Industrial Area 13, Sharjah & Al Saqr Business Tower, Dubai, UAE
Restaurant Occupational Health & Safety in the UAE: What Every Employer Must Know
Restaurant Occupational Health & Safety in the UAE: What Every Employer Must Know

What Does UAE Law Actually Require from a Restaurant Employer on Worker Safety?

Under Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 and its implementing Cabinet Resolution No. 33 of 2022, every UAE restaurant employer must provide a safe working environment, supply appropriate personal protective equipment, conduct periodic health evaluations, and report any workplace injury or death to the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE) within 48 hours. This is distinct from food safety law: restaurant health and safety UAE compliance covers your workers, not your food product.

Many UAE restaurant operators conflate food hygiene requirements with occupational health and safety. They are parallel frameworks enforced by different authorities. The food safety and PIC training rules protect your customers; the rules in this guide protect your team.

The primary federal instruments are:

  • Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 — the Labour Law, covering employer OSH obligations.
  • Cabinet Resolution No. 33 of 2022 — implementing regulations on work injury compensation and incident reporting.
  • Ministerial Resolution No. 44 of 2022 — occupational health, safety, and labour accommodation standards for establishments with 50 or more workers.
  • Cabinet Resolution No. 13 of 2009 and Ministerial Decree No. 212 of 2014 — general standards for collective labour housing.

In Abu Dhabi, the OSHAD System Framework (OSHAD-SF) adds an emirate-level layer. Dubai Municipality operates its own HSEMS technical guidelines. Sharjah falls under federal MOHRE with emirate Civil Defence requirements alongside.

Kitchen-Specific Hazards: What You Are Legally Required to Control

A commercial restaurant kitchen is classified as a high-hazard environment. UAE law requires employers to identify and eliminate or control all foreseeable occupational risks — and a kitchen presents a concentrated set of them that must be formally assessed, not simply acknowledged.

Burns and Scalds

Hot surfaces, steam, boiling water, deep-fry oils exceeding 180°C, and commercial ovens all constitute burn hazards. Employers must implement engineering controls (guarding, interlocks on fryers), safe systems of work for draining hot oil, and supply heat-resistant gloves, appropriate footwear, and long-sleeve protective clothing rated for kitchen environments. Staff induction must cover burn first-aid response before the employee begins work near cooking equipment.

Cuts and Lacerations

Knife work, mandolines, meat slicers, and broken glassware are the leading causes of laceration injuries in F&B environments. The employer duty extends to: maintaining blades in safe, sharp condition (a dull blade requires more force and is more likely to slip), providing cut-resistant gloves for high-risk tasks, and ensuring safe storage — blade guards, magnetic strips, or blade boxes — so kitchen workers never reach blindly for a knife.

Slips, Trips, and Falls

Wet and greasy floors are the single most common cause of injury in UAE hospitality. Employers must supply slip-resistant footwear as PPE, install anti-slip flooring in wet zones, maintain a spill response protocol with signage, and ensure drainage channels and floor gratings are kept clear. Mat placement, floor grading toward drains, and adequate lighting in walk-in freezers are engineering-level controls the employer must fund and maintain.

Manual Handling and Musculoskeletal Risk

Bulk ingredient deliveries, moving gas cylinders, stacking equipment, and repetitive preparation tasks create musculoskeletal injury risk. UAE law requires employers to assess manual handling tasks, provide mechanical aids where practical (trolleys, pallet jacks), and train staff in safe lifting technique. This is not optional guidance — it is part of the hazard elimination duty under Federal Decree-Law 33/2021.

Chemicals and Hazardous Substances

Commercial cleaning agents, sanitisers, descalers, oven degreasers, and pest-control products used in restaurants can cause chemical burns, respiratory damage, and eye injuries. While the UAE does not use the UK COSHH acronym, the underlying principle — assess, substitute, control, protect — is embedded in UAE OSH obligations. Employers must maintain a register of all hazardous chemicals used on-site, store them correctly (segregated, labelled, ventilated), ensure staff are trained before handling, and supply appropriate PPE including chemical-resistant gloves, eye protection, and aprons. Safety Data Sheets (SDS/MSDS) must be accessible in the language of the workforce.

