{"id":5229,"date":"2026-06-21T14:31:35","date_gmt":"2026-06-21T10:31:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/schedule-professional-crawling-pest\/"},"modified":"2026-06-21T14:31:44","modified_gmt":"2026-06-21T10:31:44","slug":"schedule-professional-crawling-pest","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/schedule-professional-crawling-pest\/","title":{"rendered":"How Often Should You Schedule Crawling Pest Control?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.who.int\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">How often should<\/a> I schedule <a href=\"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/are-crawling-pest-sprays-safe\/\" title=\"Are Crawling Pest Sprays Safe for Children and Pets?\">professional crawling pest<\/a> control services? In the UAE, the honest answer is: more often than most property owners currently do, and at intervals determined by a proper site inspection rather than a generic calendar. For most residential properties in Dubai and across the Emirates, a professionally applied crawling pest programme should run at minimum every two to three months \u2014 with certain building types, seasons, and infestation histories requiring monthly attention. The reasoning behind that frequency is rooted in climate, building construction, and the biology of the pests themselves.<\/p>\n<p>The UAE&#8217;s built environment creates near-perfect conditions for crawling pests year-round. Temperatures rarely drop low enough to interrupt reproductive cycles. Humidity \u2014 whether from the summer months, proximity to the coast in Fujairah and Ras Al Khaimah, or indoor condensation from continuous air conditioning \u2014 provides the moisture that most crawling species depend on. Add dense construction, shared drainage infrastructure, and the movement of goods and people across the Emirates, and you have a setting where crawling pest pressure is not seasonal \u2014 it is structural.<\/p>\n<p>Understanding what drives the correct service interval is more useful than following a fixed number. This guide covers the biology and behaviour of the crawling pests most commonly found in UAE properties, the variables that genuinely affect how often professional treatment is needed, and how a well-structured control programme differs from a single spray visit.<\/p>\n<div class=\"wp-block-table-of-contents\">\n<nav class=\"ez-toc-container\">\n<p class=\"ez-toc-title\">Table of Contents<\/p>\n<ul class=\"ez-toc-list\">\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-1\">The Crawling Pests That Matter Most in UAE Properties<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-2\">What Actually Determines Service Frequency<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-3\">Why Annual or Ad-Hoc Treatment Falls Short<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-4\">The Difference Between a Spray Visit and a Programme<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-5\">Recommended Service Intervals by Property Type<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-6\">The Role of Integrated Pest Management in Scheduling Decisions<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-7\">Signs That Your Current Schedule Is Not Working<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-8\">Expert Perspective: What a Professional Assessment Covers<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-9\">Frequently Asked Questions<\/a><\/li>\n<li class=\"ez-toc-page-1\"><a class=\"ez-toc-link\" href=\"#section-10\">Planning a Schedule That Actually Works<\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/nav>\n<\/div>\n<h2 id=\"section-1\">The Crawling Pests That Matter Most in UAE Properties<\/h2>\n<p>Before discussing frequency, it helps to understand which species are actually driving the risk. &#8220;Crawling pest control&#8221; in the UAE context typically <a href=\"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/how-cockroaches-enter-dubai-homes\/\" title=\"How Do Cockroaches Enter Dubai Homes and Villas?\">covers cockroaches<\/a>, silverfish, ants, spiders, and ground-level beetles. Each has its own reproductive cycle, harbourage preference, and response to treatment \u2014 and each affects how a service schedule should be structured.<\/p>\n<h3>Cockroaches<\/h3>\n<p>The German cockroach (<em>Blattella germanica<\/em>) and the American cockroach (<em>Periplaneta americana<\/em>) are the dominant species in UAE residential and commercial properties. The German cockroach, in particular, is one of the most reproductively efficient insects encountered in professional pest management. A single female can produce multiple egg capsules in her lifetime, each containing several dozen eggs. In warm indoor environments \u2014 which describes virtually every occupied building in Dubai \u2014 a small harbourage population can become a significant infestation within weeks.<\/p>\n<p>This reproductive speed is the primary reason a single treatment visit is rarely sufficient. Professional cockroach control requires follow-up inspections and, in most cases, repeat application within four to six weeks of the initial treatment to address newly hatched nymphs that emerge after the first visit.<\/p>\n<h3>Silverfish and Moisture-Dependent Species<\/h3>\n<p>Silverfish are commonly found <a href=\"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/cockroach-control-in-dubai-4\/\" title=\"How Is Cockroach Control in Dubai Apartment Buildings Done?