πŸ§ͺ PESTICIDE LIBRARY

Active Ingredients & Brand Names

130 pesticide pages organized by OTC/DIY, Licensed Only, and Natural/Organic. Cross-referenced to all brand names β€” know when you're buying the same chemical twice.

πŸ“š Guides ⚑ Pyrethroids 🧬 Neonics 🎯 Baits & IGRs 🌿 Natural / Organic 🫧 Essential Oils 🌾 Herbicides πŸ„ Fungicides 🐭 Rodenticides
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Don't buy duplicates. Demand CS and Cyzmic CS are both 9.7% lambda-cyhalothrin. Talstar P and Bifen IT are both 7.9% bifenthrin. Termidor SC and Taurus SC are both 9.1% fipronil. Each product page shows every brand name β€” so you know what you're actually buying before you purchase.
πŸ“š Educational Guides & Comparisons (14 pages)
Strategy guides, comparisons, and educational resources. Start here if you are new to pest control products.
How to Read a Pesticide Label
Federal law requires label compliance
Pesticide Safety & PPE Guide
What to wear, spill response, pet safety
IPM: Integrated Pest Management
The professional 4-step approach
Dust vs Liquid vs Bait vs Granular
Which formulation for which job
Pyrethrin vs Pyrethroid Comparison
Natural vs synthetic β€” key differences
Borax vs Boric Acid Comparison
Same boron, different potency
Complete Natural Pest Control Guide
What works, what doesn't β€” honest assessment
Repellent Comparison: DEET vs Picaridin vs OLE
Side-by-side effectiveness chart
Rodenticide Comparison Guide
5 types compared β€” safety and efficacy
Complete Ant Bait Strategy Guide
Species-to-bait matching, placement rules
Complete Cockroach Gel Bait Guide
The $25 professional secret
Pre-Emergent Herbicide Timing Guide
The forsythia trick and regional timing
Pendimethalin (Prowl)
Most economical pre-emergent
Dithiopyr (Dimension)
Forgiving β€” early post-emergent activity
Prodiamine (Barricade)
Longest-lasting pre-emergent
Safety After Spraying
Re-entry intervals and family safety
Complete Neem Oil Guide
Triple-action: insecticide + fungicide + miticide
PBO Synergist Explained
How synergists make insecticides 3-10x stronger
Complete Bed Bug Treatment Guide
Multi-modal professional approach
Termiticide Comparison Guide
Liquid vs bait vs foam vs wood treatment
Complete Mosquito Control Guide
5-layer professional strategy for homeowners
Complete Flea Treatment Guide
Multi-step protocol β€” pet + indoor + outdoor
⚑ Pyrethroids (Synthetic) (15 pages)
Synthetic versions of natural pyrethrins. The most widely used insecticide class for home pest control.
Bifenthrin
Talstar P, Bifen IT
Bifenthrin (Full Guide)
Complete mixing rates and applications
Permethrin
Permethrin SFR, Sawyer
Permethrin (Full Guide)
Detailed guide with clothing treatment
Permethrin Clothing Treatment
CDC/military tick protection
Cypermethrin
Demon WP, Cynoff
Cyfluthrin
Tempo SC Ultra
Deltamethrin
Suspend SC, DeltaDust
Delta Dust
Only waterproof insecticide dust
Lambda-Cyhalothrin
Demand CS, Cyzmic CS
Lambda-Cyhalothrin (Full)
Complete guide
Zeta-Cypermethrin
Mustang Maxx
Etofenprox
Fish-safe pyrethroid alternative
Pyrethrin (Natural)
PyGanic, Evergreen β€” OMRI organic
Pyrethrin Aerosols
CB-80, PT 565 β€” quick knockdown
🧬 Neonicotinoids & Newer Systemics (11 pages)
Systemic insecticides absorbed by plants. Highly effective but pollinator concerns.
Neonicotinoids Overview
Class overview and pollinator debate
Imidacloprid
Dominion, Merit, Bayer Tree & Shrub
Imidacloprid (Full Guide)
Complete guide
Imidacloprid Usage Guide
Application guide
Clothianidin
Arena, Grub-Ex
Thiamethoxam
Meridian, Actara
Dinotefuran
Alpine WSG, Safari
Acetamiprid
Assail, TriStar
Cyantraniliprole (Diamide)
Acelepryn β€” bee-safe grub control
Sulfoxaflor
Transform β€” neonicotinoid resistance breaker
Flupyradifurone (Sivanto)
Bee-safe systemic insecticide
🎯 Baits, IGRs & Non-Repellents (17 pages)
Colony-elimination products and growth regulators. The professional approach to lasting control.
Fipronil
Termidor, Taurus β€” transfer effect
Fipronil (Full Guide)
Complete guide
Fipronil Bait Products
Maxforce FC
Fipronil Usage Guide
Application guide
Indoxacarb
Advion, Arilon
Indoxacarb (Full Guide)
Complete guide
Indoxacarb Bait
Advion Cockroach/Ant Gel
Hydramethylnon
Amdro, Siege
Chlorfenapyr
Phantom β€” bed bugs
Methoprene (IGR)
Precor, Altosid
Methoprene (Full Guide)
Complete guide
Pyriproxyfen (IGR)
Nylar, Distance
Pyriproxyfen (Full Guide)
Complete guide