Heat Stress in Kitchen Environments

The indoor kitchen environment — high ambient temperatures, proximity to ovens and grills, and UAE’s summer climate — creates a genuine heat stress risk for your indoor kitchen workers. Even though MOHRE’s midday break rule (see below) targets outdoor work, employers have a general duty to prevent heat-related illness for all workers. Adequate ventilation, cooling systems, scheduled water breaks, and acclimatisation periods for new staff are all part of that duty. The UAE labour law rules for restaurant staff cover the broader welfare framework your team is entitled to.

The Midday Break Rule: Does It Apply to Your Restaurant?

The UAE midday break ban prohibits outdoor work under direct sunlight from 12:30 PM to 3:00 PM, from 15 June to 15 September each year. In 2026 — the 22nd year of the initiative — MOHRE confirmed the same window remains in force with AED 5,000 fines per affected employee for non-compliance, capped at AED 50,000 for repeat violations.

The rule applies to any worker performing work in open spaces under direct sunlight. For restaurants, the practical impact covers:

  • Outdoor seating and terrace service staff — waitstaff, runners, and cleaners operating in open-air dining areas during the restricted window must be rotated indoors or the outdoor operation paused.
  • Delivery riders — if your restaurant employs its own delivery staff operating outdoors, they fall squarely within scope.
  • Loading bay and goods-receipt staff — workers signing off deliveries or moving goods in uncovered areas are covered.
  • Maintenance workers — staff carrying out external maintenance such as signage, HVAC units, or car park areas during peak hours.

Indoor kitchen and dining room staff are not directly subject to the midday ban, but remain subject to the employer’s general heat stress duty described above. Employers must also ensure that during the midday break period, outdoor workers have access to shaded rest areas, sufficient drinking water, electrolyte supplements, and first-aid equipment at the worksite.

Exemptions exist for technical activities that cannot be interrupted for safety reasons — including emergency repairs to essential services — but these are narrowly construed and a restaurant outdoor terrace service operation does not qualify.

First Aid: Ratios, Kits, and Trained First-Aiders

UAE law requires every employer to maintain adequate first-aid provision at every worksite for every shift. Under OSHAD-SF guidelines (which set the benchmark applied federally in practice), the minimum ratio is at least one trained first-aider per worksite per shift where fewer than 50 workers are present, and at least one trained first-aider per 50 workers where the workforce exceeds that threshold.

For a typical UAE restaurant of 20–40 staff across a shift, this means a minimum of one certified first-aider on duty at all times the restaurant is open — including split shifts and late-night trading hours. The first-aider must hold a valid, accredited first-aid certificate (Emergency First Response or equivalent approved by the relevant emirate health authority).

First-aid kits must be maintained and stocked appropriately for the kitchen environment. At minimum, a commercial kitchen kit should contain: sterile dressings and bandages in multiple sizes, burn dressings and burn gel, eye wash solution, disposable gloves, adhesive wound closures, scissors and tweezers, and an incident log. Kits must be clearly signed, accessible to all staff, and inspected regularly with contents replenished promptly.

For larger restaurant operations (100 or more workers), a qualified Occupational Health and Safety Officer must be appointed. Establishments in the industrial and construction sectors hit this threshold at 100 workers; restaurant employers should confirm with MOHRE whether their operation structure triggers this requirement.

