UAE Dirham to Pakistani Rupee Rate Today – April 29, 2026
Key takeaways
- Add ARY News on Google Dubai / Karachi, April 29, 2026 – The UAE Dirham (AED) is trading at 75.88 Pakistani Rupees in the open market today, showing a modest decline of 0.18 PKR from recent levels.
- The Dirham’s reliable performance stems from its fixed peg to the US Dollar at 3.6725 AED per USD — a policy that has remained unchanged since 1997 and continues to provide strong protection against sharp volatility.
- For the estimated 1.5 million Pakistanis living and working in the UAE — from construction sites to corporate offices — today’s rate means each dirham sent home now converts to 75.88 PKR.
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
Add ARY News on Google Dubai / Karachi, April 29, 2026 – The UAE Dirham (AED) is trading at 75.88 Pakistani Rupees in the open market today, showing a modest decline of 0.18 PKR from recent levels. The pair has now moved closer to the psychologically important 76.00 mark, continuing the gradual softening trend observed since late 2025.
The Dirham’s reliable performance stems from its fixed peg to the US Dollar at 3.6725 AED per USD — a policy that has remained unchanged since 1997 and continues to provide strong protection against sharp volatility. The Pakistani Rupee, while floating, has been quietly supported by healthy foreign reserves and consistent remittance inflows, helping it maintain balance against the AED. Today’s rate of 75.88 PKR per AED reflects this ongoing equilibrium, offering a dependable and slightly more favorable conversion for cross-border transfers.
For the estimated 1.5 million Pakistanis living and working in the UAE — from construction sites to corporate offices — today’s rate means each dirham sent home now converts to 75.88 PKR. Monthly remittances from the UAE regularly exceed $700 million, so even a small daily improvement adds up to meaningful assistance for families covering school fees, medical expenses, groceries, utility payments, and other essentials in Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan, and beyond. These funds remain a vital economic lifeline, helping millions manage daily life and invest in a better future.