The Camel Tick is a large, robust, desert-adapted tick associated with camels, livestock, and animals in Dubai's farms, stables, and desert-edge areas. It feeds on the blood of camels and other livestock but will also bite people, and it is of real public-health importance as a vector of serious diseases — most notably Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF), as well as other livestock and zoonotic pathogens. Unlike ticks that simply wait on vegetation, Hyalomma ticks are active 'hunter' ticks that can detect and pursue a host over short distances, increasing the chance of encountering people working around animals. They are hardy and tolerant of the harsh desert climate. Properties with camels, livestock, stables, or located near desert and farmland face the greatest exposure, and control needs to address both animals and their environment.
Santera's Dubai Municipality-certified technicians manage Camel Ticks through environmental treatment of animal housing, resting areas, and harbourage, alongside guidance on veterinary livestock treatment and personal protection. For farms, stables, and desert-edge facilities, we deliver coordinated tick control aligned with Dubai Municipality public-health standards.

Get to know the physical signs and behavioral patterns associated with this species. Knowledge of these specific traits helps in maintaining a secure and pest-free environment.
Santera provides Pest control and prevention across Dubai, with primary service coverage in:

Santera gets rid of Camel Ticks in Dubai with a Dubai Municipality-certified process: our technicians inspect to find the all life stages in the environment and entry points, apply targeted treatment that eliminates the problem at its source, and put prevention measures in place so it doesn't come back.

You can try, but DIY rarely solves a Camel Tick problem in Dubai for good. Shop-bought sprays and home remedies tend to deal with what you can see while missing the developing stages and eggs in the surrounding environment, so the problem returns. Lasting control means targeting the source — which is where professional treatment makes the difference.

Because the source survives. Females feed to engorgement, drop off, and lay large numbers of eggs in sheltered ground or harbourage; the cycle proceeds through larval, nymphal, and adult stages, each taking a blood meal. The desert-hardy biology and livestock hosts allow populations to persist around farms and stables, with warm conditions supporting development. That's exactly why surface sprays and one-off DIY fail — they hit what's visible while the source keeps producing more, so lasting control has to target the source, not just the symptoms.

Watch for Camel Ticks themselves and the signs they leave. The Camel Tick is large compared with most ticks, with adults often 5–6mm unfed and engorged females swelling considerably larger. Camel Ticks are active hunter ticks that can detect host cues (carbon dioxide, movement, heat) and pursue a host over short distances, rather than passively questing. They are hardy and desert-adapted, sheltering in animal housing, cracks, and ground harbourage between meals. Catching it early, before numbers build, makes treatment far easier.

Yes — Camel Ticks bite and are a public-health concern, capable of transmitting serious diseases including Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever, and they actively pursue hosts.

Camel Ticks feed on the blood of camels, cattle, and other livestock, and will bite humans, taking blood meals at each life stage. They are adapted to large desert mammals as primary hosts. In Dubai, camels and livestock on farms and at the desert edge are the main hosts, with people exposed when handling or working around these animals. Cut off these food, water, and shelter sources and you remove what draws them in — but an established population still needs targeted treatment to clear fully.