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UAE Restaurant Kitchen Exhaust & Ventilation Requirements: A Compliance Guide

Why Kitchen Exhaust and Ventilation Compliance Matters in the UAE

Running a commercial kitchen in the UAE without a properly engineered exhaust and ventilation system is a genuine safety hazard. Heat, grease-laden vapour, smoke, and airborne contaminants accumulate rapidly in an enclosed cooking environment, creating conditions for duct fires, staff heat stress, and food contamination.

Before a restaurant can obtain its operational licence, the exhaust and ventilation design must be approved by both the relevant municipal authority and Civil Defence. Non-compliant systems cause delayed openings, costly retrofits, or fines and closure in operating kitchens. Getting it right at fit-out stage is always the cheaper path.

Core Components of a Compliant Kitchen Exhaust System

A commercial kitchen ventilation system is an integrated assembly — every component must be designed together. Here is what UAE authorities check.

Exhaust Hood (Canopy)

The hood is the first point of capture for heat, grease vapour, and combustion gases. Hoods must be fabricated from stainless steel (Grade 304 is standard) and sized to fully cover the cooking equipment beneath, with an appropriate overhang on all open sides. Hood type — wall-mounted canopy, island, or proximity — depends on the kitchen layout and affects airflow calculations.

Inside the hood, baffle-type grease filters separate liquid grease from the exhaust airstream before it enters the ductwork. Filters must be accessible for cleaning and installed at the correct angle to drain into a catch tray. Blocked filters are a routine Civil Defence inspection failure point and a leading cause of duct fires. Learn more about designing and installing a compliant kitchen exhaust system.

Fire-Rated Ductwork

The exhaust duct carries grease-laden air from the hood to atmosphere. Because a duct running through a building structure can act as a fire conduit, UAE regulations — aligned with the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code of Practice and the widely referenced NFPA 96 standard — require fire-rated ductwork with a minimum two-hour fire rating.

Access panels must be installed at regular intervals (typically every three metres) and at every change of direction to allow inspection and mechanical cleaning. Duct routing should minimise bends, as each bend traps grease. Authorities check access panel placement during inspection. Compliant MEP engineering for UAE restaurants resolves duct sizing, routing, and fire-rating specifications before a single panel is installed.

Exhaust Fan and Make-Up Air

The exhaust fan — typically a grease-rated centrifugal fan at roof level — must be correctly sized for the cooking load. Undersized fans produce insufficient capture velocity, allowing heat and grease vapour to spill into the kitchen. Exhaust airflow rates vary significantly by appliance type; calculations follow recognised standards such as DW172 and must be documented for authority approval.

For every volume of air extracted, an equivalent volume of make-up air must enter the kitchen. Dubai Municipality requires slightly negative pressure relative to adjacent spaces — keeping cooking odours in — while supplying enough pre-cooled fresh air to protect staff. Balancing exhaust and supply air rates is a core element of the ventilation design calculation.

Fire Suppression System Integration

UAE Civil Defence requires an automatic fire suppression system within the exhaust hood above cooking equipment involving oils, fats, or open flames. Wet chemical systems certified to UL 300 or equivalent are standard; nozzles are positioned over fryers, grills, and ranges and activate automatically on heat detection, simultaneously shutting off fuel supply. Civil Defence pre-approval of suppression drawings is required before installation. Understand the full requirements for restaurant fire suppression systems in the UAE.

Ecology Units and Electrostatic Precipitators (ESP)

For restaurants conducting heavy grease cooking — charcoal grilling, deep frying, smash burgers — standard baffle filters are not sufficient where exhaust discharges near other buildings or in high-density areas. UAE municipalities, including Dubai Municipality, mandate electrostatic precipitators (ESP) and carbon filters in these cases.

An ESP uses electrostatic charge to remove sub-micron grease particles and smoke from the exhaust airstream; combined with activated carbon, these ecology units eliminate visible plume and odour complaints. Dubai Municipality also specifies that the exhaust must terminate at least two metres above the nearest adjacent building. Collector cells require scheduled cleaning — specialist ecology unit cleaning produces the documented service records authorities require.

