Feral Pigeons are Dubai's most persistent bird pest, and far more than an eyesore. Their droppings are acidic and corrode building facades, paintwork, AC units, and metalwork, while accumulations harbour bacteria, fungi, and parasites that pose real health risks — a particular concern on balconies, around air intakes, and in food-related premises. They nest on ledges, parapets, signage, AC units, and balcony plant pots, blocking drainage and ventilation and creating ongoing fouling. They breed year-round in Dubai's climate, so a small roosting group quickly becomes an entrenched colony. DIY deterrents like plastic owls fail because pigeons quickly learn to ignore them.
Santera's Dubai Municipality-certified technicians manage Feral Pigeons humanely and effectively through proofing and exclusion — netting, spikes, wire systems, and ledge modification — combined with thorough cleaning and disinfection of fouled areas. For property managers, facilities, and F&B premises, we design bird-management programmes that protect buildings and meet Dubai Municipality hygiene 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 Feral Pigeons in Dubai with a Dubai Municipality-certified process: our technicians inspect to find the roosting and nesting sites 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 Feral Pigeon problem in Dubai for good. Shop-bought sprays and home remedies tend to deal with what you can see while missing the roosting and nesting sites birds keep returning to, so the problem returns. Lasting control means targeting the source — which is where professional treatment makes the difference.

Because the source survives. Feral Pigeons breed throughout the year in Dubai's mild climate, with pairs raising multiple broods of usually two eggs in simple nests on ledges and sheltered structures. Rapid, continuous breeding means populations rebuild quickly unless roosting and nesting sites are physically proofed. 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 Feral Pigeons themselves and the signs they leave. Feral Pigeons are medium-sized birds, around 30–35cm long, descended from wild rock doves. Feral Pigeons roost and nest on building ledges, parapets, AC units, signage, and balconies, returning persistently to favoured sites. They live in flocks, are active by day, and show strong site fidelity — once established, they're hard to displace without physical exclusion. Catching it early, before numbers build, makes treatment far easier.

Pigeons don't attack people, but their droppings are acidic and harbour bacteria, fungi, and parasites that pose health risks and corrode buildings.

Feral Pigeons are opportunistic ground feeders eating seeds, grains, bread, and food scraps. In Dubai they exploit discarded food, outdoor dining areas, spilled grain, and intentional feeding by residents. Easy access to food in urban areas sustains large populations and encourages them to settle around buildings and food premises. 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.