How to plan, time, and write Ramadan SMS campaigns that work across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and the wider Gulf. Real examples, timing data, and a campaign calendar.
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By Digitize Bird
Ramadan changes everything. The day inverts. Appetite, sleep, spending behaviour, and screen time all follow a different rhythm. A promotional SMS sent at 2 PM during Ramadan in Dubai will reach a tired, fasting person who is least likely to engage with it. The same message sent at 8:30 PM, thirty minutes after Iftar, reaches someone who just broke their fast, has energy and appetite, and is actively browsing for offers.
That single timing difference can double your click-through rate. It’s not a small variable.
Ramadan 2026 ran from 19 February to 20 March. In 2027, it moves earlier by about ten days. Whatever year you’re reading this, the fundamentals hold: the Gulf region’s most commercially significant month requires a specifically designed SMS strategy, not a calendar of standard campaigns with a greeting banner swapped in.
This guide gives you everything. The timing windows by country. The message frameworks that respect the month. The mistakes that get SMS campaigns flagged as spam or blocked. A sample campaign calendar. And SMS copy examples you can adapt directly for your industry.
Scale of the opportunity: Ramadan generates 20 to 30 percent of annual retail revenue for many UAE businesses, according to marketing data from regional brands. Consumer spending in Saudi Arabia rose to USD 4.6 billion in the week before Ramadan 2025 alone. Across the GCC, messaging interactions surged 140 percent during the holy month in 2025. This is not a niche seasonal window. It’s the peak of the Gulf marketing calendar.
Three things shift during Ramadan that directly affect how SMS campaigns perform.
During fasting hours, physical and digital activity drops. People are conserving energy. Retail foot traffic is lower. Browsing is lower. Engagement with marketing messages is significantly lower.
After Iftar, around sunset, the opposite happens. Energy returns, families gather, and spending begins. In the UAE in February and March 2026, Iftar was at approximately 6:30 PM Gulf Standard Time (UTC+4). The prime engagement window for SMS ran from roughly 7:30 PM to 11:30 PM. Late-night activity, including online shopping, extends well past midnight. The Suhoor window, pre-dawn, carries a smaller but highly engaged audience.
This is the central insight. Plan every Ramadan SMS send around these windows.
Recipients are in a reflective, community-oriented headspace during Ramadan. Hard-sell messaging performs badly. Aggressive urgency, countdown clocks, and high-pressure language feel jarring against the spirit of the month. What works is messaging that offers genuine value, treats the recipient as someone who appreciates an offer rather than a target who needs to be converted.
This doesn’t mean you can’t run promotional campaigns. It means the framing matters. “Ramadan Kareem. Your exclusive Iftar offer: 30% off tonight only” outperforms “FLASH SALE ENDS MIDNIGHT” in this context, even with the same underlying offer.
During Ramadan, a higher proportion of UAE residents are engaged in Arabic-language content, prayer, family gatherings in Arabic, and culturally specific activities. Promotional SMS campaigns targeting UAE nationals and Arabic-speaking residents must be bilingual at minimum. In some cases, Arabic-first is the right call entirely.
TDRA’s own guidelines note that promotional SMS to audiences that include Arabic-speaking residents should be available in both languages. During Ramadan specifically, a message that leads in Arabic and follows in English signals cultural awareness. One that is English-only can feel like the sender didn’t care enough to consider who they were reaching.
Gulf markets observe slightly different Iftar times depending on geographic location. A campaign scheduled for 8 PM in Dubai lands at different relative times across the region. If you’re running a multi-country Ramadan SMS campaign, schedule by local time per market, not a single UTC-based blast.
| Market | Typical Iftar Time (During Feb-Mar Ramadan) | Peak SMS Window | Secondary Window |
| Dubai / UAE | 6:25 to 6:35 PM GST (UTC+4) | 7:30 PM to 11:30 PM | 2:00 AM to 4:00 AM Suhoor |
| Saudi Arabia (Riyadh) | 6:00 to 6:15 PM AST (UTC+3) | 7:15 PM to 11:00 PM | 2:00 AM to 4:00 AM |
| Doha, Qatar | 6:20 to 6:30 PM AST (UTC+3) | 7:30 PM to 11:30 PM | 2:00 AM to 3:30 AM |
| Kuwait City | 6:15 to 6:25 PM AST (UTC+3) | 7:30 PM to 11:00 PM | 2:00 AM to 3:30 AM |
| Manama, Bahrain | 6:20 to 6:30 PM AST (UTC+3) | 7:30 PM to 11:00 PM | 2:00 AM to 3:30 AM |
| Muscat, Oman | 6:30 to 6:45 PM GST (UTC+4) | 7:45 PM to 11:30 PM | 2:00 AM to 4:00 AM |
Saudi Arabia follows the Arabia Standard Time zone (UTC+3), one hour behind the UAE and Oman. If you’re scheduling bulk SMS in Dubai at 8 PM GST for a UAE campaign and also sending to Saudi numbers in the same batch, Saudi recipients receive it at 7 PM AST, which is comfortably within the post-Iftar window. For Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain (all UTC+3), the same applies.
