Florida Pest Control: What Subtropical Pest Pressure Actually Means

☀️ Florida Updated 2026-05-13 12 min read

Florida is the highest-pressure pest environment in the continental United States. The combination of subtropical-to-tropical climate, year-round humidity, sandy soils, dense vegetation, and rapid suburban growth into former wetlands produces pest pressure that homeowners moving from cooler states routinely underestimate. Pest control in Florida isn't seasonal in any meaningful sense — it's continuous.

This guide covers the pests that drive most Florida pest service calls, the climate factors that make them different from elsewhere, and the regulatory framework (Florida has some of the strictest pest-control disclosure rules in the country).

The pests that matter in Florida

Subterranean and Formosan termites

Florida hosts both eastern subterranean termites and the more aggressive Formosan termite (introduced through ports). Formosan colonies are larger (millions of workers), forage farther, and damage wood faster than native subterranean species. Termite pressure is statewide and year-round; swarming peaks April–July but secondary swarms occur into the fall.

Any home purchase in Florida should include a WDO (wood-destroying organism) inspection — a state-regulated process distinct from a general home inspection. Most homes in southern Florida benefit from a termite bond (ongoing service contract with re-treat warranty).

Drywood termites

In addition to subterranean species, drywood termites are widespread along Florida's coasts. They infest dry, sound wood without soil contact and produce small piles of pellet-shaped frass below entry holes. Treatment is typically structural fumigation (tenting) or localized injection treatment.

American cockroaches ("palmetto bugs")

The large reddish-brown cockroaches Floridians call palmetto bugs are American cockroaches living outdoors year-round and entering buildings through floor drains, plumbing penetrations, and around garage doors. They are an exterior problem, not an interior one — interior baiting accomplishes little. Effective control is perimeter treatment, drain covers, exclusion, and landscape management (clearing palmetto fronds and dense ground covers within 3 feet of the foundation).

German cockroaches

Separately from palmetto bugs, German cockroaches are a problem in Florida apartments and multi-unit housing — same biology and treatment as elsewhere, but the year-round warm climate accelerates reproductive cycles.

Red imported fire ants

RIFA mounds are essentially universal in Florida lawns. Stings cause painful pustules and, in sensitive individuals, severe allergic reactions. Bait programs (broadcast hydramethylnon, indoxacarb, or fipronil baits) twice annually — typically late spring and early fall — provide the best long-term suppression. Mound drench treatments handle individual problem mounds in high-traffic areas.

Mosquitoes

Florida has 80+ mosquito species. Vector concerns include West Nile virus, Eastern equine encephalitis, Zika, dengue, and locally transmitted malaria (the latter recently re-emerged in Florida and Texas). Mosquito control districts operate countywide; residential source reduction (eliminating standing water in bromeliads, gutters, plant saucers, and the corrugated drain pipe issue particularly common in Florida landscaping) provides the highest leverage.

Tropical pests rarely seen elsewhere

Florida-specific or Florida-prominent pests include Cuban tree frogs (an invasive nuisance), Asian needle ants, ghost ants, white-footed ants, kissing bugs in south Florida, and African giant land snails (a periodic invasive). Identification of these requires regional expertise.

Florida-specific regulatory context

Climate adjustments to general advice

Major Florida metros — quick notes

Florida resources

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