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Dubai Municipality Restaurant Inspection Checklist: How to Pass

Dubai Municipality food inspectors can walk through your restaurant door on any given Tuesday without advance notice. For restaurant owners and managers across the UAE, that reality makes the Dubai Municipality restaurant inspection checklist one of the most important operational documents you can master. A strong inspection result protects your trade licence, your reputation, and ultimately your business. A poor grade—D or below—can trigger permit withdrawal, forced closure, and legal action under the Dubai Food Code and UAE Federal Law No. 10 of 2015 on Food Safety.

This guide breaks down exactly what DM inspectors evaluate, how the grading system works, the most common reasons restaurants fail, and the practical steps to stay inspection-ready 365 days a year. If you need hands-on support, our restaurant compliance audit service covers every item on this checklist.

How Dubai Municipality Restaurant Inspections Work

Dubai Municipality’s Food Safety Department conducts routine, unannounced inspections of all licensed food establishments—restaurants, cafeterias, catering companies, food manufacturers, and cloud kitchens—under the Dubai Food Code. Inspections can also be triggered by customer complaints filed through the DM portal or DMChecked app. There are approximately 14,000 food establishments in Dubai subject to this regime.

The inspection process is prevention-focused, emphasising proactive management through documentation, traceability, staff training, and daily monitoring. Inspectors use a structured scoring system that evaluates facility conditions, food handling practices, hygiene, documentation, and pest management. The designated Person in Charge (PIC) is expected to be present and must demonstrate active oversight of all compliance activities. Results are logged digitally through the DMChecked platform (which replaced the earlier FoodWatch Connect system) and the grade is publicly visible.

The Dubai Municipality Restaurant Inspection Checklist

The full Dubai Municipality restaurant inspection checklist spans eight major domains. Use this as your internal pre-audit reference before every inspection cycle.

1. Food Storage and Temperature Control

  • Refrigerators maintained at or below 4–5°C at all times (verified by calibrated probes)
  • Freezers at −18°C or colder; frozen food must not show signs of thaw-refreeze
  • Hot-holding equipment keeps cooked food above 63°C
  • Raw meat, poultry, and seafood stored separately from and below ready-to-eat foods
  • All food items covered, labelled, and date-stamped; no expired stock on premises
  • Allergen labelling in Arabic where required by UAE regulations
  • Dry-store items stored off the floor (minimum 150 mm clearance) in sealed containers
  • Temperature logs maintained daily and available for inspector review
  • FIFO (first in, first out) rotation demonstrated in all storage areas

2. Personal Hygiene and Health Cards

  • All food handlers hold a valid Dubai Municipality occupational health card—no exceptions
  • Health cards must be current; expired cards are a direct violation and a common failure point
  • Staff have completed basic food hygiene training covering handwashing, temperature control, and cross-contamination prevention
  • Handwash basins are separate from food-prep sinks, positioned within food handling zones, and fitted with elbow-, foot-, or sensor-operated taps
  • Liquid soap, disposable towels, and hand sanitiser stocked at all wash stations
  • Uniform, hair covering, and PPE (gloves where required) worn correctly at all times
  • Staff with signs of illness or skin infections are excluded from food contact duties
  • No eating, drinking, or smoking in food preparation or storage areas

3. Pest Control

  • A DM-licensed pest control contractor is engaged—DIY treatments do not meet compliance, even with approved products
  • The contractor is registered and digitally linked in the DMChecked platform under your establishment
  • Kitchen and bin room areas receive a minimum of monthly treatment
  • Original treatment certificates are kept on-site, including the technician’s full name, DM authorisation card number, chemicals used (active ingredient, brand name, concentration, volume), treatment method, and pest activity notes
  • A pest activity log documents all sightings between visits with date, location, and follow-up actions taken
  • No evidence of live pests, droppings, nesting, or structural entry points (gaps in walls, drain covers missing)
  • UV insect killers are installed away from food prep surfaces and cleaned regularly

Our dedicated restaurant pest control service is DM-registered and provides full documentation for your inspection file.