PPE: What Your Restaurant Must Provide — and Pay For

Under Federal Decree-Law 33/2021, the cost of all required personal protective equipment falls entirely on the employer. Workers cannot be required to purchase their own PPE as a condition of employment. A restaurant employer’s PPE provision must be mapped to the actual hazards identified in the workplace risk assessment. Typical mandatory PPE for UAE restaurant and kitchen workers includes:

Role / Hazard Required PPE
All kitchen staff Slip-resistant, closed-toe safety footwear; chef whites or equivalent protective clothing
Knife work / butchery Cut-resistant gloves (minimum EN 388 level 3 or equivalent)
Hot oil / deep frying Heat-resistant oven gloves; long protective sleeves
Chemical handling (cleaning) Chemical-resistant gloves; eye protection; waterproof apron
Dishwashing / wet areas Rubber gloves; slip-resistant footwear; waterproof apron
Outdoor service (sun exposure) Sun-protective clothing; adequate headwear; hydration provision

PPE is a last resort in the hierarchy of control — it supplements, but does not replace, engineering controls and safe systems of work. Providing gloves does not remove the duty to maintain sharp knives; providing burns PPE does not remove the duty to guard hot surfaces where practicable.

Incident Reporting: The 48-Hour Rule and Injury Register

When a work-related injury or death occurs in your restaurant, Federal Decree-Law 33/2021 and Cabinet Resolution 33 of 2022 impose a strict 48-hour notification window to MOHRE. The notification must include the worker’s full name, age, nationality, job title, and address, a description of the incident and its circumstances, and details of medical treatment or first-aid arrangements made.

Reporting can be made via the MOHRE website, mobile application, or business service centres. Failure to report within 48 hours carries a significant consequence: the employer may lose the right to dispute liability and faces enhanced compensation obligations.

Beyond the incident notification, UAE law requires employers to:

  • Maintain an injury register and retain injury records for a minimum of five years.
  • Submit annual injury statistics to MOHRE.
  • Fund all medical treatment for the injured worker.
  • Pay the injured worker full wages during any incapacity period.
  • Pay compensation within 10 working days of the medical report determining the disability percentage.

Work injury compensation scales are set by Cabinet Decision No. 33 of 2022. In the event of a worker’s death, compensation is calculated at 24 months of basic wage, with a minimum of AED 18,000 and a maximum of AED 200,000. For permanent full disability, the same scale applies; partial disability is calculated using percentage tables referenced in the Cabinet Decision.

Staff Accommodation: The OHS Dimension

Restaurant groups that provide accommodation for workers — which is mandatory for establishments with 50 or more workers each earning below AED 1,500 per month, under Ministerial Resolution No. 44 of 2022 — face additional OHS obligations within that accommodation.

Cabinet Resolution No. 13 of 2009 and Ministerial Decree No. 212 of 2014 set the General Standards for Collective Labour Housing. For OHS purposes, key standards include:

  • A first-aid room with a nurse is required within each housing unit, equipped with appropriate furniture, tools, and a medicine box.
  • A quarantine room must be available and equipped — relevant in the context of communicable illness management in a food service workforce.
  • Dining areas within accommodation must meet space standards of 1.4 square metres per person, and must be kept clean at all times.
  • Establishments must register in MOHRE’s Labour Accommodation System and maintain up-to-date records.

Poor accommodation conditions have been a focus of MOHRE enforcement activity. Substandard housing — overcrowding, inadequate sanitation, insufficient ventilation — is treated as an OHS violation, not merely a welfare concern, and can result in fines, stop-work orders, and establishment blacklisting.

How OHS Sits Alongside Food Safety and Civil Defence

UAE restaurant compliance involves three parallel regulatory tracks, each enforced by a different authority. Understanding which agency is responsible for what prevents gaps — and prevents the common error of assuming one approval covers all three.