\">in Dubai apartment<\/a>s and villas where there is residual moisture \u2014 bathrooms, under kitchen sinks, inside walls with slow leaks, or in spaces adjacent to poorly maintained <a href=\"https:\/\/sanih2o.com\/\" data-internallinksmanager029f6b8e52c=\"3\" title=\"Water\">water<\/a> infrastructure. They feed on starchy materials, including wallpaper adhesive, book bindings, and stored food packaging, making them a concern in both residential and archive storage environments.<\/p>\n<p>Their presence is often a signal of an underlying moisture issue rather than a standalone infestation. Addressing moisture source alongside the pest treatment is essential; without it, repopulation is predictable.<\/p>\n<h3>Ants<\/h3>\n<p>Multiple ant species establish foraging trails inside UAE buildings, typically originating from outdoor nesting sites. Pharaoh ants are a particular concern in healthcare settings because they actively seek out warm, humid spaces. Ghost ants are frequent visitors in residential kitchens. Treatment that targets only foraging workers without locating and disrupting the colony will produce only temporary results.<\/p>\n<h3>Spiders and Ground Beetles<\/h3>\n<p>Spiders are generally secondary indicators \u2014 their presence suggests an existing prey population of smaller insects. Ground beetles enter properties through gaps at floor level and are more common in properties adjacent to landscaped areas or construction sites, a relevant consideration for developments across Dubailand, Al Furjan, and comparable emerging zones across Sharjah and Ajman.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-2\">What Actually Determines Service Frequency<\/h2>\n<p>No single number applies to every property. A licensed operator who gives you a frequency recommendation without first inspecting the property is working from assumption rather than evidence. These are the variables that a professional site assessment should consider.<\/p>\n<h3>Building Type and Age<\/h3>\n<p>Older buildings in areas such as Deira, Bur Dubai, and parts of Sharjah carry higher baseline crawling pest pressure due to ageing drainage infrastructure, more entry points at floor and wall level, and decades of accumulated harbourage in voids and cavities. A high-rise built in the last decade with modern sealed construction typically requires less frequent intervention than a thirty-year-old villa with uncapped drainage and old tile grouting.<\/p>\n<p>Labour accommodations and dense residential buildings with shared kitchens require the most frequent service schedule \u2014 commonly monthly \u2014 because re-entry pressure from shared corridors, common areas, and adjacent units is continuous.<\/p>\n<h3>Season and Climate Conditions<\/h3>\n<p>While UAE temperatures sustain <a href=\"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/how-uae-climate-affects\/\" title=\"How Does UAE Climate Affect Crawling Pest Activity Indoors?\">crawling pest activity<\/a> year-round, specific seasonal shifts increase pressure. The period from April through October \u2014 when outdoor temperatures exceed 40\u00b0C \u2014 drives cockroaches and ants to seek cooler indoor environments aggressively. Properties that have treated their indoor spaces but left exterior entry points unaddressed will typically see re-<a href=\"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/what-happens-during-3\/\" title=\"What Happens During a Professional Cockroach Treatment\">entry during this<\/a> period.<\/p>\n<p>Conversely, the winter months from November through February bring reduced outdoor pest pressure in some species, which is often when property managers in Abu Dhabi and the Northern Emirates mistakenly defer scheduled treatments. Deferring during lower-pressure months breaks the programme&#8217;s continuity and allows harbourage populations to re-establish before the summer peak.<\/p>\n<h3>Previous Infestation History<\/h3>\n<p>A property that has experienced a confirmed cockroach infestation within the last twelve months requires a more intensive service schedule than a property with no recorded infestation history. Post-infestation programmes typically run monthly for the first three months, stepping down to bi-monthly once monitoring confirms population suppression.<\/p>\n<h3>Food Handling and Organic Material<\/h3>\n<p>Restaurant kitchens, hotel food and beverage areas, school canteens, and supermarket storage rooms carry significantly higher crawling pest pressure than standard office or residential environments. Dubai Municipality regulations require that food-handling establishments maintain active and documented pest management programmes. The compliance standard is not just about treatment \u2014 it is about verification, with service records and monitoring data available for inspection at any time.<\/p>\n<p>For UAE food service environments, monthly professional crawling pest treatment, combined with ongoing monitoring between visits, represents the minimum responsible standard.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-3\">Why Annual or Ad-Hoc Treatment Falls Short<\/h2>\n<p>A recurring pattern in UAE pest management is the single annual treatment \u2014 typically booked as part of a general property maintenance package and applied once, then forgotten. This approach works only if the property has no active harbourage population, no meaningful re-entry pressure, and no conditions that sustain crawling pests. In practice, those conditions describe very few properties in the Emirates.