| TDRA reminder: Promotional SMS in the UAE can only be sent between 7 AM and 9 PM UAE time under TDRA regulations. During Ramadan this matters: an 11 PM send is within the TDRA window (just barely) but an 11:30 PM send is not. Schedule evening Ramadan campaigns to go out no later than 10:30 PM to give yourself operational margin. |
Ramadan is not a uniform month. Consumer behaviour, spending intent, and emotional engagement shift across three distinct phases. Your SMS campaign calendar should reflect that.
| Phase | Timing | Consumer Mindset | SMS Campaign Focus |
| Phase 1: Opening | Days 1 to 10 | Spiritual orientation, settling into rhythm, early Ramadan purchases | Greetings, Ramadan-specific offers, food and grocery promotions, essential products |
| Phase 2: Mid-Ramadan | Days 11 to 20 | Established rhythm, increased socialising, family spending rises | Iftar offers, restaurant promotions, loyalty rewards, family bundle deals |
| Phase 3: Final 10 / Eid Build | Days 21 to 30 | Eid gifting urgency, fashion and beauty surge, premium spending increases | Eid gift guides, fashion previews, last chance offers, Eid countdown campaigns |
The final ten days of Ramadan, known as Ashr Al Akhir, carry particular spiritual significance. They include Laylat Al Qadr, which most observant Muslims treat as the most important night of the year. Marketing messages on these nights should be restrained. An Eid preview offer is appropriate. A hard-sell discount blast is not.
Brands that get this right earn long-term trust. Brands that ignore it see opt-out rates spike and sender IDs flagged as spam in the final week of the month.
Four principles guide Ramadan SMS copy. They apply whether you’re writing in English, Arabic, or both.
Start with a genuine Ramadan greeting before you say anything about your offer. This is not just cultural politeness. It signals that you see your recipient as a person, not a transaction. A message that opens with “Ramadan Kareem” or “Ramadan Mubarak” has already done the hard work of context before the offer lands.
Framing changes perception significantly. “As a Ramadan gift for our valued customers” triggers a different emotional response than “SAVE 30% THIS WEEK ONLY.” Both communicate the same discount. One fits the spirit of the season. The other sounds like it was written in January and repurposed with a greeting at the top.
During Ramadan, recipients are often in family settings, breaking fast, or in prayer mode when their phone screen lights up. A long, multi-part message read at 8 PM surrounded by family is less likely to be fully absorbed. Keep your SMS to a single 160-character segment. One offer, one call to action, one link.
If your Ramadan SMS is in Arabic, each message segment is 70 characters rather than the standard 160. A short Arabic Ramadan greeting plus an offer will very likely spill into a two-part message. Test this on your platform before your campaign goes live, because a two-part Arabic message arriving in two separate notifications is a bad experience.
These are starting points. Adapt the offer, brand name, and specific details. All examples assume your sender ID is registered and compliant with TDRA’s AD- prefix rule for promotional content.
| SMS Example | Sender: AD-Brandnm Ramadan Kareem from us. This Iftar, treat yourself: 25% off storewide, tonight only. Shop now: [link] To stop msgs: STOP Note: Single segment, 155 chars. Clear offer, time anchor, opt-out included. Warm before promotional. |
| SMS Example | Sender: AD-Restname Ramadan Mubarak! Book your Iftar table tonight. AED 149 per person. Suhoor till 3 AM. Call 04-XXX or reserve: [link] Opt out: STOP Note: Time-specific (Suhoor availability builds late-night value). 158 chars. Bilingual version recommended for Arabic audiences. |
| SMS Example | Sender: AD-PropFirm Ramadan Kareem. Exclusive: 3-bed apartments in Sharjah. Zero fees this Ramadan. Book a viewing: [link] Unsubscribe: reply N Note: Low pressure, gift framing on the fee waiver. Property searches in the Gulf spike significantly during Ramadan evenings. |
| SMS Example | Sender: AD-Clinic Ramadan Mubarak. Booking your post-Ramadan health check-up? Special Ramadan rates until Eid. Book: [link] Reply STOP to opt out Note: Post-Ramadan health checks are a natural Ramadan-specific hook for clinics. Non-promotional framing still works for healthcare audiences. |
| SMS Example | Sender: AD-Store Ramadan Kareem! Your Eid gift wishlist is waiting. Order by 25 March for Eid delivery. 15% off with code EID26: [link] STOP to opt out Note: Eid delivery deadline creates urgency that feels seasonal, not manufactured. Coupon code allows tracking. |
| SMS Example | Sender: AD-DelivCo Ramadan Mubarak from [Brand]. Ramadan hours: deliveries 10 AM to 1 PM and 7 PM to 11 PM. Track your order: [link] Note: Transactional framing. This is operational, not promotional. No AD- prefix required if purely informational. |
The Gulf is not one market. What works in Dubai will not land identically in Riyadh, and what resonates in Kuwait City has its own nuances. These distinctions matter for Ramadan SMS campaigns specifically.
