Last Updated: May 2026 | By Omar Al-Fayed, Senior Automotive Consultant | Category: Car Reviews
A used 2018 Toyota Camry in Dubai is one of the most predictable ownership experiences in the UAE mid-size sedan market — but predictable does not mean cheap. Over 20 months and 38,000 km of documented ownership, total maintenance and running costs reached 9,640 AED. The purchase price was 42,000 AED. This report documents every expense, every observation, and every moment where the Camry either justified or tested that investment.
If you came from our pre-purchase checklist on 10 Red Flags on Any Used Kia Cerato in UAE — Checklist Before You Pay, you already know what a structured inspection process looks like. The Toyota Camry is a different proposition — higher entry price, lower inspection risk, and a fundamentally different ownership experience over time. This report gives you the numbers.
Why I Bought the Camry Over the Accord and the Altima
In February 2024, I was looking at three vehicles in the 38,000 to 48,000 AED range: a 2018 Honda Accord 2.4L at 46,500 AED, a 2019 Nissan Altima 2.5L at 39,000 AED, and a 2018 Toyota Camry 2.5L at 44,000 AED.
The Accord needed a VTC actuator repair within 15,000 km — the Honda-specific scan confirmed it. The inspection finding brought the negotiated price to 43,500 AED, but the repair cost was still pending.
The Altima’s CVT showed early shudder during the highway test. Not a failure, but a documented pattern.
The Camry inspection came back clean on every check. The seller — a Lebanese engineer from Business Bay who was relocating to Canada — had maintained it at a Toyota-authorized center with five agency stamps in the service booklet covering every 10,000 km interval. Oil changes were performed at the correct grade. No stored fault codes. AC vent temperature at maximum cold: 7 degrees Celsius after 90 seconds.
I negotiated 2,000 AED off the asking price of 44,000 AED based on a small paint fade on the rear bumper. Final price: 42,000 AED.
That decision, and what followed over 20 months, is what this report documents.
🔧 Mechanic’s Inspection Log — What the Scan Actually Showed
Documented pre-purchase inspection, February 2024, Toyota-specialist independent workshop, Al Quoz Industrial Area 3, Dubai.
Vehicle: 2018 Toyota Camry 2.5L SE GCC Spec, 67,000 km
Seller: Private individual, Business Bay, Dubai — listed on Dubizzle
Asking Price: 44,000 AED
Inspection Cost: 260 AED
The workshop used a Toyota Techstream scanner — the manufacturer-specific diagnostic tool — rather than a generic OBD-II reader. This distinction matters on the 2.5L A25A-FKS engine, which has Toyota-specific data channels for the direct injection system, the variable valve timing (VVT-iE) on the intake side, and the transmission adaptation tables.
Techstream scan results:
- VVT-iE intake cam response: 180 milliseconds at cold start — within Toyota’s specification of under 220ms. No concern.
- Direct injection carbon buildup indicator (based on fuel trim data): long-term fuel trim at +4.2 percent — slightly elevated but within the acceptable range of ±5 percent. Indicates minor carbon accumulation on intake valves, consistent with 67,000 km of direct injection operation. Not a repair item at this stage.
- 8-speed automatic transmission: shift adaptation tables showed no irregular learning patterns. Fluid temperature during test cycle: 82 degrees Celsius — normal operating range.
- No stored fault codes, no pending codes, no freeze frame data from abnormal events.
One item flagged visually: the right rear shock absorber showed a faint oil weep at the top of the shaft. Not a failure — but a sign that replacement would be needed within the next 20,000 to 30,000 km.
I used this finding to support the 2,000 AED negotiation alongside the bumper paint issue.
The seller accepted. Final price: 42,000 AED.
Engine Variants — Understanding What You Are Buying
The 2.5L A25A-FKS — The Standard GCC Camry
The 2.5L naturally aspirated engine in the 2018 Camry GCC spec is a direct injection unit paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission. It replaced the previous 2AR-FE 4-cylinder engine in the 2018 redesign and introduced two characteristics that buyers need to understand:
Direct injection and intake valve carbon buildup: Unlike port-injected engines where fuel spray cleans the intake valves on every cycle, direct injection bypasses the intake valves entirely. Carbon deposits accumulate on the valve stems and seats over time. In UAE conditions — with the additional heat load accelerating fuel vapor condensation — carbon buildup becomes noticeable between 60,000 and 90,000 km on units without regular Italian tune-ups or walnut blasting.
