Aesthetic clinic reception in the UAE preparing skincare product boxes for client delivery
Delivery guides · 2026-06-03 · Sharjah & Ajman

Delivery for Aesthetic Clinics in Sharjah & Ajman: Sending Skincare Products and Post-Care Kits Without a Driver on Payroll

A clinic does not need its own driver to offer same-day delivery. Hand a client's serum, supplement refill, or post-treatment kit to a pooled trip and it reaches their door in kids clothing or Ajman the same afternoon — from AED 14 a stop, paid only when you send something. No salary, no fuel, no idle van.

Most aesthetic and skin clinics in the northern emirates already sell more than the treatment itself. There's the prescribed-on-the-spot serum, the SPF the client forgot, the supplement course that runs out in four weeks, the aftercare kit for a peel or a laser session. The product revenue is real — but the delivery side is usually improvised: a receptionist messaging a freelance driver, a staff member dropping a parcel on the way home, or the client simply told to "come back and collect." Each of those quietly costs you a sale or a follow-up visit.

Here is a practical way to run clinic deliveries across Sharjah and Ajman that doesn't put anyone on payroll and doesn't depend on whoever happens to be free that afternoon.

Why clinics lose the second sale at the door

The UAE aesthetics and cosmetics market has been growing at roughly 8.3% a year (2023–2030), and the northern emirates are a big part of that expansion — Sharjah Healthcare City alone exists to license new clinics quickly, and Sharjah and Ajman are the fastest-growing secondary markets behind Dubai and Abu Dhabi. For scale, Dubai already counts around 400 aesthetic clinics and roughly 150 day-care centres; the northern emirates are following the same curve.

More clinics means more competition for the same client's repeat spend. The repeat spend — the refill, the maintenance product, the next kit — is where margin lives. And that's precisely the part that leaks when the only way to get a product to a client is "drive it yourself" or "wait until they're back in the chair." A client in Ajman who has to make a 40-minute round trip for a AED 120 serum often just doesn't.

What pooled delivery actually changes

Koriyar batches deliveries from many senders going the same way into one trip. Instead of paying a driver to make a dedicated run for your one parcel, your parcel rides along with others heading into the same Sharjah or Ajman corridor. That's why a stop costs about AED 14 instead of the AED 30–60 a dedicated same-day courier charges for a single drop.

From AED 14 / stop

Pooled, same-day, pay-per-send. No monthly minimum, no driver salary, no idle vehicle between appointments.

How it compares for a single product drop

OptionTypical costCut-off / speed
GlamBeaute same-dayAED 50Same-day to Sharjah
Swftbox same-dayAED 15Order by 12:00, same-day
General skincare courier (Dubai/Sharjah)AED 20Same/next-day
Same courier, Ajman & northern emiratesAED 25Often next-day
Koriyar pooledAED 14 / stopSame-day, batched

Figures for other providers are their published rates as of mid-2026 and vary by order value, time, and emirate. Koriyar's AED 14 is the pooled per-stop anchor; multi-stop and volume sending bring the effective rate lower.

A workflow that fits a busy front desk

The reason clinics avoid setting up "real" delivery is the admin. Koriyar runs on WhatsApp, so there's nothing new to learn at reception:

If your clinic also takes orders through Instagram or WhatsApp Story drops between appointments, the same flow handles those — the way it does for Instagram sellers coordinating deliveries across the UAE.

Sharjah and Ajman, specifically

Distance is the thing that makes clinics in the northern emirates hesitate. A client in Al Nahda, Al Majaz, or Ajman's Corniche district feels "far" when you're imagining your own staff making the trip. Pooled routing removes that, because the trip already exists — your parcel just joins it. Koriyar's Dubai–Sharjah–Ajman corridors are designed for exactly this kind of cross-emirate hop; the Dubai–Sharjah–Ajman coverage guide walks through which neighbourhoods are on the regular routes, and the Sharjah delivery service page covers same-day options inside the emirate.

One important limit: products, not prescriptions

To be clear about scope — this is for retail and non-regulated items: cosmetic products, over-the-counter skincare, supplements, and post-treatment aftercare kits. Prescription medicines and any temperature-controlled or controlled pharmaceuticals must move through a MOHAP-licensed pharmacy courier with the right cold-chain handling, and Koriyar does not replace that. For the serum, the SPF, the supplement refill, and the kit, though, pooled delivery is the cheaper, simpler route.

What it costs you to not do this

Run the math on a single missed refill. A client who skips a AED 150 product reorder because collecting it is inconvenient isn't a one-time AED 150 loss — it's the start of them drifting to a clinic that does deliver. Against that, a AED 14 stop to keep them buying from you is the cheapest retention you'll find. Clinics watching their unit economics tend to reach the same conclusion sellers in other categories do; the guide to reducing delivery costs for UAE sellers lays out where the savings actually come from, and the tracking software guide covers the visibility side.

Start sending clinic products across Sharjah and Ajman from AED 14 a stop — no driver, no monthly fee.

Create shipment

Set it up once and your front desk has a delivery option it can offer every client who buys a product on the way out — same day, across the northern emirates, billed weekly. Create your first shipment and see how a pooled stop compares to whatever you're doing now.