Saudi consumers respond to family-oriented and community-giving messaging. Vision 2030 and the National Transformation agenda have created a sense of national pride that resonates in campaigns that connect with it. Retail spending peaks early in Ramadan and again in the final ten days. CST (formerly CITC) regulations require promotional sender IDs to carry the -AD suffix, equivalent to the UAE’s AD- prefix.
Saudi Arabia also has a strong Suhoor culture, particularly in Riyadh, with restaurants and cafes heavily patronised until pre-dawn. If your business serves F&B or retail clients in Saudi Arabia, the 1 AM to 3 AM window is genuinely productive for late Ramadan sends.
Qatar has the smallest population of the GCC countries but one of the highest per-capita spending rates. Doha’s Ramadan tents and cultural events draw large crowds. For hospitality and event businesses, Ramadan SMS campaigns in Qatar should lean into experiential offers rather than simple product discounts.
Qatar saw 67% year-on-year growth in messaging interactions in 2025. Ramadan SMS engagement there is strong and the competitive content bar is low. Well-crafted, locally relevant campaigns stand out quickly.
Kuwait has a particularly strong Ramadan social culture. Extended family gatherings, Ramadan tents, and late-night social activity are deeply embedded. F&B businesses, grocery, and fashion retailers see strong Ramadan performance. Kuwait SMS campaigns benefit from a stronger emphasis on communal and family themes compared to the more cosmopolitan, individualistic framing that works in Dubai.
The post-Iftar window. Iftar in Dubai during February and March falls at approximately 6:25 to 6:35 PM GST. The optimal SMS send time for promotional campaigns is between 7:30 PM and 10:30 PM. This captures the audience after they’ve broken their fast, re-energised, and are actively engaging with screens. Sends after 10:30 PM risk coming too close to the TDRA 9 PM cutoff or, if scheduled slightly later, breaching it. Never send promotional SMS during fasting hours, typically 4:30 AM to 6:30 PM in February and March.
Ideally both. A bilingual message, Arabic greeting followed by English offer detail, covers your entire UAE audience. If you must choose one, consider your specific subscriber list. If the majority of your customers are UAE nationals, Emirati residents, or Arabic-speaking expats, Arabic-first is the correct choice. If your list is primarily English-speaking expats, English is fine with a brief Arabic greeting as a cultural acknowledgement.
Six weeks minimum. This gives you time to build or clean your opt-in list, register or confirm your sender ID with Etisalat and du (the registration process takes 5 to 15 working days for new applications), write and translate your message copy, schedule your three-phase campaign calendar, and test all links and delivery.
Yes, fully. TDRA’s promotional SMS regulations apply the same during Ramadan as any other time. You need a registered sender ID with the AD- prefix, prior opt-in consent from recipients, an opt-out mechanism in every message, and you must send only between 7 AM and 9 PM UAE time. The cultural considerations around tone and timing are strategic, not regulatory.
The regulatory frameworks are similar but administered by different bodies. In Saudi Arabia, the CST (Communications, Space and Technology Commission) governs SMS compliance. Promotional sender IDs carry the -AD suffix rather than the UAE’s AD- prefix. Promotional SMS is permitted between 9 AM and 8 PM Saudi time during Ramadan. The content requirements, including opt-in and opt-out obligations, are closely aligned with the UAE framework.
Run Your Ramadan SMS Campaigns Across the Gulf with Digitize Bird
Digitize Bird’s bulk SMS platform covers all six GCC markets. Our campaign scheduling tools let you set send times by country time zone, segment your list by language and location, and track delivery rates per market. Sender ID registration for UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman is handled as part of onboarding.
Ready to launch your Ramadan SMS Campaign?