The anti-termite requirements for restaurants in Dubai are not covered by a single regulation — they sit across two separate Dubai Municipality frameworks that apply at different stages of a food business's life. Consequently, many F&B operators either over-comply (paying for treatments they don't need) or under-comply (missing a requirement they didn't know existed). This guide explains exactly when anti-termite treatment is compulsory, what the Dubai Food Code requires, and what your pest control documentation must contain to pass a DM food safety inspection.
The Short Answer — Yes, Under Two Separate DM Frameworks
Dubai restaurant operators face anti-termite obligations under two distinct regulatory tracks. Furthermore, both can apply simultaneously depending on when and how the restaurant premises were built or fitted out. Understanding which framework applies to your situation prevents both compliance gaps and unnecessary expenditure.
Framework 1 — Building Regulations for New Builds and Fit-Outs
Dubai Municipality's building regulations require pre-construction anti-termite soil treatment for all new commercial buildings. This obligation applies at the construction stage — specifically, before the concrete sub-floor slab is poured. A licensed DM pest control company applies an approved termiticide to the compacted sub-base, creating a chemical barrier in the soil that prevents subterranean termites from entering the structure.
Moreover, this requirement extends to restaurant fit-outs that involve structural modifications. If your fit-out includes raising or replacing the floor screed, creating new floor penetrations for drainage or services, or building new internal structural elements from the ground up, the anti-termite treatment window may be triggered. Additionally, Dubai Municipality issues a compliance certificate after treatment — this certificate is required as part of the building approval documentation before a fit-out completion sign-off is granted.
Therefore, any restaurant operator opening a new premises or undertaking a significant structural fit-out must confirm anti-termite treatment status with their contractor before the floor finish is laid. Once tiles, screeds, or floor systems are installed, this treatment window closes permanently.
Framework 2 — Dubai Food Code and Ongoing Operations
The second framework operates independently of construction. The Dubai Food Code — enforced by Dubai Municipality's Food Safety Department — requires all food premises, including restaurants, cafés, hotels, and catering operations, to maintain a signed pest control contract with a DM-licensed pest control company. This is an ongoing operational requirement, not a one-time construction obligation.
Furthermore, the Food Code's pest control requirement is comprehensive — it covers all pest categories, including termites. As a result, a restaurant's pest control contract must include termite inspection and management as part of its scope. A contract that covers only cockroaches, rodents, and flies but excludes termites does not satisfy the full Food Code pest control obligation, particularly for ground-floor or older-building premises where termite risk is elevated.
How the Two Requirements Overlap for Restaurant Owners
For a restaurant opening in a newly constructed building, both frameworks apply in sequence: the building regulation anti-termite treatment is completed during construction, and the Food Code pest control contract — which includes ongoing termite monitoring — is put in place before the food licence is issued. Consequently, the construction certificate and the operational pest control contract are two separate documents that must both be on file.
For an existing restaurant operating in an older building, the building regulation framework may not create any immediate action — if the building was constructed before DM made pre-slab treatment compulsory, a retrofit obligation does not automatically arise. However, the Food Code obligation to maintain a pest control contract covering termite management applies regardless of building age. Additionally, if signs of termite activity are discovered, a post-infestation treatment and re-certification process involves both frameworks simultaneously.
What the Dubai Food Code Actually Requires
Most restaurant operators know they need a pest control contract. However, the specific requirements within that contract — and the documentation that must accompany it — are less well understood. Three distinct requirements are particularly important for anti-termite compliance in a restaurant setting.
The Signed Pest Control Contract Requirement
The Dubai Food Code requires restaurants to hold a current, signed pest control contract with a DM-licensed pest control company. This contract must be in writing, must specify the premises covered, must list the pest categories included (which should explicitly include termites for ground-floor and older-building premises), and must confirm the treatment frequency and method.
Moreover, the contract must be renewed before it expires. An lapsed contract — even by a few days — constitutes a compliance failure at the point of inspection. Therefore, F&B operators should calendar their pest control contract renewal dates and treat the renewal process as non-negotiable, similar to a trade licence renewal.
FoodWatch Supplier Registration — The Often-Missed Requirement
Dubai Municipality's FoodWatch Supplier Management System is the digital platform through which food businesses manage their supplier relationships with DM. Critically, pest control companies providing services to food premises in Dubai must be registered as suppliers on the FoodWatch platform. A pest control company that holds a DM licence but is not registered on FoodWatch cannot be listed as your contracted supplier within the food safety management system.
Consequently, if your pest control provider is not FoodWatch-registered, your contract is technically non-compliant for food premises purposes — even if the company is DM-licensed and their treatments are of high quality. Furthermore, DM inspectors specifically check FoodWatch supplier registration status during food safety inspections. This is a compliance failure that has no visual indicator — the restaurant can appear perfectly clean and maintained, yet still fail inspection on this documentation point alone.
What DM Inspectors Check During a Food Safety Inspection
During a routine Dubai Municipality food safety inspection, pest control documentation is reviewed as a standard agenda item. Inspectors typically check: the signed pest control contract (current and not expired), treatment logs showing dates, technician names, and products used for each visit, evidence that the contractor is FoodWatch-registered, product safety data sheets for all chemicals applied on the premises, and the anti-termite treatment certificate if the building was newly constructed or recently fitted out.
Additionally, if any evidence of termite activity is observed during the inspection — mud tubes, frass, damaged timber — the inspector may issue an improvement notice requiring treatment and re-inspection within a specified timeframe. Moreover, the presence of an existing, compliant pest control contract and documentation does not automatically protect against an improvement notice if active infestation evidence is found. The contract demonstrates ongoing management intent; the absence of infestation evidence demonstrates operational effectiveness.
📋 Documentation Rule — Available on Request, Immediately
Dubai Municipality food safety inspectors expect pest control documentation to be available immediately on request — not located later in a filing system or emailed from a contractor. Every restaurant must maintain a physical or accessible digital compliance file on site at all times. This file must contain: the signed pest control contract, the most recent 12 months of treatment visit reports, product safety data sheets, and the FoodWatch supplier registration confirmation for your pest control provider. Missing any one of these documents at the time of inspection results in a compliance finding regardless of whether the premises are pest-free.
A complete pest control compliance file — contract, treatment logs, product data sheets, and FoodWatch registration confirmation — must be available immediately on request during any DM food safety inspection.