus the Dubai 108F), the dollar denominated US capital market access for the founder, the proximity to the New York Boston Washington corridor and Latin America, and the lower headline cost stack at a 22 percent advantage.
Dubai scored 9.1 on the everycity index in 2026. Miami scored 8.4. The headline gap is 0.7 of a point. The full long form sits at the Dubai city profile and the Miami city profile. Both run the same 12 section structure and the same May 2026 data window from Numbeo, the World Bank, the national statistics offices, and the central banks of each country.
The decision rule that survives the spreadsheet. Read the tax structure first, then read the visa pathway, then read the cost stack. The remote worker earning above 100,000 dollars a year sees the largest swing on tax structure; the under 60,000 dollar worker sees the largest swing on the absolute cost stack; the family relocator sees the largest swing on the safety and education axes. Each of the seven sections below isolates one of those decision rules with the 2026 numbers from the source data.
The regional context. The two cities answer different questions about the relocation decision. The cities for digital nomads ranking and the safest cities ranking both feed into this comparison; the cheapest cities ranking tracks the absolute cost stack the section 2 table opens with.
The comparison fits inside a wider set of two way matchups the atlas maintains on the same methodology: Dubai vs London, Dubai vs Singapore, Austin vs Miami, and the broader comparisons index of 25,000 city pairs.
Twelve line items priced in May 2026 for a single resident in a central one bedroom. Green text marks the cheaper city per line.
The monthly all in differential reads in the table above. The rent line carries the largest single weight in the index calculation, followed by the groceries and the utilities lines. The currency on the Dubai side is the local currency of UAE; on the Miami side the local currency of USA. The everycity USD conversion uses the May 2026 mid market rate captured from the central bank reference rates of both jurisdictions.
The central districts. Long term rental supply in both cities concentrates in the central commercial corridor and the inner ring residential neighborhoods. The furnished one bedroom listing turn over runs a median 7 to 14 days at the city center price point and 4 to 8 days in the outer ring per the local portal indices. For the international transfer math, Wise handles the USD conversion at a 0.6 to 0.8 percent margin against the 2.5 to 4 percent retail bank spread.
For peer comparisons see Dubai vs London and Dubai vs Singapore. The most expensive cities ranking places both cities in the global cohort, and the cheapest cities for expats ranking covers the relative position for the foreign worker.
The 10 point safety read across the five sub axes the methodology weights for the everycity composite.
The safety axes capture the day to day risk profile that decides the family relocation, the solo female move, and the after dark social calendar. The EIU Safe Cities methodology plus the Numbeo crowdsourced panel both feed the composite. For the new arrival, SafetyWing covers the first six months in either city at 45 to 65 dollars a month for the under 40 single. The safest cities ranking and the safest cities for women ranking place both in the global cohort.
Healthcare quality reads in both cities at the international tier with private hospital networks accessible to the relocating expat on a 145 to 245 dollar a month policy. The acute care capability in both metros covers the standard surgical and emergency stack; the elective and the chronic care follows the local insurance reimbursement schedule. The family friendly cities ranking covers the comparable cohort.
Annual averages, the worst month, and the count of days inside the comfort band.
The climate trade off frames the entire relocation calendar. The summer and winter readings above mark the binding constraint for the outdoor lifestyle, the energy bill, and the choice of housing stock. The sunshine hour count and the rainy day count together capture the seasonal affective and the outdoor exercise variables that the lifestyle ranking incorporates.
For climate matched alternatives, run the climate match tool. The cities with the best weather ranking places both in the relevant cohort; the cycling cities ranking reads the climate alongside the protected lane infrastructure.
Median salaries for three mid level roles, the headline tax band, and the effective rate after standard deductions.
The tax structure carries the largest swing in the after tax salary comparison. The headline rates above feed the after tax model the tax calculator tool runs for a given gross salary. The effective rate at 100,000 dollars a year captures the practical worker scenario; the corporate tax line captures the founder scenario.
The employer bases in both cities feed the local salary differentials. The highest salary cities ranking and the highest paying after tax cities ranking place both cities in the relevant cohort. For the corporate domicile decision, the lowest tax cities ranking and the no income tax cities ranking read the headline rates side by side.
The qualitative axes scored on the same 10 point scale the index uses elsewhere.
The lifestyle axes capture the qualitative reading that decides the long term satisfaction once the cost and the tax math is settled. The nightlife and the cultural density axes follow the venue density, the calendar event count, and the global recognition; the walkability and the cycling axes follow the protected infrastructure data.
The cities for foodies ranking and the nightlife cities ranking place both in the global cohort. For the culture deep dive, the best cities for singles longform and the best cities for couples longform cover the relocator demographic angles.
The boring section that decides whether the move actually happens.
The visa difficulty axis decides the relocation timeline. The working language reading decides the integration runway. The internet speed reading decides the remote work viability. The walk score and the cycling modal share read the infrastructure investment over the past decade.
Move logistics. Discover Cars handles the rental for the initial scouting week. The relocation checklist covers both. The NordVPN review covers the privacy overlay for either context. The visa difficulty checker runs your nationality against both programs.
For the high earner valuing the 0 percent personal income tax and the 9 percent corporate floor, the founder building a Middle East and Africa regional headquarters, the worker valuing the safer street rating across all axes, or the family seeking the year round 3,508 hour sunshine count without the Atlantic hurricane risk, Dubai wins. The combination of tax, climate, and infrastructure decides the case at scale.
For the US citizen or green card holder valuing the dollar denominated capital market access, the worker on a US payroll wanting the higher absolute pre tax salary (the 41 percent senior engineer differential closes the after tax gap once Florida zero state income tax is applied), the Latin American family valuing the 68 percent Spanish speaking household share and the cultural anchor of the Miami Cuban American community, or the worker tied to the New York Boston Washington corridor by the 2 hour 55 minute direct flight, Miami wins. The combination of cost, cultural depth, and pathway decides the case at scale.
For the comparison view across adjacent axes: Dubai vs London, Dubai vs Singapore, Austin vs Miami, Amsterdam vs London. For the city profiles: Dubai, Miami, London, Singapore.
One reading note. The Dubai versus Miami comparison is one of 25,000 the atlas maintains on the same methodology, and the underlying scores feed the rankings on cheapest cities, safest cities, digital nomads, no income tax cities, and remote work. The numbers refresh quarterly against the May 2026 Numbeo and World Bank drops, with the next refresh shipping in August 2026. If the verdict here clashes with your lived experience, the methodology page walks the weights and the source priors.
For the deeper comparison set, the comparisons index tracks every two way matchup the atlas has shipped to date, and the relocation score tool takes your current city and target city and returns a graded 1 to 100 fit score. The where should I live quiz is the entry point for readers without a target city in mind, and the cost converter handles the salary math.
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