Gentrol IGR (Hydroprene)
Cockroach & stored product IGR
Diflubenzuron
Dimilin β€” chitin synthesis inhibitor
Temprid SC
Dual-mode bed bug treatment
CrossFire Bed Bug
Clothianidin + metofluthrin
🌿 Natural, Organic & Biological (22 pages)
OMRI-listed, botanically derived, and biological control agents. Many approved for organic production.
Spinosad
Conserve, Monterey β€” OMRI organic
Spinosad/Spinetoram
Entrust, Delegate
Spinosad Fire Ant Bait
Conserve fire ant
Neem Oil / Azadirachtin
Azamax, Neem Bliss
Neem Oil (Full Guide)
Complete neem guide
Azadirachtin
Azatin XL, Neemix
Bt kurstaki (Caterpillars)
DiPel, Thuricide β€” OMRI
Bt israelensis (Mosquitoes)
Mosquito Dunks/Bits β€” OMRI
Diatomaceous Earth
Physical kill β€” no resistance
CimeXa Silica Gel
10x more effective than DE for bed bugs
Boric Acid
Harris, Niban β€” dual mode
Boric Acid & CimeXa Comparison
Dust comparison
Boracare / Tim-bor
Borate wood treatment
Insecticidal Soap
Safer Brand, M-Pede β€” OMRI
Horticultural Oil
Dormant and summer oils
Kaolin Clay (Surround)
Physical barrier β€” OMRI
Beneficial Nematodes
Grub and flea larvae biocontrol
Milky Spore Disease
20-year Japanese beetle control
Metarhizium Fungus
Tick and grub biocontrol
Bacillus subtilis Biofungicide
Serenade β€” organic disease control
Beauveria bassiana
BotaniGard β€” fungal bioinsecticide
Aprehend (Beauveria)
Biological bed bug treatment
🫧 Essential Oils & Plant Repellents (12 pages)
Plant-derived oils for repelling and controlling pests. Honest effectiveness ratings.
Essential Oils Overview
What works vs internet folklore
Peppermint Oil
Spiders, mice β€” toxic to cats
Cedar Oil
Fleas, moths, ticks
Citronella
Mosquito repellent β€” moderate
Clove Oil / Eugenol
Ants, roaches β€” strong contact kill
Geraniol
Top natural mosquito repellent
Lemongrass Oil
Related to citronella
Rosemary Oil
Aphids, mites, spider mites
Capsaicin (Hot Pepper)
Deer, squirrel, animal repellent
Oil of Lemon Eucalyptus (OLE)
CDC-recommended natural repellent
DEET
Gold standard insect repellent
Picaridin
Odorless DEET alternative
🌾 Herbicides & Weed Control (4 pages)
Selective and non-selective herbicides for lawns, gardens, and brush control.
Glyphosate (Roundup)
Non-selective β€” kills all plants
2,4-D Selective Herbicide
Broadleaf lawn weed killer
Dicamba
Tough weeds β€” extreme drift risk
MCPP/Mecoprop
The third ingredient in 3-way lawn herbicides
Triclopyr (Crossbow)
Brush, poison ivy, stumps
πŸ„ Fungicides (5 pages)
Disease control for lawns, gardens, and ornamentals.
Copper Fungicide
Organic β€” blight, mildew
Sulfur Fungicide
Organic β€” mildew, mites
Propiconazole
Brown patch, dollar spot β€” systemic
Myclobutanil (Immunox)
Rose black spot, apple scab
Chlorothalonil (Daconil)
Broadest spectrum contact fungicide
🐭 Rodenticides (8 pages)
Rat and mouse control products. Always use tamper-resistant bait stations.
Brodifacoum
Final Blox β€” strongest anticoagulant
Bromadiolone
Contrac β€” 2nd gen anticoagulant
Bromethalin
Fastrac β€” neurotoxic, fast kill
Diphacinone
Ditrac β€” 1st gen, lower secondary risk
Zinc Phosphide
Acute kill, lowest secondary poisoning
Cholecalciferol (Vitamin D3)
Growing alternative to anticoagulants
Metaldehyde (Slug Bait)
Effective but toxic to dogs
Iron Phosphate (Slug Bait)
Pet-safe slug control
🏠 Termite-Specific Products (3 pages)
Termiticides, bait systems, and wood treatments.
Hexaflumuron (Sentricon)
Colony elimination bait system
Noviflumuron (Recruit HD)
Next-gen termite bait
Sulfuryl Fluoride (Vikane)
Structural fumigation gas
πŸ“‹ Other Active Ingredients (10 pages)
Additional active ingredients and specialty products.
Acephate
Orthene β€” fire ants, ornamentals
Carbaryl (Sevin)
Broad-spectrum carbamate
Chlorantraniliprole
Acelepryn, Coragen β€” grubs
Malathion
Broad-spectrum organophosphate
Abamectin
Avid β€” mites, leafminers
Abamectin (Full Guide)
Complete guide
Emamectin Benzoate
TREE-age β€” tree injection
Methomyl Fly Bait
Golden Malrin
DDT (Historical)
Banned 1972 β€” educational
Indoxacarb vs Spinosad
Comparison
βš–οΈ Educational use only. The product label is the law under FIFRA (7 U.S.C. Β§ 136). Always read your complete label before mixing or applying any pesticide. Some applications require a state pesticide applicator license. Full disclaimer β†’
πŸ“š Sources: EPA Pesticide Labels Β· NPIC Pesticide Info
Published: Jan 1, 2025 Β· Updated: Apr 7, 2026