<\/p>\n<p>The biology of crawling pests makes interval-based control essential. German cockroach egg capsules are not affected by many residual insecticides \u2014 they hatch after the chemical has dissipated, releasing a new generation into an environment where the original treatment is no longer active. A professional programme accounts for this with a follow-up visit timed to the species&#8217; developmental cycle.<\/p>\n<p>Ad-hoc treatment \u2014 calling a service provider only when a pest is visibly present \u2014 is reactive by definition. By the time cockroaches are seen in daylight or in open areas, the harbourage population is typically already substantial. Reactive treatment controls the visible symptom; it does not address the colony.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-4\">The Difference Between a Spray Visit and a Programme<\/h2>\n<p>Professional crawling pest control, applied responsibly, is not a spray-and-leave service. A well-structured programme has distinct phases, each serving a function that the others cannot replace.<\/p>\n<h3>Inspection and Identification<\/h3>\n<p>The first visit of any responsible programme involves a thorough inspection: identifying species present, locating harbourage, mapping entry points, and recording conditions that sustain the infestation. This is not an administrative step \u2014 it is the technical foundation that determines which products, application methods, and follow-up intervals are appropriate. Skipping or rushing this phase is the single most common reason crawling pest treatments produce inconsistent results.<\/p>\n<h3>Initial Treatment<\/h3>\n<p>Once the inspection is complete, the treatment is targeted rather than broad. For cockroaches, this typically involves gel baiting in harbourage zones, crack-and-crevice application of residual products where appropriate, and dusting in inaccessible voids. The chemistry used should be disclosed to the property owner, including active ingredients and concentrations. At Saniservice, the approach is minimum effective chemistry: identify the source first, choose the most targeted intervention available, and use broad-spectrum application only where evidence supports it.<\/p>\n<h3>Follow-Up and Monitoring<\/h3>\n<p>Monitoring between treatment visits \u2014 through sticky traps, bait station inspection, or digital logging \u2014 allows the programme to track whether population pressure is declining as expected. If a monitoring visit reveals unexpected activity, the programme adjusts rather than waiting for the next scheduled treatment date. This adaptive approach is what separates a managed programme from a fixed-schedule spray contract.<\/p>\n<h3>Environmental Recommendations<\/h3>\n<p>A responsible operator will always identify the environmental factors sustaining pest pressure and communicate them to the property owner or facility manager. Uncapped drainage, inadequate food storage, <a href=\"https:\/\/sanih2o.com\/\" data-internallinksmanager029f6b8e52c=\"3\" title=\"Water\">water<\/a> pooling under kitchen units, and gaps around pipework are contributing conditions that pest chemistry alone will not resolve. Addressing these conditions alongside professional treatment significantly extends the interval between required service visits.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-5\">Recommended Service Intervals by Property Type<\/h2>\n<p>The following intervals are based on field observations across residential, commercial, and institutional properties in the UAE. They represent minimum recommended frequencies under normal conditions; active infestations, food-handling environments, or properties with structural risk factors require assessment on a case-by-case basis.<\/p>\n<h3>Standard Residential Apartments and Villas<\/h3>\n<p>For properties with no active infestation history and reasonable construction integrity, a quarterly service schedule \u2014 once every three months \u2014 provides meaningful ongoing protection. Summer months may warrant an additional interim visit, particularly for properties with direct access to shared drainage or ground-floor units adjacent to landscaped areas.<\/p>\n<h3>High-Density Residential Buildings and Labour Accommodations<\/h3>\n<p>Monthly treatment is the appropriate standard for high-density residential buildings where shared corridors, communal kitchens, and continuous occupancy turnover create persistent re-entry pressure. Dubai Municipality licensing requirements for labour accommodation hygiene are among the most detailed in the UAE; compliance means an active, documented pest management programme rather than annual treatment.<\/p>\n<h3>Hotels, Restaurants, and Food Service Environments<\/h3>\n<p>Monthly professional treatment, supplemented by monitoring visits between scheduled service dates, is the minimum standard for any food-handling environment. Hotel rooms and guestroom corridors require their own separate schedule from kitchen and back-of-house areas, as the pest pressure and inspection requirements differ between zones.<\/p>\n<h3>Offices and Commercial Buildings<\/h3>\n<p>For standard office environments without food-handling areas, bi-monthly treatment \u2014 once every two months \u2014 typically provides adequate coverage. Break rooms, server rooms (which are warm and attract silverfish), and basement car parks require more attention than open-plan office floors.<\/p>\n<h3>Schools, Nurseries, and Healthcare Facilities<\/h3>\n<p>These environments require monthly treatment given the vulnerability of occupants and the regulatory expectations that apply. Additionally, product selection must be reviewed carefully in environments occupied by children or immunocompromised patients. The chemicals used and their withdrawal periods before re-occupation should be documented and provided to the facility manager after every service visit.