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πŸ”” Free Monthly Alerts

What Pests Are Active
In Your Area Right Now?

Enter your zip code. See what's active this month, what's coming next, and sign up for free monthly forecasts delivered to your inbox.

Works for all 50 U.S. states Β· Or select region manually
Enter your zip code above to see what pests are active in your area right now.
πŸ“… 12-Month Pest Activity Forecast

Enter your zip code above to generate your regional forecast.

Legend: Inactive Low Moderate High Peak
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Your first forecast arrives on the 1st of next month.

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πŸ“¬ Sample Monthly Alert Email
πŸ›
Your May 2026 Pest Forecast β€” Northeast
From: alerts@pestcontrolbasics.com

Hey there! Here's what's happening with pests in your area this month and what to do about it.

🦟
Mosquitoes
Standing water check this weekend. Empty saucers, birdbaths, gutters.
Peak Now
πŸ•·οΈ
Ticks
Daily tick checks after outdoor activity. Treat clothing with permethrin.
Peak Now
🐜
Carpenter Ants
Swarm season active. Inspect wood structures for sawdust piles.
High
🐝
Yellow Jackets
Nests building β€” still small. Locate and mark now before they grow.
Rising
πŸ’‘ Pro Tip: May is peak termite swarm season in the Northeast. If you see winged insects near windows after rain, check for equal-length wings (termite) vs unequal (ant). ID guide β†’
⏰
2–4 Week Warning
Alerts arrive before pest peaks so you can act proactively.
πŸ“
ZIP Code Calibrated
Forecasts match your climate region β€” not generic national data.
🎯
Your Pests Only
Choose which pests matter. We only alert on what you care about.

Why Seasonal Pest Alerts Give You an Advantage

Most homeowners react to pests after they appear. But pest control professionals know that nearly every pest follows a predictable seasonal calendar β€” ants in spring, mosquitoes in summer, stink bugs in fall, mice in winter. The pests change, but the calendar doesn't. Our seasonal alert system puts that professional knowledge in your hands before you need it.

When you enter your zip code, we identify your climate region and show you exactly what's active right now, what's ramping up, and what prevention windows are currently open. Sign up for monthly emails and you'll receive a forecast on the 1st of every month with specific action items and product recommendations tailored to your region.

The advantage is timing. Treating for mosquitoes two weeks before peak is far more effective than treating after they're already biting. Sealing your home against stink bugs in early September prevents thousands from entering. Setting mouse traps in October catches them before they establish territory. Every pest has a window, and our alerts make sure you never miss it.

Derek Giordano
Reviewed by Derek Giordano
Former Licensed Pest Control Company Owner Β· Florida CPO

All seasonal timing and pest activity data calibrated from real field experience. Full credentials β†’

How to get the most out of Seasonal Pest Alerts

This tool is a region-specific alert system that flags which pests are entering peak activity in your area each month. Like any pest control tool, it works best when you use it for the right job and pair it with the rest of what you know about your situation.

Best used for: homeowners who want timely reminders rather than a static annual calendar β€” alerts incorporate current-year weather data so a late-warming spring shifts the alert window appropriately.

Less useful for: individual property risk assessment β€” alerts cover regional pest pressure, not site-specific conducive conditions.

The general pattern that works across all of our tools: use the tool to narrow the problem, then verify against a dedicated pest profile or treatment guide before you spend money or apply product. Tools are decision-support, not decision-replacement β€” they're meant to make you a more efficient researcher, not to short-circuit the research entirely.

A practical workflow most readers find useful: start with identification (so you actually know what you're dealing with), move to the relevant pest profile to understand biology and treatment options, then run any product or cost decisions through the appropriate tool before purchasing. Working in that order β€” identify, understand, decide β€” produces consistently better outcomes than jumping straight to product selection or service quotes.

Where Seasonal Pest Alerts fits in a broader pest control approach

Single-tool thinking is one of the most common patterns we see fail in DIY pest control. A spray alone, a bait alone, an inspection alone, or any one tool's output alone is rarely the whole answer. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) β€” the framework most professional pest control programs follow β€” combines monitoring, identification, source reduction, exclusion, and targeted treatment into a sequence rather than relying on any single intervention.

In an IPM-aligned workflow, this tool sits at one specific stage. Use its output as one input into the broader decision, alongside what you can see in your home, what season it is, what you've tried already, and what's realistic for your time and budget. The most effective DIY practitioners we've worked with treat tools as research aids rather than oracles β€” the tool surfaces options and helps narrow choices, but the final decision belongs to the person who can see the actual conditions on the ground.

