Guide
What the colours you choose say about your brand — and what works in the UAE market specifically. Based on real projects and Dubai market experience.
Important context: Colour psychology is a starting point, not a rule. What matters more than colour theory is how consistently your colour is applied, how well it contrasts in your specific context, and whether it genuinely reflects your brand's personality. A distinctive colour used consistently will outperform a theoretically "correct" colour used inconsistently every time.
In Dubai specifically
Hugely effective in Dubai's luxury market. High-end hospitality, premium automotive, luxury fashion, and high-ticket professional services all lean heavily on black. Signals you are serious and premium.
Works well for
Be careful with
Mass-market consumer brands, children's products, healthcare (unless going premium), anything where you want to feel approachable rather than exclusive.
Real example
VIMA Sportswear — black packaging communicates premium performance positioning.
In Dubai specifically
Gold is the signature colour of Dubai's aspirational culture. It appears everywhere from government branding to hospitality. When used correctly it signals established quality. When overused it reads as cheap imitation — there's a fine line.
Works well for
Be careful with
Technology brands, startups trying to appear innovative, any brand wanting to feel fresh and modern rather than established.
Real example
Used sparingly as an accent in premium hospitality brands — works best paired with black or deep navy, not on its own.
In Dubai specifically
Orange punches through in Dubai's saturated market. Less formal than gold but more energetic. Works particularly well for creative industries, fitness, F&B, and brands targeting a younger professional demographic.
Works well for
Be careful with
Ultra-luxury positioning, legal or financial services requiring strict professionalism, medical or healthcare brands.
Real example
Pixel Creative — orange signals creativity and energy while remaining professional. Fitbox L9 used orange to communicate fitness energy.
In Dubai specifically
Blue dominates corporate Dubai — it's the default for B2B, financial services, and government-adjacent work. That's both its strength and its weakness. It conveys trust instantly but can blend into the crowd in competitive sectors.
Works well for
Be careful with
Brands wanting to feel bold and distinctive — blue is safe but rarely memorable. If everyone in your sector is blue, that's a signal to go elsewhere.
Real example
Valuebee — deep blue communicates reliability and trustworthiness for a discount/essentials brand.
In Dubai specifically
White-dominant branding communicates premium in Dubai, particularly in beauty, wellness, healthcare, and architecture. It signals confidence — you don't need colour to stand out. Pairs powerfully with a single accent colour.
Works well for
Be careful with
Sectors where warmth and personality matter more than clinical precision. Difficult to stand out when everyone in wellness and beauty is also using white.
Real example
Used in Formed by Stone's supporting materials — white space emphasises the premium, architectural quality of the work.
In Dubai specifically
Green is underused in Dubai's brand landscape, which makes it an opportunity. It's growing fast in F&B (organic, farm-to-table), wellness, and sustainability-focused brands. Also carries associations with prosperity and growth — culturally resonant in the region.
Works well for
Be careful with
Technology, financial services, anything trying to feel urban and modern rather than natural.
Real example
Freshfare Organics — deep green immediately communicates the organic, natural positioning of the brand.
In Dubai specifically
Red is powerful but demanding. It works extremely well in F&B (stimulates appetite), retail (sale, urgency), and sports brands. Use it as a primary brand colour only when you want to feel truly bold — it's not a background colour.
Works well for
Be careful with
Finance, legal, luxury hospitality, anything requiring calm and trust. Red raises heart rate — that's a feature or a bug depending on your context.
Real example
Works strongly in short-term retail contexts (promotions, limited offers). Long-term, red brands need strong design discipline to avoid looking aggressive.
In Dubai specifically
Purple is underused and carries interesting associations in Dubai — royal heritage (historically associated with royalty in the Middle East), creativity, and spirituality. Creates instant distinctiveness in most sectors because so few brands use it.
Works well for
Be careful with
Heavy industry, construction, automotive, or any sector with strong masculine associations. Can feel indulgent if the brand doesn't have the substance to back it up.
Real example
Rare in Dubai brand design which makes it a differentiation opportunity in the right context.
Contrast beats convention — a distinctive colour used consistently will always outperform a theoretically "correct" one.
Dubai is aspirational — colours signalling quality, success, and premium positioning generally outperform those that feel mass-market.
Black + one accent colour is the safest premium formula in this market. Simple, powerful, easy to maintain consistency.
Avoid using colour as decoration — every colour choice should have a reason that connects to your brand's positioning.
Consider your competitive landscape — if every competitor is blue, that's a reason to go elsewhere. Stand out or blend in, not by accident.
Test in context — a colour that works on a white background may not work on your product, your packaging, or your Instagram grid.