Seal the entry points
This is the single highest-leverage thing you can do. Most pests are bad at finding entries โ they just exploit the ones already there.
Outside the house
- Walk the perimeter and look for gaps where pipes, cables, vents, and dryer ducts pass through the wall. Seal each one with caulk, expanding foam, or steel wool packed tight.
- Replace torn weatherstripping on doors. Add door sweeps to any door with daylight visible underneath. A 6 mm gap is enough for a mouse.
- Repair or replace damaged window screens. Make sure all screens fit tightly in their frames.
- Cap chimneys with stainless steel screened caps. Screen attic, gable, soffit, and crawlspace vents with quarter-inch hardware cloth.
- Check the roofline where soffits meet the wall โ a common entry for roof rats and squirrels.
Inside the house
- Caulk gaps under baseboards, behind cabinets, around plumbing penetrations under sinks, and between countertops and walls.
- Repair holes in drywall promptly โ they become roach and mouse highways inside walls.
- Install drain covers in basements and laundry rooms. Run water down rarely-used drains weekly.
Cut off the food
If pests cannot eat, they cannot reproduce. Most homes have far more accessible food than residents realize.
- Store dry goods (flour, rice, pasta, cereal, sugar, pet food, birdseed) in glass or hard plastic with tight-sealing lids. Cardboard and thin plastic do not stop roaches, ants, weevils, or mice.
- Take out kitchen trash nightly. Use a bin with a tight-fitting lid. Wash the inside of the bin with soapy water monthly.
- Wipe down counters, the stove, and the area behind the toaster every night. Grease films feed roaches indefinitely.
- Sweep or vacuum kitchen floors daily โ under the table, behind the trash can, under the fridge.
- Do not leave pet food out overnight. Store the bag sealed.
- Take recycling outside frequently and rinse bottles and cans before storing.
- Refrigerate ripening fruit. Store potatoes and onions in sealed bins.
Cut off the water
Many pests need water more than food. Roaches can survive a month without food but only a week without water.
- Fix leaky faucets, leaky toilets, and dripping pipes. Even a slow drip can sustain a colony.
- Run a dehumidifier in basements and crawlspaces. Aim for under 50% relative humidity year-round.
- Repair condensation problems โ insulate cold pipes, ventilate bathrooms, fix poor crawlspace ventilation.
- Empty pet water bowls overnight if possible.
- Drain plant saucers after watering. Do not over-water houseplants.
Manage the yard
The exterior of your home is the first line of defense. Pests that can't get to the building can't get in.
- Pull mulch and groundcover back at least 30 cm from siding. Mulch directly against the house provides moisture and harborage.
- Trim tree branches at least 2 m from the roof. Squirrels, roof rats, and ants use them as bridges.
- Trim shrubs back from windows and walls. Air circulation makes the area less hospitable.
- Store firewood off the ground and at least 6 m from the house.
- Clear leaf litter from gutters and from window wells.
- Slope soil away from the foundation. Extend downspouts at least 2 m beyond the foundation.
- Eliminate standing water โ empty buckets, plant saucers, kiddie pools, and clogged gutters. Even a bottle cap of water breeds mosquitoes.
Bedroom & laundry
- Inspect hotel beds before unpacking โ lift the sheets at corners, check seams for bed bug evidence (rust spots, dark fecal flecks, live bugs).
- Store luggage on a hard surface, not the bed. Inspect and wash clothes on hot when you return.
- Wash bedding weekly in hot water (above 55ยฐC / 130ยฐF) โ kills dust mites and denatures their allergens.
- Use allergen-proof zippered covers on mattresses and pillows.
- Vacuum mattress seams and behind the headboard monthly.
- Inspect used furniture (especially upholstered) carefully before bringing it home. Bed bugs and roaches both spread this way.
Storage & clutter
- Store items in sealed plastic bins, not cardboard. Roaches, silverfish, and mice all love cardboard.
- Reduce clutter in basements, attics, and garages โ fewer hiding places means fewer pests.
- Inspect grocery bags and boxes before bringing them inside. German cockroaches commonly hitchhike.
- Store off-season clothing clean (especially wool) in sealed bags or bins. Dirty natural fibers attract clothes moths and carpet beetles.
- Check spices, flour, and pet food regularly for signs of pantry pests. Discard anything past its use-by date.
Pet care
- Use year-round flea and tick prevention prescribed by your veterinarian, especially in warm climates.
- Wash pet bedding weekly on hot.
- Pick up pet waste from the yard daily. Flies and rodents are both attracted.
- Check pets for ticks after every outdoor session in tick country โ focus on ears, neck, armpits, and between toes.
- Vacuum frequently in homes with pets. Pet hair and dander feed carpet beetles.
Build a seasonal routine
Spring
- Walk the perimeter and look for new entry points after winter freeze-thaw.
- Inspect eaves and outdoor structures for early-stage wasp nests (the size of a golf ball is much easier to deal with than a basketball).
- Pre-treat ant trails before populations explode in summer.
- Treat the yard for ticks and fleas if pets spend time outdoors.
Summer
- Empty standing water weekly to prevent mosquitoes.
- Inspect houseplants and outdoor furniture before bringing inside.
- Maintain trimmed grass and clear vegetation buffer near the foundation.
Fall
- Seal up the home BEFORE the first cold snap โ this is when stink bugs, lady beetles, mice, and roof rats invade.
- Inspect attics and basements for early signs of rodent activity.
- Clean out gutters before leaves clog them.
- Bring in firewood only as needed โ never store inside.
Winter
- Listen for nighttime sounds in walls and attic โ best time to detect rodents.
- Check stored grain and spices in the pantry; pantry pests breed year-round indoors.
- Watch for stink bugs and lady beetles emerging during warm spells.
When DIY is not enough
Some situations call for a licensed pest control professional. Call one if:
- You suspect termites โ DIY treatment is not realistic and the damage is expensive.
- You have bed bugs in more than one room โ DIY usually fails for established infestations.
- You see cockroaches during the day โ sign of a heavy population.
- You find brown recluse or black widow spiders repeatedly indoors.
- There is a wall, attic, or underground wasp/hornet nest, or anyone in the household has a sting allergy.
- Honey bees have moved into a wall โ call a beekeeper or bee removal specialist (not a pest control company).
- Rodent infestations in attics or wall voids โ exclusion work is the long-term solution and pros do it best.
- Any infestation that returns within a month after DIY treatment.
Not sure what you're dealing with yet? Run it through the pest identifier or browse the catalog first, then come back to target your prevention.