
Buying a real ticket before visa approval puts your money at risk. If your visa is denied or delayed, you may face non-refundable losses or costly change fees. A verified flight reservation with a live PNR satisfies the same embassy requirement at a fraction of the cost.
Applying for a visa means juggling a lot at once. Documents, appointments, forms, bank statements. And at some point, almost every applicant hits the same question: do I need to buy a flight ticket before I apply?
The short answer is no. The longer answer is that buying one anyway is one of the most common and easily avoidable financial mistakes visa applicants make.
Embassies and consulates want to see that you have a real, concrete travel plan. For most visa categories, including Schengen, US, UK, and Canadian visas, that means submitting a flight itinerary that shows your intended route and travel dates.
What they do not ask for is proof of payment. The requirement is a booking reference, not a payment receipt.
A dummy ticket satisfies this in full. It is a verified reservation with a valid PNR, which is a real entry in the airline's system that the visa officer can look up directly on the airline's website. For a deeper look at how PNRs work and what officers check, see our guide to PNR codes and how visa officers verify them.
This is where a lot of applicants run into trouble. There are three common scenarios that end up costing more than expected.
Your visa gets denied. If you bought a non-refundable ticket, that money is gone. Most budget fares explicitly exclude refunds, and there is no appeal process with the airline. Depending on your route, that could be anywhere from a few hundred to several thousand dirhams lost on a trip you never took.
Your visa is approved but delayed. Processing times vary, and delays happen more often than people expect. Schengen visas alone can take anywhere from 15 to 45 calendar days, sometimes longer in peak season. If your approval comes in later than you planned, your original travel dates may no longer work. You are then looking at paying change fees, which on many airlines can cost almost as much as a new ticket. For more on this, see our guide on how long a Schengen visa takes to process from Dubai.
Your plans change after approval. Visa applications sometimes lead to adjusted itineraries. If your dates or destination shift after you get approved, a paid ticket becomes a problem to deal with rather than an asset.
Any one of these situations can turn an unnecessary purchase into a real financial loss.
Some applicants try to get around this by booking a fully refundable ticket. It sounds like a safe middle ground, but flexible fares cost significantly more, often two to three times the price of a standard economy ticket.
You are paying a large premium to protect against a risk that a dummy ticket handles at a fraction of the cost. The maths rarely works in your favour. A standard economy fare from Dubai to a European city in 2026 sits anywhere from AED 1,500 to AED 4,000. The same route as a flexible fare can run AED 4,000 to AED 10,000 or more. A dummy ticket replaces both for a small one-time fee.
Dummy Ticket 365 has a useful breakdown on whether you should buy a flight ticket before visa approval if you want a fuller breakdown of the decision.
A dummy ticket is a verified flight reservation that is created in the airline's real reservation system. It is not a fake document or a template. It carries a live PNR code that anyone can check directly on the airline's website using the Manage Booking tool.
It shows your name, your route, and your travel dates in exactly the same format as any paid ticket. From the embassy's perspective, it satisfies the flight itinerary requirement the same way a paid booking does. The only difference is that you are paying for the reservation itself, not the full cost of the flight.
If your visa is denied, you have not lost the price of a ticket. If your dates change, there is nothing expensive to cancel or rebook. You simply get your actual ticket once everything is confirmed.
One important note: a dummy ticket cannot be used to board a flight. It is a reservation, not a paid e-ticket, and is not valid at airport check-in. Dummy Ticket 365's guide on whether you can use a dummy ticket at airport check-in explains this distinction clearly.
Some applicants are tempted to create a fake flight document themselves, or buy one from cheap services that issue fabricated PNRs. This is a serious mistake. Embassies have entire procedures for detecting fake reservations, and the consequences go well beyond a simple visa refusal.
A flagged fraudulent document can be recorded against you across multiple countries' visa systems, affecting future applications for years. The Dummy Ticket 365 guide on what happens if you submit a fake flight ticket walks through the full chain of consequences. The fix is simple: only use reservations from providers that issue genuine, GDS-backed PNRs.
Most people who buy a ticket before their visa is approved do it for one of two reasons.
They are not sure what the embassy actually requires, and buying a ticket feels like the safe option. Or they have seen the requirement listed as a "flight itinerary" and assumed that means a paid booking.
Neither assumption is correct. Embassies require evidence of a travel plan, not evidence of a financial commitment to a specific flight. A dummy ticket provides exactly that evidence.
It is also worth knowing that some embassies, particularly larger consulates, verify reservations through Global Distribution Systems rather than just public airline websites. Cheap or fake reservations fail these checks. Dummy Ticket 365 has a useful piece on whether embassies verify flight reservations through GDS that covers how the verification works in practice.
Buy your flight once your visa is in your hands. At that point, you know your approval is confirmed, your travel dates are set, and you can take your time finding the best available fare.
There is no benefit to buying earlier. There is only risk.
Until your visa is approved, a verified flight reservation from Dummy Ticket 365 is the practical, lower-risk way to get through your application without putting your money on the line. Dummy Ticket 365 also issues hotel reservations by email, so you do not need to lock in non-refundable hotel bookings either.
The flight reservation is one piece of a wider application. Travel insurance, accommodation proof, bank statements, and other supporting documents all need to be in order. Our Schengen visa documents checklist for UAE residents covers the full list of what UAE applicants need, and the complete 2026 Schengen visa guide walks through the entire process step by step. For an overview of common pitfalls, our guide on the top 10 reasons Schengen visas get rejected is worth a read.
If you would rather hand the whole application over to someone who handles it daily, Travl's Schengen visa assistance covers documentation, appointment booking, and review end to end. The Travl FAQ also covers common queries on dummy tickets, PNR codes, and embassy requirements.