Track Governing Authority Primary Focus
Food safety / hygiene Dubai Municipality / Sharjah Municipality / Abu Dhabi Agriculture & Food Safety Authority HACCP, food handler permits, kitchen hygiene standards, PIC designation
Occupational health & safety MOHRE (federal); OSHAD-SF (Abu Dhabi) Worker safety, PPE, incident reporting, first aid, midday break, accommodation
Fire safety Civil Defence (emirate-level: DCD in Dubai, Abu Dhabi CD, Sharjah CD) Fire suppression systems, evacuation plans, extinguisher maintenance, fire warden training

Fire safety and OHS interact directly: Civil Defence requires fire wardens and wet-chemical suppression systems over cooking equipment, both of which also reduce the occupational hazard of grease fires injuring staff. First-aid provision must be positioned consistently with the Civil Defence evacuation plan. See the related guide on restaurant fire safety requirements in the UAE for the Civil Defence compliance layer.

Running an integrated audit across all three tracks simultaneously is more efficient and closes the gaps that sequential approvals miss. Our restaurant compliance audit service covers food safety, OHS, and Civil Defence in a single engagement. For operators in setup, the F&B business setup package builds compliance from day one. View the full scope on our essential services page.

Building Your OHS Compliance System: A Practical Checklist

Compliance is an ongoing management system, not a single document. The following represents the minimum a UAE restaurant operator should maintain:

  • Written risk assessment covering all kitchen and operational hazards, reviewed annually and after any significant incident.
  • PPE inventory and issue log — what is provided, to whom, and when replaced.
  • First-aider register with certificate expiry dates; one trained first-aider on every shift.
  • Incident register with entries for every near-miss and injury; retained for five years.
  • MOHRE notification protocol — assign a responsible person before an incident occurs, not after.
  • Outdoor work roster plan covering June 15–September 15, eliminating direct-sunlight work 12:30 PM–3:00 PM.
  • Chemical register and SDS file for every hazardous substance, in the working language of staff.
  • Staff safety induction records for every employee before they begin work.

If your business provides accommodation, add Labour Accommodation System registration to this list. The restaurant staff training resources available through Make My Restaurant support the induction and competency requirements your OHS system depends on.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the UAE midday break rule apply to indoor restaurant kitchen workers?

No. The MOHRE midday break ban (12:30 PM–3:00 PM, June 15–September 15) covers outdoor work under direct sunlight only. Indoor kitchen staff are not subject to the ban, but employers still have a general duty to manage heat stress in high-temperature kitchen environments through adequate ventilation, water breaks, and acclimatisation protocols.

How many trained first-aiders does a UAE restaurant legally need?

The OSHAD-SF benchmark requires at least one certified first-aider per worksite per shift for operations with fewer than 50 workers, and one per every 50 workers above that threshold. For a typical single-outlet restaurant, this means one qualified first-aider on duty at all times the restaurant is operating.

What happens if we fail to report a work injury to MOHRE within 48 hours?

Under Federal Decree-Law 33/2021 and Cabinet Resolution 33 of 2022, failure to notify MOHRE within 48 hours can forfeit the employer’s right to dispute liability, result in enhanced compensation obligations, and attract regulatory fines. The 48-hour window begins from the moment the incident occurs, not from when it is discovered.

Who pays for PPE in a UAE restaurant — the employer or the worker?

The employer bears the full cost of all required PPE under UAE labour law. Workers cannot be asked to purchase their own protective footwear, gloves, or other required equipment as a condition of employment. Deducting PPE costs from wages is unlawful.

Is a restaurant in Dubai subject to different OHS rules than one in Sharjah?

The federal framework under Federal Decree-Law 33/2021 applies across all emirates. Abu Dhabi additionally enforces the OSHAD-SF framework. Dubai Municipality adds HSEMS technical guidelines. In Sharjah, federal MOHRE rules apply directly alongside Sharjah Civil Defence requirements. The core employer duties — risk assessment, PPE, first aid, incident reporting — are consistent federally; emirate-level layers add procedural detail and specific inspectorate authority.

Related guide: This article is part of our complete restaurant compliance and food safety guide.

Make My Restaurant

Make My Restaurant is a UAE-based turnkey restaurant-services company — design, fit-out, MEP, compliance, cleaning and back-office support across all seven emirates.

Post a comment

Your email address will not be published.

×

Loading...