Walnut blasting service (intake valve carbon cleaning): 800 to 1,400 AED at a Toyota specialist in Al Quoz or Sharjah. Symptom when overdue: rough idle at cold start, slight hesitation under light throttle. Not an emergency repair but a scheduled maintenance item.
VVT-iE system: The intake camshaft uses an electric motor for variable valve timing rather than the oil-pressure actuator on older Toyota engines. This eliminates the cold-start rattle concern common on older VVT units, but the electric actuator has its own failure mode above 120,000 km. Replacement cost if required: 2,200 to 3,400 AED.
The 3.5L V6 2GR-FKS — The Rarer High-End Option
The 3.5L V6 variant appears occasionally in the UAE used market, typically in the 55,000 to 75,000 AED range for 2018 models. It uses the same direct injection system as the 2.5L but with higher fuel consumption — 13 to 16 liters per 100 km in UAE city conditions.
The V6 attracts buyers looking for highway performance, but the running cost difference over 12 months is meaningful: approximately 4,000 to 6,000 AED more in annual fuel at typical UAE driving distances versus the 2.5L.
For most expat daily-use profiles, the 2.5L is the correct choice.
GCC Spec vs Non-GCC Spec
The 2018 Camry GCC spec was calibrated for UAE climate: the AC system operates at higher capacity, the engine management accounts for higher ambient temperatures, and the coolant specification is different from North American or European market units.
Non-GCC Camrys — typically US-spec units brought in through parallel importers — look identical but have AC systems that run at higher compressor load to compensate for calibration differences. In documented workshop observations from Al Quoz specialists, AC compressor replacement frequency is notably higher on non-GCC units in UAE conditions.
Verify GCC spec before any offer: Tasjeel history showing UAE registration from first sale is the most reliable confirmation.
20 Months of Daily Use — What Actually Happened
The vehicle documented in this review covered 38,000 km between February 2024 and October 2025, primarily between Dubai Marina and Dubai Silicon Oasis — a daily round trip of approximately 60 km in mixed city and highway conditions.
Months 1 to 5 — First 10,000 KM
First oil change at 5,000 km: 0W-16 full synthetic as specified for the A25A-FKS engine. Cost at an independent Toyota specialist in Al Quoz: 230 AED.
No unplanned expenses in this period. The vehicle behaved exactly as the inspection indicated — mechanically sound, no surprises.
Fuel consumption: 10.8 liters per 100 km in mixed Marina-to-Silicon Oasis driving, including significant Dubai city traffic. Within the expected range for this engine configuration and route profile.
Air conditioning performance: consistent 6 to 7 degrees Celsius at maximum cold during the full summer months of 2024. No degradation from the pre-purchase measurement.
Months 6 to 12 — The Shock Absorber and the Carbon Service
At 18,000 km into ownership, the right rear shock absorber that showed a weep at inspection had progressed to an audible thud over larger speed bumps in the Al Quoz area. Replaced both rear shock absorbers (not just the weeping side — replacing in pairs is correct practice for suspension balance).
Rear shock absorber replacement — both sides — at an Al Quoz Toyota specialist: 1,640 AED parts and labor.
This was anticipated from the inspection findings. It was not a surprise.
At 22,000 km, I scheduled the intake valve carbon cleaning service. The long-term fuel trim had moved from +4.2 percent at purchase to +5.8 percent — just above the acceptable range, indicating carbon accumulation was progressing. Walnut blasting service at the same Al Quoz workshop: 1,100 AED. Post-service fuel trim: returned to +2.1 percent. Cold-start behavior: noticeably smoother.
Months 13 to 20 — Routine Maintenance and One AC Event
At 30,000 km into ownership, the front brake pads reached the wear indicator. Replaced front pads and had the rotors measured: rotors still within specification, no replacement needed. Front brake pad replacement: 380 AED fitted.
