A 110–127V country
USA · Canada · Mexico · Japan · Taiwan
Your hair dryer is built for 110–127V. Yemen's 230V is roughly double — the device will overheat, smoke, and likely burn out within seconds.
A device's voltage rating is set when it's manufactured. The country it was built for is the question that decides everything else.
USA · Canada · Mexico · Japan · Taiwan
Your hair dryer is built for 110–127V. Yemen's 230V is roughly double — the device will overheat, smoke, and likely burn out within seconds.
UK · Europe · Australia · India · most of Asia & Africa
Your hair dryer runs on 220–240V, same as Yemen's 230V. The plug shape is the only thing to solve — grab a Type A adapter.
The mismatch isn't subtle. Voltage is the pressure pushing electrons through the device — too much, and components fail. Too little, and they don't do their job.
The heating element receives double the designed current. Within 5-10 seconds it glows cherry red, begins smoking, and can ignite surrounding plastic. This is one of the top causes of hotel electrical fires worldwide.
Look at the label near the power cord. If it says '120V only' or '120V 60Hz', it is single-voltage and CANNOT be used in 220-240V countries without a heavy-duty converter. If it says '100-240V 50/60Hz', it's dual-voltage and safe worldwide with just a plug adapter.
The shopping list — adapter for the plug shape, converter for voltage mismatches, or just a different device entirely.
Yemen uses Type A/D/G outlets. A universal adapter covers this and 150+ other countries.
Standard voltage converters are NOT rated for hair dryers. Hair dryers draw 1200-1800W — most travel converters max out at 200W. You need a heavy-duty converter ($40+) or simply buy a travel dryer ($15-25).
Works in every country, no converter needed. Usually lighter and cheaper than a proper voltage converter for high-wattage devices.
Every adapter, charger, and travel-safe device we've curated — in one place on Amazon.
The four partners we genuinely use ourselves — eSIM for landing-day data, VPN for the laptop on hotel WiFi, insurance for the gear, and a clean airport pickup.
Activate before you fly so you have data the second you land in Yemen. No SIM-card hunt at the airport, no roaming charges.
Hotel and café WiFi is open and shared. NordVPN encrypts everything — banking, streaming, work — so no one on the same network can snoop.
Your laptop and camera are worth more than the trip itself. Ekta covers electronics, medical, and trip cancellation for Yemen.
Skip the taxi-line negotiation in Yemen. An English-speaking driver waits at arrivals with your name on a sign — fixed price, no surprises.
The small details that save trips — drawn from real hair dryer owners traveling to Yemen.
A 120V hair dryer brought into Yemen's 230V will burn out instantly. Don't bring it.
Most Yemen hotels provide hair dryers — ask at reception if you don't see one.
If you must bring your own, buy a dual-voltage travel hair dryer ahead of time (look for "100–240V" on the label).
Standard travel converters cannot handle hair dryers (1200–1800W). They'll overload and trip out.
Beyond your device — the broader picture of what plugs into the wall in this country.
Quick answers, with the JSON-LD FAQ schema feeding the same content to Google.
The picture changes country to country. Pick another destination, or another device for this one.