How to Follow Up After a Job Interview in the UAE (With Email & WhatsApp Templates)

A well-timed follow-up can be the difference between an offer and silence. Here is exactly when and how to follow up after a UAE job interview — with ready-to-use email and WhatsApp templates.
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You finished the interview, it seemed to go well, and then… silence. Most candidates sit and wait, assuming that following up looks desperate. In the UAE job market, the opposite is usually true: a short, professional follow-up keeps you top of mind and signals genuine interest — and it is often what tips a close decision in your favour.
This guide covers exactly when to follow up, what to say, and gives you templates you can copy, edit, and send.

When should you follow up?
Timing matters more than most people realise:
- Within 24 hours: send a short thank-you message. This is the single highest-impact follow-up and very few candidates do it.
- After 3–5 business days of silence: if they gave you a timeline that has passed, or no timeline at all, send a polite check-in.
- One final time after about a week more: if there is still no reply, send one last message. After that, move on and keep applying — chasing further rarely helps.
Always ask at the end of the interview, "What are the next steps and when can I expect to hear back?" That single question makes your follow-up timing obvious and natural.
Email vs WhatsApp — which to use?
Use the channel the recruiter used with you. In the UAE, a lot of hiring communication happens on WhatsApp, especially for retail, hospitality, and blue-collar roles. For corporate and office roles, email is safer and more professional. When in doubt, email — and keep WhatsApp for when they messaged you there first.
The 24-hour thank-you email (template)
Keep it short, specific, and warm:
Subject: Thank you — [Job Title] interview
Dear [Interviewer's name],
Thank you for taking the time to meet with me today about the [Job Title] role at [Company]. I enjoyed learning more about [something specific you discussed], and I am even more confident I can contribute to your team, particularly with my experience in [relevant skill].
Please let me know if you need any further information from me. I look forward to the next steps.
Kind regards,
[Your name]
[Phone number]
The polite check-in after silence (template)
Use this 3–5 business days after the expected response date:
Dear [Interviewer's name],
I hope you are well. I wanted to follow up on the [Job Title] position I interviewed for on [day]. I remain very interested in the role and would be grateful for any update on the hiring decision. Please let me know if there is anything else I can provide.
Thank you for your time.
Kind regards,
[Your name]
The short WhatsApp follow-up (template)
WhatsApp messages should be even shorter and more casual, but still polite:
"Good morning [Name], thank you again for the interview on [day] for the [Job Title] role. I'm still very interested and wanted to check if there's any update. Happy to share anything else you need. Thank you!"
What not to do
- Don't message multiple times a day. One message per follow-up window is enough.
- Don't sound entitled. Avoid "Why haven't I heard back?" — stay gracious even if you are frustrated.
- Don't follow up on every channel at once. Pick one. Emailing, WhatsApping, and calling the same day reads as anxious.
- Don't forget the basics. Address the right person, spell their name correctly, and proofread.
If you keep getting silence
Sometimes the role is frozen, filled internally, or the company simply went quiet — none of which is about you. Keep your pipeline full so no single interview carries all the pressure. Our guides on common UAE interview questions and the top mistakes job seekers make will help you convert more of your interviews into offers.
What to do next
- Prepare better answers: UAE interview questions and answers
- Nail your introduction: "Tell me about yourself" in a UAE interview
- Dress the part: UAE interview dress code
- Negotiate the offer: how to negotiate salary in the UAE
Key takeaways
- Use short examples from your own experience instead of memorizing generic interview answers.
- Practice answers about service, safety, teamwork, and shift discipline because these themes repeat across Gulf hiring.
- Mirror the language of the role you want so your answers sound relevant, not vague.

