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Servicios de Control de plagas

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Pest control services protect your home and family from insects, rodents, and wildlife that cause damage, spread disease, or simply make life unpleasant. Coverage ranges from routine quarterly treatments for general pests to specialized work on termites, bed bugs, rodents, and wildlife.

5
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3
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US · PL · NL
Menos de 24h
Respuesta
Gratis
11
Problemas comunes
Diagnóstico

Cuándo llamar a un profesional

Homeowners typically call a pest control pro when they see signs of infestation — ants in the kitchen, droppings in the attic, wood damage that suggests termites, or sleepless nights from bed bugs. Many people also opt for preventive plans that keep common pests out before they become a problem. Mosquito yard treatments are increasingly popular for backyard livability in summer.

Cómo elegir

When hiring, look for a licensed and insured operator (most US states require state licensing for pest applicators), ask about the products they use and their safety profile around children and pets, and confirm whether the treatment includes a guarantee or follow-up visits. Reputable companies will inspect before quoting and explain what's driving the infestation.

Resumen de precios

Costs vary widely by pest and method. A one-time general pest treatment averages $150–$300; quarterly plans run $40–$70 per visit. Termite treatment costs $1,200–$3,500 for a typical home. Bed bug eradication is the most expensive — $1,000–$4,000 for whole-home heat or chemical treatment. Get multiple quotes for any treatment over $500.

Rangos de referencia
$150–$300$40–$70 per visit$1,200–$3,500$1,000–$4,000
Servicios

Servicios en esta categoría

Diagnosticar primero

Problemas comunes que resolvemos

Ant Infestation in Kitchen

A trail of ants across your countertops usually means a colony has established a scent route to a food or moisture source inside your home. Without professional treatment the colony will keep sending workers, and satellite nests can form in wall voids. A pest-control technician locates the nest, applies targeted bait or barrier treatments, and seals common entry points to prevent re-infestation.

Mice or Rodents in Walls

Scratching or scurrying sounds inside walls and ceilings, especially at night, are the most common sign of a mouse or rat infestation. Rodents gnaw electrical wiring, contaminate insulation with droppings, and reproduce rapidly—one pair can produce dozens of offspring in a year. A pest-control technician inspects for entry points, sets traps or bait stations, and exclusion-seals gaps to stop the cycle.

Cockroach Infestation

Spotting even a single cockroach during the day usually signals a larger colony hiding in walls, under appliances, or inside drain lines. Cockroaches carry bacteria, trigger allergies and asthma, and reproduce extremely fast. A pest-control technician applies gel baits, growth regulators, and residual sprays to eliminate the colony at its source and advises on sanitation changes that reduce re-infestation risk.

Wasp or Hornet Nest on Property

A wasp or hornet nest near doors, eaves, play areas, or garden sheds poses a serious sting risk, especially for anyone with allergies. Disturbing the nest without protective equipment and proper insecticide can provoke a swarm attack. A pest-control technician identifies the species, treats or removes the nest safely—often at dusk when the colony is least active—and recommends deterrents to prevent rebuilding.

Mosquito Infestation

A persistent mosquito infestation makes outdoor spaces unusable, poses health risks from diseases such as West Nile virus and Zika, and can breed rapidly in even small amounts of standing water around the property. Populations explode when gutters hold stagnant water, birdbaths are not refreshed, or low spots in the yard collect rainwater. A pest-control technician inspects the property for breeding sites, eliminates standing water sources, applies targeted larvicide to areas that cannot be drained, and treats the yard with a barrier spray to repel adult mosquitoes for several weeks.

Ant infestation in kitchen

Ants marching across kitchen countertops and around food sources signal a colony that has found a reliable path inside your home. Store-bought sprays often kill only the visible foragers without reaching the nest, allowing the colony to rebound within days. A pest-control technician identifies the ant species, traces the trail back to the entry point, applies targeted bait that workers carry to the queen, and seals cracks along the foundation and window frames to prevent re-entry.