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-6\">The Role of Integrated Pest Management in Scheduling Decisions<\/h2>\n<p>Integrated pest management \u2014 commonly abbreviated as IPM \u2014 is the professional standard that frames how frequency decisions should be made. Rather than applying chemicals on a fixed calendar regardless of actual pest pressure, IPM uses monitoring data to drive treatment decisions. The principle is to intervene at the lowest effective level, using non-chemical methods where evidence supports them and reserving stronger chemistry for situations where monitoring confirms it is necessary.<\/p>\n<p>In practice, this means that an IPM-aligned programme might reduce treatment frequency in a property where monitoring shows consistently low activity, while increasing frequency in a property where monitoring reveals unexpected pressure. The schedule serves the outcome; the outcome is not assumed to follow from the schedule.<\/p>\n<p>Saniservice&#8217;s SaniEx division applies IPM principles across all crawling pest programmes, targeting colonies precisely before treating and declining to apply broad-spectrum chemistry as a substitute for inspection-led decision making. This approach protects occupants from unnecessary chemical exposure and produces more durable control results than routine blanket application.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-7\">Signs That Your Current Schedule Is Not Working<\/h2>\n<p>If any of the following are present between scheduled service visits, the current programme frequency or methodology warrants review.<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Cockroaches visible in daylight or in open areas of the kitchen or bathroom<\/li>\n<li>Ant trails returning within two weeks of a treatment visit<\/li>\n<li>Silverfish found in multiple rooms rather than isolated to one moisture zone<\/li>\n<li>Sticky trap counts increasing between visits rather than declining<\/li>\n<li>Pest sightings in areas that were not previously affected<\/li>\n<li>Persistent odour in areas that have been treated<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Any of these signals warrants a review visit from the pest management operator rather than simply waiting for the next scheduled date. A programme that is not producing measurable reduction in monitored activity is either under-resourced in frequency, misaligned in product selection, or failing to address the environmental conditions sustaining the infestation.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-8\">Expert Perspective: What a Professional Assessment Covers<\/h2>\n<p>Having worked across a range of UAE property types \u2014 from Dubai Marina apartments and Palm Jumeirah villas to hotel back-of-house areas and school facilities in Sharjah \u2014 the consistent finding is that properties with ongoing monitoring programmes identify problems earlier, spend less on reactive treatment, and maintain cleaner compliance records than properties managed reactively.<\/p>\n<p>The assessment that determines service frequency for crawling pest control should include: a walk-through of all potential harbourage zones, inspection of drainage access points and pipework, review of any previous treatment records, identification of species from live specimens or cast skins, and documentation of environmental risk factors. This is not a ten-minute exercise \u2014 a thorough assessment of a medium-sized villa takes between thirty and sixty minutes to complete properly.<\/p>\n<p>Properties that have never had a formal inspection are often surprised by the harbourage they have been unaware of: cockroach activity behind refrigeration units, silverfish colonies in wall voids adjacent to <a href=\"https:\/\/sanih2o.com\/\" data-internallinksmanager029f6b8e52c=\"3\" title=\"Water\">water<\/a> tanks, ant nesting in external walls with moisture ingress. The inspection is not incidental to the service \u2014 it is where the service actually starts.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-9\">Frequently Asked Questions<\/h2>\n<h3>How often should I schedule professional crawling pest control services in Dubai?<\/h3>\n<p>How often should I schedule professional crawling pest control services depends on your building type, occupancy, and infestation history. For standard Dubai apartments and villas, quarterly treatment is a reasonable minimum. Food-handling environments, high-density residential buildings, and properties with active infestation histories typically require monthly professional service to maintain effective control.<\/p>\n<h3>Is quarterly pest control enough for a Dubai villa?<\/h3>\n<p>For a villa with no active infestation history, sound construction, and good sanitation practices, quarterly professional treatment is a workable baseline. Villas in landscaped communities or those with older drainage infrastructure often benefit from adding a monitoring visit between quarterly treatments, particularly during the summer months when cockroach pressure increases as outdoor temperatures peak.<\/p>\n<h3>What crawling pests are most common in UAE apartments?<\/h3>\n<p>German cockroaches are the most frequently encountered crawling pest in UAE apartments, followed by American cockroaches in drainage-adjacent areas, silverfish in moisture-prone zones such as bathrooms and under-sink spaces, ghost ants in kitchens, and pharaoh ants in healthcare-adjacent environments. Each species requires a different treatment approach, which is why professional inspection precedes any responsible treatment programme.