Two specific cross-checks consistently improve results. First, before committing to a treatment plan suggested by any tool, walk through the affected area with fresh eyes looking for conducive conditions β€” moisture, food access, harborage β€” that the tool can't see. Fixing those is often more impactful than the chemistry. Second, after running the tool, scan the related pest profile for the section labeled "Common DIY mistakes" β€” those callouts catch the recurring application errors that defeat otherwise correct product selection.

This site publishes hundreds of pages of supporting context for exactly this reason. The tools are entry points; the depth lives in the pest profiles, treatment guides, and seasonal references those tools link to.

Related resources on this site

The tools, guides, and pest profiles below pair well with Seasonal Pest Alerts and are worth bookmarking if you're working through a pest problem actively. Each is maintained as a standalone reference that goes deeper than the tool itself can on a single screen.

For broader context, the DIY Pest Control Guide walks through the full sequence β€” identification, treatment selection, application technique, follow-up monitoring β€” that ties individual tools together into a coherent program. The Integrated Pest Management Guide covers the professional framework that informs how the editorial team thinks about treatment sequencing across all of these tools.

All recommendations on this site are reviewed by Derek Giordano, a former pest control company owner and previously licensed Pest Control Operator in Florida. Articles draw from EPA, CDC, and university extension sources; product reviews reflect editorial testing and aggregated user-reported outcomes rather than manufacturer marketing claims.

Frequently asked questions

How are alert windows determined?

Each pest has documented degree-day or temperature-threshold triggers in pest management literature. The alert system pulls current-year regional climate data and compares it against those thresholds, flagging the window when activity typically begins.

How are alert windows different from a static calendar?

A static calendar tells you 'mosquitoes become active in May' for your region. The alert system tells you 'mosquito activity threshold reached in your zip code on May 14th, two weeks later than the regional average', which is materially more useful for treatment timing.

Why do some pests not get alerts in some years?

Drought years suppress mosquito populations; mild winters extend rodent activity throughout the year (no clear 'season' to alert on); regional anomalies happen. The alert system is honest about uncertainty rather than firing alerts for the sake of consistency.

Building a pest management calendar for residential properties

Most pest management problems become much easier to handle with a simple seasonal calendar mapping the high-leverage interventions to their optimal windows. A representative annual calendar for temperate-climate residential properties: February through March, conduct exterior exclusion audit and address gaps before spring pressure begins; March through April, schedule outdoor preventive treatment if appropriate (foundation perimeter, mosquito source reduction setup), inspect for early wasp nest construction; May through July, mosquito source reduction maintenance (weekly standing water check), tick prevention if regionally relevant; August through October, fall rodent exclusion check, schedule pest control inspection if on annual service, address overwintering pest entry points (occasional invaders); November through January, indoor monitoring (sticky traps for pantry pests and incidental species), assess prior year's pressure to plan next year's focus. A calendar entry per month, taking 15-30 minutes most months, produces dramatically better outcomes than reactive treatment after problems become visible.

How weather forecasting fits into pest treatment scheduling

Weather isn't usually considered part of pest control planning, but it's one of the variables with the largest effect on treatment outcomes. Rain within four hours of an outdoor liquid application washes off most surface residue except specifically rainfast formulations. Wind above roughly ten miles per hour produces drift that reduces target coverage and increases off-target deposition. Temperatures above the upper limit on the product label (typically 85-90Β°F for many residential products) cause volatility losses and reduced binding. Temperatures below about 50Β°F slow knockdown and can produce uneven residual films. The practical scheduling rule: check the next 24-hour forecast before any outdoor treatment, prefer mornings on calm days, and reschedule rather than apply in marginal conditions. Indoor treatments are less weather-dependent but still affected by humidity (bait acceptance) and HVAC airflow (vapor distribution and re-deposition).

Integrated pest management for households: the practical hierarchy

Integrated pest management (IPM) is a structured approach to pest control developed for agricultural and commercial settings that translates well to residential use. The hierarchy: prevention first (sanitation, exclusion, habitat modification to make conditions unfavorable for pests), monitoring second (sticky monitors, visual inspection, identifying pests at low population before infestation establishes), targeted intervention third (using the least disruptive effective method against an identified pest in an identified location), and broad chemical treatment last (when targeted approaches have failed or aren't feasible). The hierarchy matters because higher-level interventions are durable and address root causes, while lower-level chemical interventions address symptoms and require repeat application. Most residential pest control reverses this hierarchy β€” chemical treatment first, sometimes prevention later β€” and produces the predictable consequence of recurring problems. Households that adopt the IPM hierarchy (often without using the term) generally describe spending less time and money on pest issues over years even though specific incidents might take more thought to address than spray-and-forget approaches.