Active ingredient classes and rotation principles

Pesticide active ingredients are organized into classes based on their mode of action β€” the biological mechanism through which they affect target pests. The EPA mode-of-action (MoA) classification (and the analogous IRAC classification used internationally for insecticides) labels products by their MoA group, which is the relevant grouping for resistance management. Common residential MoA classes include pyrethroids (group 3, affecting sodium channels), neonicotinoids (group 4, affecting acetylcholine receptors), spinosyns (group 5, separate acetylcholine mechanism), insect growth regulators (group 7, hormone disruption), avermectins (group 6, chloride channels), and several others. Rotating among MoA classes β€” not just product brands β€” is the resistance management practice that matters. A homeowner using a pyrethroid product for two seasons then switching to another pyrethroid brand has not rotated meaningfully; switching to a spinosyn or neonicotinoid would be a real rotation. Product labels typically list the IRAC group number on the front panel.

Reading reviews of pest control products critically

Online reviews of pest control products are noisier than reviews in most categories because outcomes depend heavily on application and identification β€” both of which are usually wrong when DIY treatment fails. A one-star review saying "didn't work on bedbugs" often reflects insufficient coverage, untreated harborage, or a misidentified pest, not product failure. Reviews are most useful when they describe specific application conditions (substrate, dilution, target pest stage, environmental conditions) and least useful when they're brief judgments without context. Independent testing from Consumer Reports, university entomology trial publications, and the EPA's BEAD (Biological and Economic Analysis Division) reports give more reliable efficacy data than aggregated retailer reviews. For consumer products, the EPA registration alone confirms basic safety and that the product does what the label claims; outperformance among registered products is usually a matter of formulation choice for the specific substrate and pest.

Pesticide rotation and the resistance management problem

Resistance management β€” using multiple active ingredients in sequence so that no single mode of action selects for resistant individuals β€” is standard practice in agricultural and commercial pest control but rarely makes it into residential treatment decisions. The underlying concern is real: chronic use of a single pyrethroid product against bed bugs has produced widespread pyrethroid resistance, with some populations now showing resistance factors of 1000x or more. The same pattern is documented in German cockroach resistance to chlorpyrifos and other historical actives, mosquito resistance to organophosphates in heavy-use regions, and house fly resistance across multiple compound classes. For residential treatment, the practical implication is to avoid using the same active ingredient repeatedly across multiple treatment cycles; rotating between products in different chemical families (e.g., pyrethroid β†’ neonicotinoid β†’ insect growth regulator β†’ carbamate, or whatever subset is appropriate to the target pest) reduces selection pressure and preserves efficacy. The product label specifies the active ingredient family, allowing rotation choices to be made on actual chemistry rather than brand name.