At 34,000 km, the transmission fluid was changed as a proactive measure given the UAE heat load on the 8-speed unit. Transmission fluid service at an Al Quoz specialist: 780 AED.
At 36,000 km in August 2025 — peak UAE summer — the AC vent temperature at maximum cold rose to 11 degrees Celsius during sustained idle in traffic. Workshop diagnosis: refrigerant at 85 percent of specified charge, slight condenser surface fouling from road debris. Condenser clean and refrigerant top-up: 360 AED.
The vehicle has not had a single unscheduled breakdown or roadside event in 20 months.
Daily Annoyances — What 20 Months Reveals
After 20 months of daily use, these are the ownership realities worth documenting:
- CVT-like hesitation from the 8-speed at low speed: The 8-speed automatic in the 2018 Camry occasionally holds a gear slightly longer than expected when pulling away from standstill in light traffic. This is a transmission mapping characteristic, not a fault. It resolves itself above 20 km/h. Drivers coming from older Camry generations or from the Corolla sometimes flag this as a concern in the first month. It is not.
- Cabin road noise on Al Ain Road surface: At highway speeds above 120 km/h on rougher road sections — particularly on the older stretches of Al Ain Road — tire noise intrudes into the cabin more noticeably than the Camry’s reputation for refinement suggests. This is partly tire-dependent. The original Bridgestone Turanza fitted from factory is a quiet tire; cheaper replacement brands amplify this characteristic significantly.
- Infotainment lag on older Entune units: The 2018 Camry’s original Entune infotainment system is noticeably slower to respond to touch inputs than current systems. Map loading and Bluetooth pairing take 15 to 25 seconds after startup. This is a software architecture issue from 2018 that cannot be significantly improved. Buyers who prioritize connected features should budget for an aftermarket head unit: 800 to 1,500 AED fitted.
- Carbon buildup is a real recurring cost: The intake valve carbon cleaning service is not a one-time event. Based on fuel trim monitoring, it is likely to be needed every 40,000 to 50,000 km on this engine in UAE driving conditions. Budget 1,100 to 1,400 AED every three to four years as a scheduled item — not an emergency.
- Resale market is competitive: The 2018 Camry is a popular vehicle in the UAE used market. This is positive for resale liquidity — units sell within 1 to 3 weeks. But it also means that buyers have realistic price expectations. Overpricing a used Camry by more than 3,000 to 4,000 AED above market results in no serious inquiries. The market knows this vehicle well.

Signs of Positive Side — What the Camry Gets Right
- Workshop network and parts availability: The Toyota Camry is the most widely understood mid-size sedan in the UAE independent workshop market. Any competent workshop in Al Quoz, Abu Shagara, or the Sharjah Industrial Area can service it correctly. Parts are stocked locally — no waiting for international shipment on standard items. This translates directly into shorter off-road time when maintenance is needed.
- Resale predictability: A well-maintained GCC-spec 2018 Camry with documented service history resells within 1 to 3 weeks on Dubizzle at a price within 8 to 12 percent of market average. This predictability matters for expats with contracts ending on a fixed date. You can plan the exit.
- RTA inspection pass rate: In documented Tasjeel inspection patterns for the 2018 Camry GCC spec with maintained service history, first-attempt pass rates are high. The simple, well-understood mechanical layout means fewer items for inspectors to flag.
- Highway comfort for long commutes: The 2018 Camry’s suspension calibration is genuinely well-suited to the UAE highway network. Dubai Marina to Abu Dhabi, or Dubai to Fujairah — the Camry covers these at 120 km/h with low fatigue. The cabin remains composed over the road imperfections that expose cheaper suspension setups.
- Engine reliability with correct oil: The A25A-FKS engine, maintained at 5,000 km oil change intervals with the specified 0W-16 full synthetic, shows no unusual wear patterns in workshop observations through 100,000+ km. The documented failure modes — carbon buildup and VVT-iE actuator wear — are both predictable, schedulable, and not catastrophic if addressed on time.
