Subterranean Termites: Reading the Early Warning Signs

Updated 2026-05-02 · 13 min read · Category: Termites

Termites cause an estimated $5 billion in property damage in the United States each year — more than fires, floods, and storms combined in many regions. Most of that damage is done by subterranean termites, which nest in soil and tunnel up into wood through hidden mud tubes. By the time a homeowner notices visible damage from inside a structure, the colony has typically been active for two to ten years.

This is the rare household pest where DIY is not the answer. Termite treatment requires specialized equipment, knowledge of the structure's foundation type, and ongoing monitoring. But understanding the warning signs and knowing what proper treatment looks like protects you from both an active infestation and from low-quality or unnecessary contracts.

Subterranean vs. Drywood vs. Dampwood

Three groups of termites attack structures in North America:

This article focuses on subterranean termites because they are the most common, the most damaging, and the most relevant to the largest number of homeowners.

The Three Warning Signs Most Homeowners Miss

1. Mud Tubes

Subterranean termites build pencil-thin mud tubes (also called shelter tubes) to travel from soil to wood while staying enclosed in a humid, protected environment. Look for these tubes:

An active mud tube will rebuild itself within a few days if you break a small section open. A dormant or abandoned tube will not.

2. Swarmers and Discarded Wings

Once a year — usually after rain in spring or summer — mature termite colonies release winged reproductives ("swarmers" or alates) to start new colonies. Swarmers indoors are nearly always significant: they suggest an established colony already inside or under the structure.

Termite swarmers are commonly mistaken for flying ants. The differences:

FeatureTermiteFlying Ant
AntennaeStraight, beadlikeBent (elbowed)
WaistBroad, no narrowingDistinct narrow waist
WingsFour wings, all equal lengthFour wings, front pair larger

If you find piles of small, equal-length wings near windowsills, exterior door thresholds, or light fixtures, save a few in a sealed bag for a pest professional to identify. This is one of the most common ways homeowners discover an existing infestation.

3. Hollow-Sounding or Damaged Wood

Termites consume wood from the inside out, leaving the painted exterior surface intact. Tap suspect wood with a screwdriver handle. Wood that sounds hollow, that crumbles or flakes when probed, or that shows blistered paint with shallow tunneling beneath warrants inspection. Common spots: door frames near the floor, baseboards, window sills, and the underside of subfloor in crawlspaces.

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Conditions That Attract Termites

You can't make a property completely termite-proof, but you can dramatically reduce the pressure:

Treatment Options — What Actually Works

Two approaches dominate professional termite control:

1. Liquid Termiticide Barriers

A non-repellent termiticide (commonly fipronil, marketed under names like Termidor) is applied as a continuous barrier in the soil around and beneath the structure. Termites entering the treated zone pick up the chemical and carry it back to the colony, where it spreads through grooming and trophallaxis (food sharing). Modern non-repellent products often eliminate the colony rather than just blocking new entry.

Application typically requires drilling small holes through concrete patios, garage floors, and slab perimeters to reach the soil. This is not a DIY project — both because of the equipment required and because most state pesticide regulations restrict the products to licensed applicators.

2. Bait Stations

In-ground bait stations (Sentricon being the best-known brand) are placed every 10–20 feet around the foundation. They contain wood or cellulose lures and are checked regularly. When termite activity is detected, the bait is replaced with a slow-acting growth regulator (commonly noviflumuron or hexaflumuron) that prevents molting and eliminates the colony over weeks to months.

Bait systems require ongoing service contracts but are less invasive than liquid treatment, work well around structures where drilling is impractical, and provide continuous monitoring. Total cost over 10 years is comparable to liquid; the trade-offs are about access, family preferences, and structure type.

What Doesn't Work

Cost Expectations

Treatment costs vary by region, structure size, foundation type, and severity. Typical ranges for a single-family home:

Be cautious of any quote dramatically below these ranges, and any inspection report that shows damage but provides no photographs. Always get a second opinion before signing a multi-year contract on a major treatment.

Annual Inspection Is Worth It

If you live in a moderate-to-high termite pressure area (most of the southern half of the U.S.), an annual professional termite inspection — either standalone or as part of a service contract — is a reasonable expense given how expensive missed termite damage can be. Many home insurance policies do not cover termite damage on the grounds that it is preventable through inspection.

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