Dipolar excitons offer a rich playground for both design of novel optoelectronic devices and fundamental many-body physics. Wide GaN/(AlGa)N quantum wells host a new and promising realization of dipolar excitons. We demonstrate the inplane confinement and cooling of these excitons, when trapped in the electrostatic potential created by semitransparent electrodes of various shapes deposited on the sample surface. This result is a prerequisite for the electrical control of the exciton densities and fluxes, as well for studies of the complex phase diagram of these dipolar bosons at low temperature. Keywords exciton fluid, electrostatic traps, cooling, gallium nitride Dipolar excitons, Coulomb-bound but spatially separated electron-hole pairs, have a long life-time and a built-in dipole moment that offer an opportunity for the cooling and electrical 1 arXiv:1902.02974v1 [physics.app-ph] 8 Feb 2019 control of exciton fluids. 1-7 Various intriguing quantum phenomena including Bose-Einsteinlike condensation, darkening and superfluidity of excitons have been recently reported. 8-15Albeit demonstrated at very low temperatures, those phenomena are promising for better understanding of new states of matter, but also for potential applications in excitonic devices with novel functionalities. 7The recent emergence of high quality wide-bandgap semiconductor quantum wells (QWs) and two-dimensional Van der Waals heterostructures, hosting dipolar excitons with large exciton binding energies and built-in electric fields, has given a new impetus to this research. [16][17][18][19][20] Room temperature exciton transport in GaN/(AlGa)N QWs has been demonstrated, 17 as well as its electrical control in MoS 2 −WSe 2 heterostructures. 20 The latter is