# Abu Dhabi already runs its government on AI

> Source: <https://thenextweb.com/news/abu-dhabi-ai-native-government-tamm>
> Published: 2026-07-15 10:59:53+00:00

*While the West argues over how to regulate AI, Abu Dhabi has quietly built an AI-native government. In the UAE capital, a single app already renews your ID, books your doctor, and pays your parking fine, sometimes before you ask.*

Most governments are still drafting their first AI strategy. Abu Dhabi is running on one.

The emirate has near-universal adoption of an app called TAMM, Arabic for “consider it done.” It knows when your national ID, health insurance, or vehicle registration falls due. Its “AutoGov” feature goes further. It handles the paperwork and pays what you owe before you even ask. Axios’s Mike Allen [reported](https://www.axios.com/2026/07/15/uae-ai-government-app-tamm) as much after two interviews with the man who runs it.

That man is Mohamed Al Askar, director general of TAMM. He describes an AI-native government that treats the citizen as a customer. Snap a photo of a broken streetlight and the app routes it to the right department. That department cannot close your request until you confirm the fix.

## A decade-long bet

None of this happened overnight. The UAE named the world’s first AI minister in 2017. Two years later it opened MBZUAI in Abu Dhabi, which calls itself the first graduate university devoted entirely to AI.

The money followed. Abu Dhabi [funds sovereign AI](https://thenextweb.com/news/mgx-ai-fund-50bn-abu-dhabi) at a scale few states can match, part of a [wider push](https://thenextweb.com/news/india-sovereign-ai-anthropic-fable-suspension-debate) to build a future beyond oil. Its national strategy promises that by 2031 the country will be a magnet for the world’s AI talent. PwC estimates AI could add $320 billion (roughly €295 billion) to the Middle East economy by 2030.

## The catch democracies cannot copy

Here is the part that does not travel. Abu Dhabi can rebuild government around AI because an all-powerful royal family controls both the state and the economy. It can force wholesale change that no elected government could, as Axios notes in its own reality check.

That is also the uncomfortable part. An app that acts on your behalf, run by a state that sees every ID renewal and parking fine, is a convenience and a surveillance system at once. The infrastructure that pays your fine also knows a great deal about you.

## Caught between Washington and Beijing

The bet now runs through a war. The conflict with Iran rattled the Gulf. Even so, the UAE says it stays all-in on AI. It will work with both [the United States and China](https://thenextweb.com/news/china-ai-global-cooperation-vs-g7-export-controls) to get there.

Washington is rewarding it. The Wall Street Journal [reported](https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/uae-ai-chips-iran-war-26c10d77) that the Trump administration is widening the UAE’s access to [coveted AI chips](https://thenextweb.com/news/nvidia-halves-asia-buyer-list-china-crackdown). The move rewards Abu Dhabi’s help in the war, and caps a yearslong push for US technology.

That leaves Abu Dhabi as the test case the rest of the world is watching. Its AI does the paperwork, and its [agents act on their own](https://thenextweb.com/news/itu-un-ai-agents-trust-initiative). The open question is whether a model built on absolute control can mean anything for governments that answer to voters.

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