The initial steps of the thermal chemistry of Cu(I)-2-(tert-butylimino)-5,5-dimethyl-pyrrolidinate on metal surfaces were characterized using temperature-programmed desorption experiments and density functional theory (DFT). The relative stability of the initial dimer relative to its dissociation on metal surfaces was evaluated. Several molecular desorption temperatures were identified on Ni(110), but all correspond to dimers, either containing the initial Cu ions or after their removal; no monomer was ever detected. DFT calculations also indicated preferential bonding on Cu(110) as a dimer, albeit with a distorted configuration, via the Cu atoms and in registry with the lattice of the substrate. A potential dissociation pathway of the adsorbed dimer was identified involving the partial detachment of the ligands via the scission of one Cu–N bond at the time and migration to adjacent surface sites. This process is accompanied by the reduction of the Cu centers of the metal–organic complex, indicating that it may be the rate-limiting reaction that leads to further fragmentation of the ligands.