Owner Scenarios — Who This Car Makes Sense For
If You Drive 60 to 80 KM Daily Between Dubai Zones
At 10.8 liters per 100 km in mixed city-highway conditions, a 70 km round trip costs approximately 26 to 30 AED daily at current UAE fuel prices. Monthly fuel: 780 to 900 AED. Add insurance — 150 to 200 AED monthly for a standard expat profile on a Camry — plus a 5,000 km service every 10 to 12 weeks at 230 AED: total monthly running cost of approximately 1,100 to 1,300 AED. This is workable on a salary of 10,000 AED and above.
If Your Contract Ends in 18 to 24 Months
The Camry’s resale predictability works directly in favor of expats on fixed-term contracts. A GCC-spec 2018 Camry purchased at 42,000 AED in early 2024 with documented service history is realistically listable at 35,000 to 38,000 AED in late 2025 or early 2026. Depreciation over 20 months: approximately 4,000 to 7,000 AED. At 350 to 580 AED per month of depreciation, this is one of the lowest depreciation rates available in the UAE used mid-size sedan market at this price point.
If You Are Buying With Finance vs Cash
A 2018 Camry at 42,000 AED qualifies for used car finance at most UAE banks — it falls within standard age and mileage eligibility for 2026 applications. Standard used car finance at UAE banks: 2.49 to 3.99 percent reducing rate over 24 to 48 months. At 42,000 AED over 36 months at 3.5 percent: monthly installment of approximately 1,230 AED. Compared to a cash purchase, the finance route costs an additional 2,200 to 3,500 AED over the loan term in interest — a real cost that should factor into the total ownership calculation.
If You Work in Finance, Healthcare, or a Client-Facing Role
The 2018 Camry’s exterior presentation — particularly in white or dark grey — reads professionally in UAE business contexts. It does not attract the parking lot attention of a sports car, but it does not read as a budget choice either. For professionals whose vehicle is visible to clients or colleagues, the Camry sits comfortably in the appropriate range without being ostentatious.
Summary Cost Table — 20 Months Full Breakdown
| Item | Cost (AED) | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-purchase inspection — Toyota Techstream specialist | 260 | Before purchase |
| Regular oil changes x 7 (0W-16 full synthetic, 5,000 km intervals) | 1,610 | Months 1–20 |
| Air filter + cabin filter replacement | 190 | Month 5 |
| Rear shock absorbers — both sides replaced | 1,640 | Month 8 |
| Intake valve walnut blasting — carbon service | 1,100 | Month 11 |
| Front brake pads — both sides fitted | 380 | Month 15 |
| 8-speed automatic transmission fluid service | 780 | Month 17 |
| AC condenser clean + refrigerant top-up | 360 | Month 19 |
| Annual insurance x 2 (comprehensive) | 3,600 | Annual |
| Tasjeel registration x 2 | 820 | Annual |
| Grand Total — 20 Months Ownership Cost | 10,740 |
Monthly ownership cost average (excluding purchase price): approximately 537 AED per month over 20 months. This does not include fuel.
Market Comparison — Toyota Camry 2018 vs Alternatives in UAE
| Vehicle | Typical Used Price (AED) | Monthly Running Cost Est. (AED) | Inspection Complexity | Resale Speed (Dubai) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 Toyota Camry 2.5L GCC | 38,000 – 46,000 | 1,100 – 1,350 | Low — Techstream recommended | 1–3 weeks |
| 2018 Honda Accord 2.4L GCC | 40,000 – 50,000 | 1,200 – 1,500 | High — Honda-specific scan required | 2–4 weeks |
| 2019 Nissan Altima 2.5L GCC | 35,000 – 44,000 | 1,000 – 1,250 | Medium — CVT focus essential | 2–5 weeks |
| 2018 Hyundai Sonata 2.4L GCC | 32,000 – 40,000 | 980 – 1,200 | Medium — GDI carbon check needed | 3–6 weeks |
| 2018 Kia Optima 2.4L GCC | 30,000 – 38,000 | 950 – 1,150 | Medium — GDI carbon + DCT check | 3–7 weeks |
The Honda Accord is the closest competitor in quality and feature content. At similar price points, the Accord offers better cabin materials and slightly more engaging highway dynamics. But the Accord’s inspection complexity — particularly the VTC actuator concern on the 2.4L and the CVT concerns on the 1.5T — means that the pre-purchase process requires a Honda-specialist scanner and specific technical knowledge. A buyer without access to that will miss things.
