You sleep eight hours and wake up tired. You have your coffee, push through the morning, hit a wall by 2pm, and wonder how everyone else seems to be functioning just fine. You’ve had your bloods done. The GP said everything looks normal. And yet — you’re still exhausted.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not imagining it. As a CNM Qualified Naturopathic Health Coach in Dubai, KHDA approved and trained at the College of Naturopathic Medicine, I hear this from women across the UAE constantly. The good news is that “normal bloods” and “chronic fatigue” are not mutually exclusive — and there are real, overlooked reasons why women living in Dubai specifically tend to struggle with energy.
This article walks you through what’s most likely going on, and what you can start exploring.
Is Dubai Making You More Tired Than You’d Be at Home?
The short answer: quite possibly, yes.
The UAE’s climate, lifestyle pace, and environmental factors create a combination that quietly drains energy in ways that don’t always show up on standard blood panels.
Heat and humidity place a genuine physiological load on the body. When temperatures sit at 38–45°C for five or six months of the year, your body expends significant energy just regulating its core temperature. This thermal stress affects sleep quality, hydration status, and adrenal function — all of which feed directly into how energised you feel day-to-day.
Vitamin D deficiency is counterintuitively common in the UAE, despite the abundant sunshine. Most women here spend their days in air-conditioned offices, cars, and homes — meaning actual sun exposure is minimal. Vitamin D plays a central role in energy metabolism, immune regulation, and mood. When it’s low, fatigue tends to be one of the first signs.
Disrupted circadian rhythm affects many expats in the GCC, particularly those working across time zones, travelling frequently, or adjusting to a schedule that differs significantly from their home country. Your body’s internal clock governs when cortisol rises in the morning and when melatonin builds at night. When that rhythm is off, no amount of sleep fully restores you.
Why “Your Bloods Are Normal” Doesn’t Always Tell the Whole Story
Standard NHS or UAE clinic blood panels typically check for anaemia, thyroid function, and sometimes B12 and vitamin D. These are useful — but they only show whether you fall within a reference range built around population averages.
What they often miss:
Subclinical thyroid changes. TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) can sit within the “normal” range while you still experience fatigue, brain fog, hair thinning, and sluggishness. A fuller thyroid panel — including free T3, free T4, and thyroid antibodies — often tells a more complete story.
Adrenal and cortisol patterns. Chronic low-grade stress — the kind that comes from managing a demanding job, family, heat, and adapting to life far from home — can dysregulate your cortisol rhythm over time. This isn’t “adrenal fatigue” in the outdated sense, but it is a real pattern of HPA axis dysregulation that leaves your energy flat throughout the day.
Nutritional gaps. Iron, ferritin (stored iron), B12, folate, magnesium, and zinc are all involved in energy production at a cellular level. Ferritin in particular is frequently low in women who feel exhausted but have “normal” haemoglobin. A ferritin below 50 µg/L can cause significant fatigue even when anaemia hasn’t technically developed.
Could Your Sleep Actually Be the Problem — Even If You’re Getting Enough Hours?
Eight hours in bed is not the same as eight hours of restorative sleep.
Common sleep disruptors for women in Dubai include the heat (even with air conditioning, ambient temperatures affect sleep architecture), bright screens well into the evening, late dinner times, and elevated cortisol from chronic stress. All of these reduce the proportion of deep, slow-wave sleep — which is when genuine physical and cellular repair happens.
If you wake up feeling unrefreshed, need caffeine to function before 10am, or feel a strong dip in energy in the early afternoon, your sleep quality is likely a contributing factor regardless of how many hours you’re getting.
What About Hormones?
Fatigue is one of the most consistent symptoms women report when their hormones are out of balance — yet it’s often the last thing investigated.
Oestrogen, progesterone, and testosterone all influence energy metabolism, mitochondrial function, and sleep quality. Women in their late 20s through to perimenopause can experience significant hormonal shifts that don’t yet register as “clinical” but still have a real impact on how they feel day-to-day.
This is especially relevant in the UAE, where the stress of expat life, heat, disrupted routines, and nutritional gaps can compound hormonal changes that might otherwise be barely noticeable.
Gut Health and Energy: A Connection Worth Taking Seriously
The gut plays a direct role in energy levels that many people don’t realise. Your digestive system is where nutrients are absorbed — so if gut health is compromised, even a good diet may not be translating into the fuel your body needs.
Signs that your gut may be contributing to your fatigue include: bloating, irregular bowel habits, feeling heavy after meals, food sensitivities, and low mood. The gut-brain axis also means that gut dysfunction can affect neurotransmitter production — including serotonin, over 90% of which is produced in the gut.
For women in Dubai, dietary changes that come with expat life — different foods, different eating schedules, eating out frequently — can quietly affect the gut microbiome in ways that drain energy over time.
What You Can Actually Do
A naturopathic approach to fatigue looks at the whole picture — sleep, nutrition, hormones, gut health, thyroid, stress patterns, and lifestyle — rather than searching for a single cause.
If you’ve been dismissed with “normal bloods” and you’re still exhausted, it’s worth working with a practitioner who will look at the full picture. That includes exploring a more comprehensive set of markers, understanding your daily rhythms, reviewing what you’re eating and when, and identifying the specific factors that are most relevant for your body and your life here in the UAE.
You can explore more about how I support women with fatigue and energy on the energy and fatigue page.
One Thing You Can Do Today
Check your ferritin — not just your haemoglobin. If you’ve had recent bloods done, ask your GP specifically for your ferritin level. Anything below 50 µg/L is worth discussing further, even if you were told your iron is “normal.” This single marker is one of the most commonly missed drivers of fatigue in women.
If you’d like support with this:
I work with women in Dubai and across the GCC as a CNM Qualified Naturopathic Health Coach. If persistent fatigue is something you’ve been struggling with, I’d love to help you understand what’s really going on beneath the surface. Learn more about working with me →
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. If you have concerns about your health, please speak with your GP or a qualified medical professional.