<\/p>\n<h3>Why does one <a href=\"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/signs-your-pest-control\/\" title=\"Is Your Pest Control Treatment Actually Working in Dubai?\">pest control treatment<\/a> not solve the problem permanently?<\/h3>\n<p>Crawling pests \u2014 particularly cockroaches \u2014 have reproductive cycles that mean egg capsules present at the time of initial treatment hatch after residual chemistry has dissipated. A single visit addresses the active population at that moment, not the eggs or newly hatched nymphs. Effective control requires follow-up visits timed to the species&#8217; developmental cycle, typically four to six weeks after the initial treatment for cockroaches.<\/p>\n<h3>Do Dubai Municipality regulations require regular pest control for commercial properties?<\/h3>\n<p>Dubai Municipality health and safety regulations require food-handling establishments, hotels, healthcare facilities, and labour accommodations to maintain active and documented pest management programmes. Inspection records, service reports, and monitoring data must be available for regulatory review. A single annual treatment does not satisfy these requirements \u2014 active, ongoing programmes with documented service intervals are expected.<\/p>\n<h3>What is the difference between a crawling pest programme and a one-off treatment?<\/h3>\n<p>A one-off treatment addresses the visible pest population at a single point in time. A programme includes initial inspection, targeted treatment, follow-up visits aligned with pest biology, ongoing monitoring, and environmental recommendations. Programmes produce more durable results because they account for the reproductive cycles, re-entry pressure, and environmental conditions that sustain crawling pest populations beyond any single treatment visit.<\/p>\n<h3>How do I know if my current pest control schedule is working?<\/h3>\n<p>Declining pest activity between treatment visits, as measured by monitoring trap counts and visual inspection, is the clearest indicator of an effective programme. If cockroaches remain visible in open areas, ant trails return within days, or sticky trap counts are not decreasing over successive service periods, the current frequency or methodology requires review. A well-structured programme adjusts based on monitoring data rather than following a fixed calendar regardless of results.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"section-10\">Planning a Schedule That Actually Works<\/h2>\n<p>The most effective crawling pest control programmes in the UAE share three characteristics: they begin with a thorough inspection rather than an assumption, they are aligned to the biology and behaviour of the species present rather than a generic treatment calendar, and they include monitoring that makes the programme adaptive rather than fixed.<\/p>\n<p>How often should I schedule professional crawling pest control services is ultimately a question answered by evidence \u2014 the evidence gathered during an honest site assessment. For most UAE properties, that evidence will point toward more frequent professional service than is currently in place. The cost of a well-structured programme is consistently lower than the cost of reactive treatment once an established infestation requires intensive intervention.<\/p>\n<p>If you are uncertain about the current pest pressure in your property, the right starting point is a professional inspection \u2014 not another spray visit. Saniservice&#8217;s SaniEx specialists operate across all seven emirates and can assess your specific property conditions, recommend a service schedule grounded in what they actually find, and structure a programme that you can measure and verify over time. The invitation is open whenever the time is right. Understanding <strong>How Often Should I Schedule Professional Crawling Pest Control Services<\/strong> is key to success in this area.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In the UAE, professional crawling pest control is not a one-off event \u2014 it is a scheduled discipline shaped by climate, building type, and the pest pressure identified during a proper site inspection. This guide explains what determines the right service frequency, which crawling pests matter most in Dubai and across the Emirates, and how to build a control programme that actually holds.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":5222,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"_uf_show_specific_survey":0,"_uf_disable_surveys":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[414],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5229","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-pest-control"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5229","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/8"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5229"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5229\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5236,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5229\/revisions\/5236"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5222"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5229"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5229"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/saniservice.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5229"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}