Most “chauffeur” services in Dubai are transport, not security. Understanding the difference matters – especially if you’re moving between predictable locations (office, home, school) that an adversary can map in a week.
What counter-surveillance actually means
It doesn’t mean a tinted Range Rover. It means: are you being followed, and if so, what do you do about it.
Practical techniques
- Surveillance detection routes: deliberate, harmless-looking detours that force a follower to reveal themselves.
- Pattern disruption: varying the route and the timing of the same journey. Same road at the same time is a targeting gift.
- Vehicle pre-inspection: ten-minute walk-around before every departure, plus an under-body sweep when the vehicle has been unattended.
- Drop-and-go: for high-risk exits, the driver doesn’t wait in the lobby; they circle and return.
Vehicle choice
Counter-intuitively, the safest vehicle in Dubai isn’t the flashiest. A grey mid-spec saloon in Sheikh Zayed Road traffic is invisible. A black G63 with tinted windows is a homing beacon.
When to escalate to armoured
Armoured vehicles make sense when the principal is publicly named as a threat target, where reliable counter-surveillance has identified persistent hostile interest, or where travel routes cross known high-risk stretches. Otherwise the cost/benefit rarely justifies.
