The Common Earwig is the elongated brown insect instantly recognised by the pair of pincers (cerci) at the rear of its body. Those pincers look threatening and feed a long-standing myth about earwigs crawling into ears — but this is false: earwigs don't burrow into ears, don't sting, and pose no real threat to people, at most delivering a harmless pinch if handled. They are primarily a nuisance and a minor garden pest. They love moisture and dark shelter, so in Dubai they thrive around irrigated landscaping, mulch, and damp ground, and creep into ground-floor villas, bathrooms, and damp areas through gaps — often in numbers after watering or at night. Outdoors they can damage soft plants, seedlings, and flowers. Their tendency to gather in damp hiding spots and intrude indoors is the real issue, not any danger.
Santera's Dubai Municipality-certified technicians manage earwig intrusions by treating entry points and harbourage, reducing the damp and organic conditions that attract them, and proofing access routes, with accurate reassurance about their harmlessness, in line with Dubai Municipality standards. For ground-floor villas and landscaped properties, we provide practical, targeted control.

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 Common Earwigs in Dubai with a Dubai Municipality-certified process: our technicians inspect to find the harbourage and entry points 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 Common Earwig problem in Dubai for good. Shop-bought sprays and home remedies tend to deal with what you can see while missing the damp harbourage and entry points around the building, so the problem returns. Lasting control means targeting the source — which is where professional treatment makes the difference.

Because the source survives. Earwigs show unusual maternal care: the female lays eggs in a burrow or sheltered spot and guards them, and tends the young nymphs after hatching. They breed in damp soil and harbourage, and Dubai's irrigated, organic-rich garden conditions support their development, allowing populations to build in landscaping and recur indoors. 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 Common Earwigs themselves and the signs they leave. The Common Earwig is about 12–15mm long, elongated and flattened, and reddish-brown to dark brown, with a distinctive pair of curved pincers (cerci) at the tip of the abdomen — more strongly curved in males. Earwigs are nocturnal and moisture-loving, hiding by day in damp, dark, tight spaces — under mulch, stones, pots, debris, and in cracks — and becoming active at night. They use their pincers for defence and handling prey, not for harming people. Catching it early, before numbers build, makes treatment far easier.

No — despite the menacing pincers and the old myth, earwigs don't crawl into ears, don't sting, and pose no real threat; at most they give a harmless pinch if handled.

Earwigs are omnivorous, feeding on decaying organic matter, plant material, soft seedlings, flowers, and small insects. In Dubai gardens they can damage soft plants and seedlings, while around homes they scavenge organic debris. Their feeding on garden plants is a minor concern, and their attraction to organic matter and moisture draws them to landscaped, irrigated areas. 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.