Having worked as an SEO analyst in Dubai for several years and managing websites hosted across different cloud environments, I looked into this issue in detail when reports of widespread outages began circulating.
To clarify, AWS has not stopped offering hosting services in the UAE, nor has it announced any withdrawal from the region. The disruption was linked to the March 2026 drone strikes that reportedly damaged multiple AWS data center facilities in the UAE and Bahrain during the escalation of the Middle East conflict. As a result, several AWS services experienced outages, affecting websites, applications, databases, and cloud-hosted platforms that depended on the impacted infrastructure.
Many website owners interpreted the downtime as AWS shutting down its UAE hosting operations, but that was not the case. AWS continued operating in the region while working to restore affected systems. The company also advised customers to activate disaster recovery plans and, where possible, migrate workloads to alternative AWS regions to reduce service interruptions.
From what I observed, one of the biggest lessons from this incident was that many businesses had concentrated their infrastructure within a single AWS region. When the disruption occurred, organizations without cross-region backups, redundancy, or failover mechanisms faced prolonged downtime. Businesses that had adopted multi-region deployment strategies generally recovered much faster.
Regarding whether this has happened before, AWS has experienced major outages in the past, including incidents caused by networking issues, software failures, power disruptions, and configuration errors. However, this event stands out because it was linked to physical damage associated with an active regional conflict rather than a technical fault inside AWS infrastructure. That makes it one of the most unusual service disruptions AWS customers have faced in the region.
As of now, AWS continues to provide cloud and hosting services in the UAE. The incident should be viewed as a temporary infrastructure disruption caused by extraordinary geopolitical circumstances rather than an indication that AWS has stopped supporting customers in the country.