Scorpion Control: Sealing, Black Lights, and the Arizona Reality

πŸ¦‚ Scorpions Updated 2026-05-13 11 min read

If you live in the desert Southwest β€” particularly Arizona, the southern half of Nevada, parts of New Mexico, west Texas, and the deep inland valleys of Southern California β€” scorpions are a real residential pest, not a theoretical one. The Arizona bark scorpion (Centruroides sculpturatus) is the only U.S. species whose sting is medically significant, and its range overlaps heavily with the suburban Phoenix metro. Most other U.S. species deliver stings comparable to a wasp.

Effective scorpion control is essentially a building envelope problem: scorpions are excellent at finding the smallest gaps and at climbing surprisingly well. Black-light inspection plus aggressive exclusion produces dramatic reductions; spraying alone produces frustration.

Identification

Common U.S. species:

Why scorpions are inside

Scorpions are nocturnal hunters of insects and small invertebrates. Three reasons they end up in homes:

  1. Following prey. Crickets, cockroaches, beetles, and other insects entering the home draw scorpions after them. Reducing the prey population reduces scorpion pressure.
  2. Moisture. Despite their desert reputation, scorpions need moisture and seek it out, especially in dry interior summer months.
  3. Shelter from heat. Daytime temperatures over 100Β°F drive scorpions to cool harborage, including the cool slab interiors of air-conditioned homes.

The black light advantage

Scorpions fluoresce bright blue-green under ultraviolet (UV-A) light. This is a remarkable inspection advantage no other household pest offers. A 30-watt LED UV flashlight, used on a moonless night outdoors, makes scorpions visible from 20+ feet away as glowing dots against landscaping.

Use the black light to:

Exclusion (the actual fix)

Bark scorpions can squeeze through a gap as small as 1/16 inch β€” about the thickness of a credit card. Sealing has to be thorough:

The building envelope

The landscape

Chemical treatment β€” limited utility

Scorpions are highly resistant to most consumer pesticides because of their thick exoskeleton. A perimeter pyrethroid treatment can knock down some insect prey, indirectly reducing scorpion presence. Direct sprays on visible scorpions are largely ineffective; physical removal is faster.

Professional applications using bifenthrin or cyhalothrin formulations at higher concentrations than consumer products provide modest direct effects, but exclusion remains the dominant intervention. Be skeptical of any pest control contract claiming scorpion elimination through quarterly spraying alone.

If you live in scorpion country with kids

Practical precautions for households with young children or elderly residents in bark scorpion territory:

Arizona bark scorpion stings warrant medical attention, especially in children under 6, elderly individuals, and anyone with severe systemic symptoms (uncontrolled muscle spasms, breathing difficulty, blurred vision). Anascorp antivenom is available at major Southwest hospital emergency departments. Less-severe stings in healthy adults can typically be managed with ice and over-the-counter pain control, but err on the side of medical evaluation if uncertain.

When to call a professional

Frequently asked questions

How long do scorpions live?

3–8 years depending on species. Females produce live young (not eggs), and broods can include 20–40 babies that ride on the mother's back for the first week or two. This is why even one female indoors can become a problem.

Do bark scorpions climb walls and ceilings?

Yes β€” they're excellent climbers and frequently found on textured walls, in light fixtures, and on ceilings. This is why bedrooms in bark scorpion country sometimes have scorpions falling from above. Other species mostly stay on the floor.

Will pets help control scorpions?

Cats sometimes catch and kill scorpions. Chickens are surprisingly effective scorpion predators in outdoor enclosures. Dogs can be stung; most recover with veterinary supportive care, but bark scorpion envenomation in dogs warrants vet evaluation.

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