4. Cleaning and Sanitation

  • Written cleaning schedules in place for all areas: kitchen, storage, staff areas, front of house, waste zones
  • Only DM-approved disinfectants and cleaning chemicals are used; product list available for inspection
  • High-touch and high-risk surfaces (cutting boards, prep tables, handles) disinfected at regular intervals during service
  • Colour-coded equipment (boards, cloths, utensils) segregates raw and ready-to-eat food contact surfaces
  • Floor surfaces are clean, non-slip, crack-free, and free from standing water
  • Curved coving at floor-to-wall junctions (no 90-degree angles where bacteria accumulate)
  • Chemicals stored separately from food, correctly labelled, and in original or clearly marked secondary containers
  • Dishwashing and sanitising processes verified (correct temperatures, dilution ratios logged)

5. Grease Trap and Waste Management

  • Grease traps are installed on all cooking area drainage lines—mandatory under DM requirements
  • Grease traps are serviced by a licensed contractor and cleaning records maintained on-site
  • Waste bins have tight-fitting lids and are lined; separate bins for food waste, general waste, and recyclables
  • Waste storage area is clean, ventilated, and inaccessible to pests
  • Food waste is removed from the kitchen at regular intervals during service—not allowed to accumulate at prep stations

Blocked or overflowing grease traps are one of the fastest routes to a compliance notice. Book a scheduled grease trap cleaning to avoid this entirely.

6. Kitchen Exhaust and Hood Cleanliness

  • Exhaust hood and canopy above cooking equipment are clean and free from grease build-up
  • Duct system, filters, and fans are cleaned on a documented schedule by a qualified contractor
  • For heavy-grease cooking operations, electrostatic precipitators and carbon filters are required
  • Chimney exhaust must extend at least 2 metres above the nearest building structure
  • Negative kitchen pressure is maintained to prevent smoke and odour escape into dining areas
  • Cleaning records (dates, contractor details, before/after photos) retained for inspector review

Grease-laden ducts are a fire hazard and a recurring DM inspection failure. Schedule professional kitchen hood cleaning at intervals appropriate to your cooking volume.

7. Person in Charge (PIC) Presence and Documentation

  • A designated PIC (Person in Charge) is on-site during all operating hours
  • The PIC holds a valid food safety management qualification recognised by DM
  • HACCP or FSMS (Food Safety Management System) documentation is current, accessible, and reflects actual operations
  • Supplier verification records are maintained: only approved suppliers are used, and delivery records are logged
  • Water quality test certificates from a certified lab are on file
  • Equipment calibration records (thermometers, probes) are maintained
  • Staff training records, health card copies, and incident reports are available for immediate review
  • Food Safety Certificate (FSC) for the establishment is current—annual renewal is required

8. Food Labelling and Expiry Management

  • All packaged and portioned foods are labelled with product name, date of preparation, use-by date, and allergen information
  • No food items past their use-by or best-before date are stored or used—inspectors check storage areas, fridges, and prep benches
  • Halal certification is displayed and current where applicable
  • Bulk ingredients decanted into secondary containers are labelled with original product name and opening/expiry date
  • Delivery records show traceability from approved suppliers to in-house use

How the DM Restaurant Grading System Works

The Dubai Municipality grading system assigns a letter grade (A through F) to every food establishment following each inspection. Grades A, B, and C indicate passing compliance at different levels of performance, while D and F indicate failing grades that trigger escalating enforcement responses. An “A” grade is publicly recognised and is a prerequisite for entry into the DM Food Elite programme, which awards establishments demonstrating exceptional standards in food safety, nutrition, sustainability, and social responsibility.

Grades are publicly visible through the DMChecked platform, which means your inspection result is accessible to the customers you are trying to attract. Establishments that receive a D or F grade face consequences including mandatory re-inspection, fines, permit suspension, or closure. Specific score thresholds for each grade are not published in granular form by DM, but the categories of non-compliance that drive grades down are clearly documented in the Dubai Food Code.

If you want an independent baseline before DM visits, our restaurant compliance audit uses the same framework inspectors follow.

