Run your fingernail across the scratch. If it catches, the damage has gone through the clearcoat into the paint or primer beneath. If your nail slides over it smoothly, it is surface only. That 5-second test is the most reliable way to categorise any scratch before you spend a dirham on repair.
Dubai's conditions create all three types of car scratches more aggressively than most cities. The UV index sits at 8 or above for eight months of the year, which dries out clearcoat and makes it brittle. Desert sand in the air acts as a fine abrasive on every surface exposed during a khamsin. Parking lots with tight bays and shopping trolleys account for the majority of contact scratches. Knowing which type you are dealing with determines whether the fix costs AED 100 or AED 1,200.
What Are the Types of Car Scratches?
Car paint is built in layers: a steel or aluminium substrate, a primer coat, a basecoat carrying the colour, and a clearcoat on top. Types of car scratches are defined by how deep they penetrate through these layers.
- Level 1 (clearcoat only): The scratch affects only the transparent outer layer. Nail slides over it. No colour change visible. Appears white or hazy in direct light. Can often be corrected by machine polishing without any painting. - Level 2 (basecoat/paint): The scratch penetrates the clearcoat into the coloured basecoat. Nail catches lightly. The scratch shows a different colour than the surrounding panel (white marks on a dark car, for example). Requires touch-up paint or a panel respray depending on length and location. - Level 3 (primer or metal): The deepest category. Nail catches firmly. A grey or silver colour is visible at the scratch centre. At this depth, bare metal is exposed to moisture and will rust if left untreated. Always requires professional repair.
A fourth variant, kerb rash on alloy wheels, follows the same layering logic but is treated differently because wheel substrate and clearcoat are different materials from body paint.
The Most Common Car Scratch Types in Dubai
Level 1 clearcoat scratches are by far the most common types of car scratches seen in Dubai. Fine sand particles suspended in the air during shamal and khamsin events settle on car surfaces. When owners wipe or wash without rinsing first, or when the car moves through sandy air at speed on Sheikh Zayed Road, abrasive particles are dragged across the clearcoat.
The result is a network of fine swirl marks and surface scratches visible when light hits the panel at a low angle. Each individual mark is Level 1. Combined across an entire panel, they create what detailers call swirl damage. Machine polishing removes Level 1 scratches by abrading the top layer of clearcoat to a uniform smooth surface. The process takes 2 to 4 hours per panel and typically costs AED 200 to AED 400.
Level 2 paint scratches are the second most common category. These are usually caused by shopping trolley impacts in mall car parks, other car doors in tight spaces, or contact with concrete pillars and posts. They are typically short (2 to 10 cm) but highly visible because the missing colour creates a hard contrast line. Repair involves colour-matched touch-up paint for minor cases, or a panel respray when the scratch is longer than about 10 cm or in a highly visible location.
Level 3 metal-exposure scratches are less common but serious when they occur. A deep key scratch, a significant collision-related mark, or a scratch from a sharp object can breach all three paint layers. At 40-plus degrees in summer and high humidity near the coast, exposed steel begins to form surface rust within days. See our car scratch repair guide for a detailed breakdown of what each repair method involves.
How Do Dubai's Conditions Affect Scratch Severity?
UV radiation in Dubai causes clearcoat to lose elasticity over time. The World Health Organisation's UV index guidance classifies anything above 8 as Very High, requiring protection. Dubai regularly reaches 10 to 11 between April and October. Clearcoat exposed to that UV level without correction or protection becomes progressively more brittle and harder to buff. A Level 1 scratch on a 3-year-old uncorrected car often cannot be removed by polishing alone because the clearcoat is too thin and too hard.
This has a practical consequence: on older vehicles, Level 1 scratches may need a spot clearcoat respray rather than polishing. The job costs AED 300 to AED 500 instead of AED 150 to AED 200, but it is still far cheaper than a full panel respray.
High humidity near the Creek, Marina, and Palm areas accelerates rust formation on Level 3 scratches. A scratch that reaches bare metal in a dry inland climate might stay rust-free for three to four weeks. The same scratch in a ground-floor apartment parking garage near the Marina can show surface rust in five to seven days. If you live near the waterfront and discover a deep scratch, it should be assessed within a week.
Sand abrasion also attacks panel edges disproportionately. The leading edges of bonnets, door sills, and boot lids catch sand at impact angles that concentrate abrasive force. These locations accumulate Level 1 damage faster than flat panel surfaces. Annual machine polishing on a Dubai-based car is worth considering as general maintenance, not just cosmetic repair.
What Does Each Scratch Type Cost to Fix in Dubai?
Pricing depends on scratch depth, length, and location on the vehicle. These are current market rates at quality body shops in Al Quoz and surrounding areas.
Level 1 clearcoat scratches: machine polish and correction AED 150 to AED 400 per panel. If the clearcoat is too thin to polish, spot clearcoat respray AED 300 to AED 500.
Level 2 paint scratches: short scratch (under 5 cm) with colour-matched touch-up, AED 100 to AED 200. Panel respray for longer or prominent scratches, AED 400 to AED 800 depending on panel size and vehicle type. A door on a Toyota Land Cruiser costs more than a door on an Audi A3 because the surface area is larger and metallic colours require more careful blending.
Level 3 metal-exposure scratches: these always require paint, which means at minimum a panel spot repair (AED 200 to AED 400) or a full panel respray (AED 400 to AED 800). Rust treatment adds AED 100 to AED 250 if rust has already formed.
For multiple scratches across several panels, it is worth discussing a combined job. Repainting two adjacent panels at the same time costs less per panel than two separate visits because masking, setup, and curing time is shared. See our full car scratch repair cost guide for more detailed price breakdowns.
According to the Roads and Transport Authority Dubai, paint condition is a factor in vehicle roadworthiness checks. Significant paint loss or rust-through can be flagged during Tasjeel inspection.
DIY Car Scratch Repair: When It Makes Sense
Level 1 clearcoat scratches on panels less than 3 to 4 years old can sometimes be addressed with a quality compound and a dual-action polisher. The distinction matters: a polishing compound removes a thin layer of clearcoat to eliminate the scratch. A polish fills and hides it temporarily. Compounds work. Polishes mask.
For a car owner with no prior experience, the risk in DIY on Level 2 or Level 3 scratches is making the damage worse. Touch-up paint from a brush applicator, applied without proper surface preparation and colour matching, typically looks worse than the original scratch. The colour is rarely an exact match, and the application creates a raised blob rather than a flat finish.
The cleaner decision rule: Level 1 and you have access to a machine polisher, try it. Level 2 or Level 3, send photos to a professional for an assessment. Most reputable body shops, including our Al Quoz workshop, will give you a WhatsApp quote from photos in under 30 minutes. That is faster than a DIY attempt and removes the risk of making the problem worse.