Mice in walls

Scratching and scurrying sounds inside walls, especially at night, are a clear sign that mice have found entry points into your home. Mice chew through electrical wiring, contaminate stored food, and leave droppings that pose health risks. Over-the-counter traps catch a few individuals but rarely stop the infestation. A pest-control technician performs a thorough inspection, identifies entry holes, sets professional-grade traps or bait stations throughout the affected areas, and seals gaps with steel wool and caulk to prevent reinfestation.

Cockroaches appearing at night

Seeing cockroaches scurry when you turn on a light at night usually indicates an established infestation — for every roach you see, dozens more may be hiding in wall voids, behind appliances, and inside cabinetry. German cockroaches (the most common indoor species) reproduce rapidly: a single female can produce hundreds of offspring in a year. Over-the-counter sprays repel roaches from treated surfaces but rarely eliminate the nest. A pest control technician uses gel baits, insect growth regulators, and targeted crack-and-crevice treatments that roaches carry back to their harborage, collapsing the colony from the inside.

Carpenter ants in wood framing

Carpenter ants don't eat wood — they excavate it to create nesting galleries, leaving behind smooth, clean tunnels and small piles of frass (sawdust-like debris). They're attracted to wood softened by moisture, so their presence usually signals a moisture problem somewhere in the structure — around leaking pipes, roof flashings, or window frames. A single mature colony can contain 10,000–50,000 workers, and satellite colonies throughout a house can cause significant structural damage over years. A pest control technician locates the parent nest (often outside the house in a dead tree or stump) and satellite colonies using visual inspection and sometimes acoustic detection, then treats with targeted baits or perimeter insecticide. Addressing the moisture source is essential to prevent re-infestation.

Carpenter ant damage in wood framing

Carpenter ants don't eat wood like termites, but they excavate smooth, clean galleries inside structural timbers to nest. Over years the tunneling weakens joists, sill plates, and window headers. You'll see small piles of fine sawdust (frass) below entry holes and hear faint rustling inside walls at night. A pest-control technician identifies the parent colony and satellite nests, applies targeted bait and non-repellent liquid treatment, and recommends moisture fixes that attracted the ants in the first place.

Termite swarmers appearing inside the house

Finding winged termites (swarmers) indoors — often near windows, light fixtures, or in spider webs — means an active colony is living inside or directly beneath the structure and has matured enough to produce reproductives. Unlike flying ants, termite swarmers have straight antennae, equal-length wings, and a thick waist. A pest-control technician identifies the species, locates mud tubes and colony access points using moisture meters and thermal imaging, applies targeted liquid termiticide or installs a baiting system, and schedules follow-up inspections to confirm elimination.

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Preguntas frecuentes

Preguntas frecuentes

  • What pest control services do you cover?
    We connect you with licensed local pest pros for general pest control (ants, roaches, spiders), termite inspection and treatment, bed bug treatment, rodent control (mice, rats), and wildlife removal (raccoons, squirrels, bats).
  • How often should I have pest control done?
    Most homes do well with quarterly preventive treatments ($40–$70 per visit). After active infestations are eliminated, ongoing prevention is cheaper than reactive treatment. Specialty issues like termites need annual inspections; bed bugs need follow-up treatments at 2–3 week intervals.
  • Is pest control safe around kids and pets?
    Modern pest control uses targeted, low-toxicity products. Most treatments require people and pets to stay off treated surfaces for 2–4 hours. Heat treatment for bed bugs is chemical-free. Always ask your pro for the product safety data sheet (SDS) if you have concerns.
  • How much does pest control cost?
    One-time general pest treatment: $150–$300. Quarterly plans: $40–$70 per visit ($150–$300/year). Termite treatment: $1,200–$3,500. Bed bug whole-home: $1,000–$4,000. Rodent control with exclusion: $300–$800. Wildlife removal: $200–$600 per animal.