Interactive tool

The 12-month pest calendar.

When each pest is most active across the year — calibrated for temperate-climate U.S. zones. Use it to time inspections before peak pressure, schedule bait rotations, and stop treating things that are about to go dormant on their own.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
🐜 Ants
L
M
H
P
P
H
H
M
L
🪳 Cockroaches
M
M
M
H
H
P
P
P
H
M
M
M
🐭 House mice
H
H
M
L
L
L
M
H
P
P
🐀 Rats
M
M
M
M
L
L
L
M
H
P
P
H
🪵 Subt. termites
L
M
P
P
H
H
H
M
L
🛏️ Bed bugs
M
M
M
M
H
H
P
P
H
M
M
M
🦟 Mosquitoes
L
M
H
P
P
P
H
M
L
🐝 Wasps / hornets
L
M
M
H
H
P
P
M
🕷️ Spiders
L
L
M
M
M
M
M
H
P
P
H
M
🦗 Fleas
L
L
M
M
H
P
P
P
H
M
L
L
🪲 Ticks
L
M
P
P
P
H
H
H
P
M
🪰 Flies
L
L
M
M
H
H
P
P
P
H
M
L
Dormant Low Medium High Peak

How to use the calendar

The calendar is most useful as a planning tool, not a real-time monitor. Three patterns to look for:

Region notes

This calendar reflects temperate U.S. conditions — roughly USDA hardiness zones 5 through 7. Adjustments by climate zone:

Why the calendar matters more than people think

Most pest control is reactive: you see the pest, you call someone, treatment happens. The calendar lets you reverse that — to put exclusion in place in September instead of trapping mice in January, to inspect for termite swarmers in late April instead of finding damage in October, to drain mosquito breeding sites in March instead of fogging in July.

It's also the single best argument against year-round pesticide service contracts that don't actually align with pest biology. If you're paying for quarterly outdoor spray applications in January in zone 5, you're paying for theater. A licensed professional with a real program adjusts treatment by season — and so should you.


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