Boxelder Bugs & Asian Lady Beetles: The Fall Invader Pair

🐞 Fall invaders Updated 2026-05-13 8 min read

If you watched red-and-black insects pile up on the sunny side of your house last October, you saw boxelder bugs (Boisea trivittata). If you watched orange-and-black "ladybugs" do the same thing β€” except they sometimes bite, leave yellow stains on walls, and smell terrible β€” those were Asian multicolored lady beetles (Harmonia axyridis), a separate but coinciding fall-invader species.

Both species are harmless to humans and structures. Both overwinter in human buildings because that's the warmest sheltered space they can find. Both can be partly excluded with the same approach used for brown marmorated stink bugs. Whether you live near a boxelder tree, a soybean field, or neither, this is one of the most common nuisance pest complaints across the northern half of the U.S.

Identification

Boxelder bugs

Adults are 11–14mm, elongated, black with three red lines on the pronotum (the shield behind the head) and red edges on the folded wings. Juveniles (nymphs) are bright red with developing black wing pads. They emerge from leaf litter and boxelder/maple trees in spring, reproduce through summer, and seek warm overwintering sites in fall.

Asian multicolored lady beetles

Adults are 6–10mm, dome-shaped, orange to red, with variable spotting (from no spots to 19). A diagnostic white "M" or "W" pattern on the pronotum distinguishes them from native lady beetles. They were intentionally released in the U.S. in the 1970s–80s for aphid control and are now widespread. They do bite (a mild pinch, not medically significant) and exude an unpleasant yellowish reflex fluid when disturbed that stains walls and curtains.

The shared problem

Both species spend summer outdoors, then in late September and October seek warm sheltered spots to overwinter as adults. Light-colored south-facing walls warmed by afternoon sun are the preferred landing point. From there they crawl into any gap they can find β€” siding seams, soffit gaps, weep holes, window frames, and chimney chases β€” and end up in attics, wall voids, and occasionally living spaces.

Indoors they are inactive at low temperatures but become active on warm winter days, appearing on south-facing windows. They can't feed or reproduce indoors. In spring they try to escape outdoors; many die in voids first.

Prevention (the same playbook as stink bugs)

Sealing must happen before fall migration begins β€” late summer at the latest.

Exterior pesticide options

A perimeter pyrethroid spray (bifenthrin, lambda-cyhalothrin, deltamethrin) applied to exterior walls in late summer reduces fall migration significantly when paired with sealing. Time the application 1–2 weeks before peak migration in your region β€” typically mid-September in the upper Midwest and Northeast, slightly later further south.

Indoor sprays are essentially useless. The bugs are in voids you can't reach.

Indoor management once they're inside

Outdoor source reduction

If your property includes a boxelder tree (Acer negundo) or female maple trees that drop seeds, you're hosting the breeding population. Removing the tree is the most permanent solution but is rarely worth the cost. Otherwise:

Frequently asked questions

Do they bite?

Boxelder bugs don't. Asian lady beetles can deliver a mild pinch that produces a small pinpoint mark β€” about as painful as a static-electricity shock. Not medically significant.

Why the yellow stains?

The yellow fluid lady beetles release is reflex bleeding (hemolymph) β€” a defensive behavior. The fluid contains pyrazines responsible for the smell. It will stain light-colored fabrics and walls. Clean promptly with mild soap and water.

Will the population get worse each year?

It depends on outdoor breeding success and weather. Some years are worse than others. Cumulative damage to your exclusion (worn weatherstripping, settling foundations creating new gaps) can make things worse over time even with stable outdoor populations.

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