Top Reasons Restaurants Fail Dubai Municipality Inspections

Understanding why establishments fail is as valuable as knowing the checklist itself. Across the most commonly cited DM inspection violations, these are the recurring patterns:

  • Expired or missing health cards: A single staff member without a valid occupational health card is an immediate violation. With high staff turnover in the UAE F&B sector, health card expiry is consistently the most common paperwork failure.
  • Temperature danger zone violations: Food left between 5°C and 63°C for extended periods creates bacterial growth risk. This includes inadequate cold-holding in buffet service, improper thawing, and malfunctioning refrigeration without corrective action documented.
  • Inadequate or undocumented cleaning: Cleaning schedules that exist on paper but are not followed, unapproved chemicals, and surfaces with visible grease or residue all trigger violations.
  • Pest control documentation gaps: Even a single missing treatment certificate—or a contractor not linked in DMChecked—can trigger compliance action, regardless of whether pest activity is present.
  • Grease trap and hood neglect: Visible grease accumulation in exhaust ducts and unserviced grease traps are straightforward to verify and among the most penalised infrastructure failures.
  • Missing or outdated documentation: HACCP records not reflecting current operations, lapsed Food Safety Certificates, and absent supplier verification records all reduce your inspection score significantly.
  • Unauthorised or unverified suppliers: Using suppliers not registered with DM or lacking proper documentation creates a traceability gap that inspectors flag as a food safety risk.
  • Cross-contamination risk: Shared equipment between raw and ready-to-eat food, missing colour-coding, and improper storage stacking are consistent violation areas.

How to Stay Inspection-Ready Year Round

The restaurants that consistently achieve A grades do not prepare for inspections—they operate as if an inspection is always in progress. Here is a practical system to maintain that standard:

  • Weekly self-audits: Use the DM checklist framework to conduct internal walkthroughs every week. Assign a senior staff member or manager to complete and sign off the audit record.
  • Health card tracking: Maintain a spreadsheet of every staff member’s health card expiry date with automated reminders at 60 and 30 days before expiry.
  • Temperature log discipline: Temperature checks must be recorded at set intervals throughout each shift—not filled in retrospectively. Use calibrated probes and log the actual probe reading, not an estimate.
  • Scheduled professional services: Book grease trap cleaning, hood cleaning, and pest control on recurring schedules tied to your cooking volume, not only when problems appear. Keep all service certificates in a single compliance binder.
  • Supplier management: Review your approved supplier list quarterly. Ensure all suppliers remain DM-registered and that delivery records are complete.
  • Staff training cadence: Run refresher food safety training at least once per year, and onboard new staff with a formal hygiene induction before they enter the kitchen.
  • DMChecked monitoring: Register all contractors (pest control, cleaning) in the DMChecked platform promptly. Any gap in contractor linkage shows up on your profile even if the physical work is being done.

For operators who want a structured programme built around their specific operation, our restaurant food safety training service delivers DM-aligned staff training across all 7 emirates.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often does Dubai Municipality inspect restaurants?

Dubai Municipality does not publish a fixed inspection frequency. Routine inspections occur throughout the year and are unannounced. Complaint-triggered inspections can happen at any time. High-risk or previously non-compliant establishments may be inspected more frequently. The only safe assumption is that you should be audit-ready every day you are open.

What happens if a restaurant fails a DM inspection?

A failing grade (D or F) triggers escalating enforcement: the establishment receives a formal notice, must take corrective action within a defined timeframe, and faces a re-inspection. Depending on the severity of the violation—particularly active pest infestations, unsafe food, or adulterated products—DM can issue immediate closure orders, suspend or revoke the food permit, and initiate legal proceedings under UAE Federal Law No. 10 of 2015 on Food Safety.

Is a food safety management system (FSMS/HACCP) mandatory for all Dubai restaurants?

Yes. The Dubai Food Code requires all food establishments to operate a documented food safety management system. For most restaurants, this is a HACCP-based system. The FSMS must reflect your actual operation, be kept current, and be available for inspector review. A generic template that does not match your menu or workflow will not satisfy the requirement.

Get Expert Help Before the Inspector Arrives

Passing a Dubai Municipality restaurant inspection is not about luck—it is the result of systems, documentation, and trained staff working together consistently. Make My Restaurant supports restaurants across all 7 emirates with the full range of compliance services: from pre-audit walkthroughs and staff training to scheduled hood cleaning, grease trap maintenance, and pest management.

Call us on +971 58 570 7110 or visit our contact page to speak with a compliance consultant about your next inspection.

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Compliance
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