The role of caulk, sealant, and exclusion in long-term pest control

Sealing entry points is the most underrated pest control activity in residential settings, partly because it produces no immediate visible result and partly because it feels like home repair rather than pest control. The yield is substantial: a thoroughly sealed structure with appropriate exterior caulking, intact weatherstripping, sealed utility penetrations, and screen integrity has dramatically lower pest pressure than the same structure without those interventions. Specific high-yield targets include gaps around dryer vents, electrical and plumbing penetrations through exterior walls, gaps where siding meets foundation, mortar joints in older brick, weep holes in newer brick (which should be screened, not sealed), garage door bottom seals (where rodents commonly enter), and the gap above door thresholds where many ants and small insects pass. Materials matter: silicone-based caulk for moisture areas, polyurethane sealant for foundation cracks, copper mesh for rodent exclusion at utility penetrations (steel wool degrades), and 1/4-inch hardware cloth for larger openings. A weekend of methodical sealing in spring or fall β€” when activity is moderate and weather permits exterior work β€” produces lasting reduction that no single treatment matches.

Choosing a pest control company: questions worth asking

Pest control companies vary substantially in approach, training, and pricing, and the questions to ask before signing a contract often aren't the obvious ones. Worth asking: what's the technician's training and certification (state pest control certification is the floor; advanced training in IPM, structural inspection, or specific pest specialties is meaningful additional credentialing); what does the service include beyond visiting and spraying (inspection, monitoring, exclusion recommendations, follow-up scheduling); what guarantees apply if pests return between visits; what's the protocol for hard-to-resolve issues (some companies escalate to senior technicians or supervisors; others repeat the same approach); what active ingredients are used and whether the company will use specific products on request (homeowners with chemical sensitivities, pollinator gardens, or other concerns may want specific products); and what's the contract structure (per-visit, annual, multi-year). Worth less than expected: brand recognition and advertising spend (large national chains and small local operators both produce excellent and mediocre service); 'green' or 'organic' labels (which mean different things to different companies and often don't correspond to specific product or practice differences); price alone (typical pricing variance is modest, and the floor of cheap options often includes poor service).

Understanding pest forecast reports and what they signal

Pest forecast reports β€” issued by some state agricultural agencies, cooperative extension services, and commercial pest control companies β€” are an underutilized resource for homeowners who want to anticipate rather than react to seasonal pest activity. These reports typically combine historical pest data, current weather conditions, and growing degree day calculations to predict when specific pests will emerge or peak in specific regions. A tick forecast for an upcoming spring season, a mosquito pressure forecast after a wet winter, a termite swarm prediction for a specific week in the Southeast β€” these aren't speculation but reasonably calibrated predictions based on biological timing. For homeowners, the value is in scheduling preventive treatment and personal protection to match the predicted high-pressure windows rather than reacting after problems have established. Subscribing to a regional pest newsletter from a cooperative extension service or state agriculture department is free or low cost and produces these forecasts during relevant seasons. The information is dramatically more actionable than generic pest control content because it's calibrated to your specific region and current conditions.

Pesticide residual life and reapplication intervals

The residual life of a pesticide is one of the most misunderstood properties in household pest management. Active ingredients vary widely in how long they remain bioavailable on a treated surface, and the same active can behave very differently depending on substrate, exposure to sunlight and rain, temperature, and the formulation it's carried in. A pyrethroid applied to a porous masonry surface in full sun will degrade in days; the same active in a microencapsulated formulation on a protected interior surface may remain effective for months. Understanding this is the difference between an evidence-based treatment schedule and one driven by superstition. Reapplying too soon wastes product and increases selection pressure for resistant individuals; reapplying too late creates gaps in coverage during which pest populations rebound. The right answer depends on specific conditions and is not the same number printed on the bottle in all circumstances. Field experience and willingness to monitor for early signs of pest return are what calibrate the schedule. The label is a guide, but conditions in front of you are the real input.

Pest control and HOA dynamics: where they overlap

Homeowners' associations vary widely in how they engage with pest control, and the variations create practical issues that affect individual treatment decisions. Some HOAs maintain common-area pest treatment programs that handle perimeter spraying, mosquito treatment, or rodent monitoring on shared property; others leave all pest control to individual homeowners. Some have rules about treatment products or notification requirements; others don't. Some include treatment in the HOA fee structure; others bill separately. For homeowners in HOA communities dealing with persistent pest pressure, understanding what the HOA does and doesn't do is the first step in figuring out what additional individual action is needed. For HOAs without coordinated programs in areas with significant pressure, organizing a neighborhood-level treatment plan often produces dramatically better results than individual treatment efforts that don't coordinate timing or coverage. The conversations are sometimes politically awkward in HOA contexts, but the underlying problem β€” that some pests are neighborhood-scale and unit-level treatment can't address them β€” is structural rather than personal. Bringing the issue to an HOA meeting with concrete proposals tends to produce more constructive responses than complaint-style framing.