The low-latitude coastal sediments of the United Arab Emirates accumulate adjacent to the gently sloping ramp-like bathymetry of the southern Arabian Gulf. Here, an extensive arid coastline system is expressed by a variety of different shallow carbonate and evaporite depositional settings. Off the western Abu Dhabi mainland coast, flanking the north and seaward side of the Khor Al Bazam lagoon, is an offshore bank. This bank is progressively accumulating carbonate sand and mud, extending an area of shoals and channels, coral banks, tidal deltas, and nearshore coastal terraces that prograde outwards from the offshore bank. South of the bank, where wave energy is minimal, cyanobacterial mats colonize protected intertidal sediments, building these seaward, and binding sediment washed onto them.Ooids, grapestones, pellets, lime mud and bioclastic grains accumulate along the western Abu Dhabi coast. The distribution and characteristics of individual grains types is controlled largely by their hydrodynamic setting, with interactions between wave and current action, sediment mobility, burial rate and cementation. Aragonite mud is confined mainly to the sheltered areas; the source of lime mud is the abundant blooms or clouds of "whiting" formed by carbonate precipitation directly from seawater. Soft and cemented aragonitic pellets accumulate in sheltered lagoons and shallow shelves with moderate exposure to wind and waves. High salinities in evaporative water bodies likely promote cementation in lagoons and ooid formation on tidal deltas. The surfaces of many carbonate grains are altered by cyanobacteria. This micritization forms envelopes enclosing grains that matches those found in ancient carbonates, and represents a useful tool that can be used as evidence of lower rates of accumulation and longer periods of exposure on the shallow seafloor.