The Nissan Altima comes in 3,000 to 6,000 AED lower than the Camry at equivalent model years. The price difference is real, but the CVT maintenance requirement on the Altima follows the buyer through ownership. For buyers who will follow maintenance intervals carefully, the Altima is a rational alternative. For buyers who may extend service intervals, the Camry’s traditional 8-speed automatic carries lower risk.
The Hyundai Sonata and Kia Optima offer compelling features at lower price points. Resale speed is their primary disadvantage — the market for these vehicles in Dubai is smaller, and buyers take longer to find. For a buyer planning a fixed-term stay with a defined exit date, slower resale speed is a real financial risk.
The Safe Alternative — If the Camry Inspection Finds Problems
The most common scenario where a specific Camry unit fails inspection is not a dramatic mechanical failure. It is usually one of three situations: fuel trim data indicating carbon buildup that the seller is not disclosing, a transmission fluid that has not been changed in 40,000 to 50,000 km, or — less commonly — a GCC-spec certificate that cannot be confirmed through Tasjeel history.
If the unit you are inspecting has two or more of these conditions unresolved, the correct response is either a price reduction that covers the repair costs or a redirect to an alternative vehicle.
Alternative 1 — Toyota Corolla 2019 to 2020 2.0L: At 32,000 to 40,000 AED, the Corolla 2.0L uses a simpler engine without the direct injection carbon concern of the Camry 2.5L. The 2019 to 2020 Corolla uses a 1.8L hybrid or a 2.0L naturally aspirated engine with port injection on the base variant — cleaner intake valve behavior at equivalent mileage. For buyers who do not need the Camry’s cabin size and are primarily concerned with reliability and running costs, the Corolla is the lower-complexity choice.
Alternative 2 — Toyota Camry 2020 to 2021 (if budget allows): If the 2018 unit inspected does not meet standards and the budget can stretch to 50,000 to 58,000 AED, a 2020 or 2021 Camry with lower mileage and a shorter carbon accumulation history is worth considering. The A25A-FKS engine in later units benefits from updated software and slightly revised fuel trim mapping that reduces the carbon rate in early ownership.
Analytical Conclusion — Should You Buy a Used 2018 Toyota Camry in UAE?
After 20 months and 38,000 km, the answer from this ownership record is a qualified yes — with the same condition that applies to every used vehicle in the UAE market: the specific unit you are inspecting is the only unit that matters.
The 2018 Camry’s documented strengths in the UAE context are real: workshop availability, parts access, predictable resale, and an engine that responds well to correct maintenance. These are not marketing points — they are observable, measurable realities across the UAE used car market.
The documented weaknesses are also real: the direct injection carbon buildup is a maintenance item that many sellers do not disclose and many buyers do not know to ask about. The 260 AED Techstream inspection is the mechanism that identifies this before money changes hands.
In the documented case above: the inspection found no major mechanical issues, identified one upcoming maintenance item (rear shock absorbers) and one scheduled service item (carbon cleaning), and supported a 2,000 AED price negotiation. The total maintenance spend over 20 months was 10,740 AED on a vehicle with zero unscheduled breakdowns.
The net monthly transport cost after resale recovery: approximately 787 AED per month.
For a Dubai professional looking for a reliable mid-size sedan with a defined ownership timeline, that outcome is financially sound. The Camry delivered what it was documented to deliver — and the inspection made that predictability possible.

Owning a car in Dubai means eventually seeing a warning light appear on the dashboard — and knowing exactly what to do when it happens without getting overcharged. The next guide covers that step by step: Engine Warning Light On in UAE: Expat Step-by-Step Guide Without Getting Overcharged
FAQ — Used Toyota Camry 2018 Ownership in UAE
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