Trap and bait psychology: why placement beats product choice

Across pest categories, placement is more important than the specific brand or formulation chosen, and the diagnostic data backs this up. A mediocre bait placed in the correct location outperforms a premium bait placed wrong; a basic snap trap on a runway outperforms a designer electronic trap in the middle of a room. The underlying reason is pest behavior: most pests follow predictable physical patterns β€” walls, edges, vertical surfaces, harborage-to-food routes β€” and traps or baits intersecting those patterns get encountered, while traps placed for human convenience often don't. Practical placement principles that apply across pest types: along walls rather than in open spaces, between harborage and food/water sources, near observed activity rather than in 'symmetric' patterns, and in higher density (more units, closer together) than feels intuitively right. Cockroach gels go in corners and crevices, not on open surfaces; rodent traps go perpendicular to walls with trigger toward the wall; pheromone traps for moths go where moth flight has been observed, not centrally; ant baits go on observed trails, not where ants are 'expected.' Spending time observing pest behavior before deploying traps almost always pays back.

Application timing within the day and weather conditions

Pesticide applications produce significantly different results depending on application timing, and matching application to conditions improves outcomes substantially. For outdoor liquid applications, early morning (after dew has evaporated, before pollinators are active) and late evening (after pollinators have stopped foraging, before evening dew) produce best results: temperatures are moderate, wind is typically lower, and non-target exposure is reduced. Mid-day applications during high temperatures cause volatility losses and faster degradation. For interior treatments, timing depends on the pest: cockroach baiting works at any time but should follow rather than precede cleaning; bed bug treatments need to follow vacuuming and clutter reduction; ant baits work best when active trails are present, which often means specific times of day for specific species. Rain within 4 hours of outdoor liquid application washes off most surface residue except specifically rainfast formulations; checking the next 24-hour forecast before any outdoor treatment is the basic discipline that prevents this loss. Temperatures above 90Β°F or below 50Β°F outside the product label's recommended range produce reduced efficacy.

Pesticide drift and the neighbor dimension

Pesticide drift β€” the off-target movement of applied product through air, water, or runoff β€” is an under-discussed dimension of residential pesticide use, but it's an increasingly common source of conflict between neighbors and a real factor in the cumulative environmental load of pesticide use. Foliar sprays applied in even light wind drift further than most homeowners expect, particularly with finer droplet sizes. Granular products applied near property lines wash into adjacent properties in significant rainfall. Mosquito fogging can move across multiple properties depending on conditions. The implications are partly legal β€” drift onto neighboring property without consent has been the basis of successful nuisance claims in some jurisdictions β€” and partly ethical. Applying products only in low-wind conditions, choosing coarser droplet sizes when possible, using granulars rather than sprays near property lines, and timing applications to avoid imminent rainfall all reduce drift. For homeowners concerned about pesticide exposure from neighbors' applications, the productive conversation is usually about timing and product choice rather than about pesticide use in general, and approaching it that way tends to produce cooperation rather than escalation.

How regional pest pressure should shape what you buy

The retail pest control aisle is largely undifferentiated by region, but pest pressure is enormously regional, and the disconnect leads to predictable purchasing mistakes. A homeowner in the Gulf Coast facing year-round subterranean termite pressure and large peridomestic cockroach populations has dramatically different needs from a homeowner in the upper Midwest facing rodent invasion in October and bed bugs in apartments. The product mix that makes sense for each is different, the level of investment that's justified is different, and the cadence of application is different. Generic shopping advice and product reviews tend to wash out these regional patterns by averaging across users. The better approach is to identify the two or three pests that actually drive pressure in your specific area, then build a product and treatment plan around those rather than around the broad category. Local cooperative extension publications, state agricultural department pest fact sheets, and regional pest control company blog content tend to be more useful sources of guidance than national review sites, precisely because they're calibrated to the conditions you're actually treating.

Reduced-risk pesticide selection: a category worth knowing

The EPA's reduced-risk pesticide program identifies active ingredients and formulations that meet specific criteria for lower toxicity to non-target organisms, reduced potential for groundwater contamination, lower likelihood of resistance development, or better compatibility with integrated pest management. Products in this category aren't free of toxicity β€” they're pesticides, and all pesticides have some toxic profile β€” but they represent the lower end of the risk distribution within their pest categories. For homeowners who want to use pesticides but are concerned about minimizing exposure and environmental impact, looking for products with reduced-risk actives is a defensible filter. Examples include some of the diamide insecticides, spinosyns, and certain microbial products. The catch is that retail availability lags behind the professional market for many reduced-risk products, and consumer pesticide aisles still skew heavily toward older pyrethroid and carbamate formulations. For homeowners willing to source products from agricultural supply channels or work with a pest control company that uses these products, the option exists; for those buying off the shelf at typical retail, the choices are narrower.