Georgia Pest Control: Termites, Fire Ants, and the Humid Southeast
Georgia's humid subtropical climate sits in the middle of the Southeast's high-pressure pest zone. Atlanta and the Piedmont region experience cool-but-mild winters and hot humid summers; coastal Georgia (Savannah, Brunswick) has near year-round pest activity comparable to North Florida. The pest profile described here applies broadly to Alabama, South Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and northern Florida as well.
The pests that matter in Georgia
Subterranean termites
Georgia is in one of the heaviest subterranean termite pressure zones in the U.S. The eastern subterranean termite (Reticulitermes flavipes) is the dominant species; the Formosan termite is established in coastal areas and slowly expanding inland. A termite bond is essentially standard for Georgia homeowners — most lenders require active termite warranty for closing.
Red imported fire ants
RIFA is endemic across the entire state. Mounds in lawns, parks, and roadsides are unavoidable. Twice-yearly broadcast bait programs (spring and fall) are the residential standard. Stings are common; severe allergic reactions warrant medical attention.
Mosquitoes
Georgia experiences high mosquito pressure from late spring through October. West Nile virus is present statewide. The Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus) is a particularly aggressive daytime biter common in suburban yards. Source reduction (eliminating standing water — including the corrugated drain pipe issue common in Georgia landscaping) is the highest-leverage intervention.
American cockroaches
"Palmetto bugs" in coastal Georgia, "water bugs" in the Piedmont — large American cockroaches living outdoors and entering through plumbing penetrations and drains. Exterior treatment + drain management + exclusion is the right approach.
German cockroaches
Common in apartments and older homes. Same biology as elsewhere; standard bait + IGR program applies.
Brown recluse spiders
Range covers most of Georgia, though densities are lower than in Arkansas, Missouri, and Tennessee. Common in undisturbed storage areas. Generally not a panic-level concern but warrants awareness.
Black widows
Common in outdoor storage, garages, and woodpiles. Same identification and management as elsewhere.
Kudzu bug
The kudzu bug (Megacopta cribraria) is an invasive species established in Georgia since the late 2000s. Like brown marmorated stink bugs, it congregates on light-colored south-facing walls in fall and enters homes to overwinter. Same exclusion approach as stink bugs.
Wood roaches and outdoor pests
In rural and wooded Georgia areas, smoky-brown cockroaches, wood roaches, and various beetles enter homes from adjacent forest. Tick exposure is significant — particularly lone star ticks and American dog ticks.
Climate considerations
- The growing season is long — termite, ant, and mosquito activity runs March–November in most of the state, year-round in coastal areas.
- Summer heat and humidity drive German cockroach populations indoors and increase rodent moisture-seeking behavior.
- Tropical storm/hurricane events trigger mosquito and tick population spikes 1–3 weeks later.
- Mild winter rain keeps soil termite activity continuous in southern Georgia.
Georgia regulatory context
- Georgia Department of Agriculture, Structural Pest Control Section regulates pest control operators. License verification available online.
- Georgia Wood Infestation Report is the state's required pre-purchase termite inspection report. Common in real estate transactions; only state-licensed inspectors can provide them.
- Termite bond renewal — bond contracts vary by company. Read carefully; some bonds include only retreat coverage while others include damage repair.
- Mosquito management — many Georgia counties operate mosquito control programs; check with your county.
Major Georgia metros — quick notes
- Atlanta metro — heavy termite pressure, fire ants, mosquitoes; growing suburban encroachment into wildland adds tick exposure.
- Savannah and the Coast — Formosan termites, year-round mosquito pressure, palmetto bugs, sand gnats (a regional biting midge).
- Augusta — typical Piedmont pest profile.
- Columbus / South Georgia — closer to North Florida pest pressure.
- North Georgia mountains — cooler climate; pest pressure shifts to more typical Appalachian profile (cluster flies, mice, occasional wildlife).
Georgia resources
- UGA Cooperative Extension — county offices, pest identification, and Georgia-specific recommendations.
- Georgia Department of Agriculture — pest control licensing and consumer complaints.
- UGA Urban Entomology — applied research on Atlanta-area pest issues.