Arizona Pest Control: Bark Scorpions, Kissing Bugs, and Year-Round Termites

🌵 Arizona Updated 2026-05-13 11 min read

Arizona's Sonoran desert climate produces the most distinctive pest profile in the continental U.S. Bark scorpions — the only medically significant scorpion species in North America — drive most residential pest concerns in the Phoenix metro. Add year-round termite pressure, kissing bugs, Africanized bees, and the seasonal monsoon-driven mosquito and tick spikes, and Arizona becomes a pest control environment where exclusion matters more than chemistry.

The pests that matter in Arizona

Bark scorpions

The Arizona bark scorpion (Centruroides sculpturatus) is the only U.S. species whose sting is medically significant — particularly in young children, elderly individuals, and people with compromised health. Stings can cause severe pain, numbness, muscle spasms, and rare systemic reactions. The species is concentrated in the Phoenix metro area but ranges throughout Arizona.

Bark scorpions climb walls and ceilings, which makes them more likely to be found indoors than other scorpion species. They fluoresce under UV light — a black-light inspection at night is the most reliable detection method. Sealing entry points (gaps as small as 1/16 inch) is the most effective control. See the scorpion guide.

Termites

Subterranean termites are present statewide; drywood termites occur in some areas. Termite pressure is year-round in the Sonoran desert because soil temperatures rarely drop low enough to slow colonies. Most Arizona homes warrant an annual termite inspection.

Kissing bugs (Triatoma rubida)

Sometimes called "conenose bugs." Active during warm months, especially around outdoor lighting at night. They bite humans painlessly (often while sleeping) and are vectors of Chagas disease, though local transmission is rare. Found in dense vegetation, woodpiles, packrat nests, and adjacent to homes in foothills.

Africanized bees

Established throughout Arizona since the 1990s. Defensive behavior is more pronounced than European honey bees; swarm response and colony removal should be handled by professionals familiar with defensive bees. Outdoor work (gardening, tree trimming, demolition) requires awareness during warm months.

Pack rats (white-throated woodrats)

Native rodents that build large stick-and-debris middens in cacti, under sheds, and inside vehicle engine compartments. They chew wiring (a major problem with parked cars in storage), accumulate household debris, and can introduce hantavirus through urine and droppings. Exclusion and trapping in problem areas; do not relocate.

Cockroaches

American cockroaches ("sewer roaches") are common throughout the metro Phoenix and Tucson sewer systems and enter homes through drains and around plumbing penetrations. German cockroaches occur in apartments. The exterior-treatment approach (rather than interior baiting alone) is appropriate for American cockroaches.

Crickets

Following monsoon rains, large indian-summer cricket populations migrate. Crickets are themselves a nuisance, but they're also a major scorpion food source — large outdoor cricket populations correlate with elevated scorpion pressure.

Recluse spiders (Arizona recluse)

The Arizona recluse (Loxosceles arizonica) is present in central and southern Arizona. Bites are uncommon but warrant medical evaluation if necrotic symptoms develop.

Black widows

Common in garages, sheds, and outdoor electrical boxes statewide.

Climate and the monsoon

Arizona's "monsoon season" (mid-June through September) brings dramatic humidity and rainfall spikes that change pest dynamics:

Arizona regulatory context

Major Arizona metros — quick notes

Arizona-specific advice

Arizona resources

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