Do I Need a Permit for Termite Treatment? in Verenigde Staten
Termite treatment sometimes requires a permit, depending on the method and jurisdiction. Liquid barrier treatments (termiticides injected around foundations) and bait station systems rarely need a per-job permit beyond the operator's pest control license. However, soil pre-treatment of new construction before a slab pour often requires a soil treatment permit from the county. Tent fumigation for drywood termites requires a fumigation permit and neighbor notification in most states. The operator must always hold a valid pest control license with the termite/wood-destroying organism category.
Do you need a permit?
Sometimes
- Permitting authority
- State Department of Agriculture / County Building Department
- Typical fee
- $0–$200 (soil treatment permit); $50–$150 (fumigation notice)
What triggers a permit
- Tent fumigation (whole-structure tenting) for drywood termites
- Soil pre-treatment with termiticides before a new construction slab is poured
- Injecting liquid termiticide within buffer zones of wells, waterways, or aquifers
- Drilling through concrete slabs or foundation walls for sub-slab treatment
Country-specific detail
US termite treatment requirements vary by state. All operators must hold a state pest control license with a termite/wood-destroying organism (WDO) category. Tent fumigation requires a fumigation permit filed with the local fire department and typically 24–48 hours of neighbor notification — California (SPCB) and Florida (DACS) are the strictest. Soil pre-treatment of new construction with termiticides often requires a soil treatment permit from the county building department, with the operator filing a treatment certificate (e.g., FPL-64 form in many states). Liquid barrier treatments and bait station installations on existing structures generally do not require a per-job permit. Termiticide applications near wells must comply with EPA label setback requirements.