Who Regulates Kitchen Exhaust in the UAE?

Two authorities must both approve a commercial kitchen before it can legally operate:

  • Municipal authority — governs food safety standards, ventilation adequacy, grease trap installation, and overall kitchen suitability. Dubai Municipality’s technical guidelines (including TG19) frame the design review process.
  • Civil Defence — governs fire safety: fire-rated ductwork, hood construction, suppression system design, and compliance with the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code of Practice. This is a separate submission from the municipality review.

Both must be pursued in parallel during fit-out — not sequentially after construction. Explore the full range of essential restaurant compliance services across the UAE.

Common Compliance Failures

The most frequently cited failures during UAE commercial kitchen inspections are:

  • Undersized hood or exhaust fan — insufficient capture, heat and grease spill into the kitchen.
  • Grease buildup in ductwork — the most common fire risk and cleaning violation.
  • Non-fire-rated ductwork — standard HVAC duct used instead of the required fire-rated construction.
  • Missing or incorrectly spaced access panels — duct that cannot be inspected is automatically non-compliant.
  • No make-up air — negative pressure problems and loss of exhaust efficiency.
  • Absent or uncertified fire suppression — missing systems, expired service contracts, or non-certified equipment.
  • No ESP where required — heavy grease cooking without mandated odour and particulate control.
  • Grease trap deficiencies — wrong sizing, blockage, or no cleaning documentation.

Ongoing Maintenance Obligations

Compliance is not a one-time approval. UAE authorities expect documented maintenance programmes for all exhaust components.

Hood and duct cleaning: Professional cleaning frequency is driven by cooking volume and type — high-volume, heavy grease kitchens may need cleaning every one to three months; lower-volume operations quarterly or semi-annually. Grease filters require cleaning in busy operations weekly or more frequently. Professional kitchen hood and duct cleaning by certified technicians produces the service report authorities and insurers require.

ESP/ecology unit cleaning: Collector cells must be washed at manufacturer-specified intervals — typically monthly for high-volume operations. A clogged ESP increases static pressure on the fan and can become a fire source.

Grease trap cleaning: All drainage from cooking areas must pass through a grease trap before connecting to the municipal sewer. Dubai Municipality requires proper sizing, accessible maintenance points, and retained cleaning records. Specialist grease trap cleaning ensures compliant disposal and documented service history.

Getting It Right the First Time

Correcting non-compliant ductwork inside a completed kitchen typically costs three to five times the original installation. Municipalities and Civil Defence will not issue an operational licence until every deficiency is resolved. Engage qualified MEP engineers early, design all components as a system, submit drawings to both authorities before construction begins, and establish a documented maintenance programme from day one.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a fire suppression system inside the hood mandatory for all UAE commercial kitchens?

Yes, for kitchens using oils, fats, or open flames — the vast majority of food service operations — UAE Civil Defence requires an automatic wet chemical suppression system integrated into the exhaust hood. Exact certification, nozzle placement, and agent quantity requirements depend on the specific equipment; confirm with a Civil Defence-approved supplier at design stage.

Do I need an ecology unit (ESP) for my restaurant in the UAE?

It depends on cooking type and location. Municipal authorities mandate ESP and carbon filtration for heavy grease operations — charcoal grilling, deep frying, smash burgers — near residential or high-density areas. Confirm the specific requirement with the relevant authority for your emirate before finalising the design.

How often must kitchen ductwork be cleaned in the UAE?

There is no single universal interval — frequency is set by cooking type and volume. High-volume, heavy-grease kitchens typically require professional cleaning every one to three months; lower-volume operations quarterly or semi-annually. Authorities and insurers expect documented records; a visually clean duct without them will still fail inspection.

Need Help with Kitchen Exhaust Compliance in the UAE?

Make My Restaurant provides turnkey kitchen exhaust design, installation, fire suppression integration, ecology unit supply, and ongoing cleaning across all seven emirates — from authority submissions to final inspection sign-off.

Call us on +971 58 570 7110 or send us a project enquiry to discuss your kitchen ventilation requirements.

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