Mosquitoes ruining the back porch, palmetto roaches after the rain, rats in the attic, or termite swarmers in May? We are a licensed, local crew covering Houston, Sugar Land, Katy, The Woodlands, and Pearland. We post real ranges, we seal the entry points instead of just spraying, and we do not lock you into a contract you cannot leave.
Licensed in Texas
Pet-safe options
Same-week scheduling
Real prices on the phone
Quick answer: A first general pest control visit in Houston usually runs $135 to $225, and most homes do best on a recurring quarterly plan that runs about $95 to $165 a visit. Mosquito service is priced separately and runs $80 to $150 for a single treatment. Termite treatment is bid after an inspection. We quote the real number before we treat, not after.
Recurring and one-time treatment for Houston's everyday pests - ants, German and American (palmetto) roaches, crickets, spiders, silverfish, and earwigs. We seal and treat the perimeter so the Gulf Coast stays outside, and most homes do best on a quarterly plan that keeps the barrier intact through the long summer push.
Learn more
Asian tiger and southern house mosquitoes breed in every gutter, bromeliad, pool cover, and detention basin across Greater Houston, and the population stays thick from April through October. We treat the resting harborage on shaded foliage, target the breeding sites in standing water, and offer recurring service through mosquito season so the yard is usable.
Learn more
German roaches breed fast through Houston kitchens, apartments, and shared walls, and a one-time spray rarely ends an established infestation. American (palmetto) roaches, the inch-and-a-half fliers, push in from yard debris and sewer lines after rain. We use targeted gel baiting and growth regulators for German, perimeter and drain work for palmettos, and we schedule the follow-up that actually breaks the breeding cycle.
Learn more
Roof rats and Norway rats follow Houston's bayou network and mature live oak canopy through Memorial, the Heights, and West University, and they push into attics, garages, and behind appliances. We trap and remove the active population, then do the exclusion work - sealing roof lines, soffit gaps, weep holes, garage gaps, and utility penetrations - because trapping without sealing just invites the next one in.
Learn more
Subterranean termites work the Gulf Coast clay under Houston slab foundations year round, and the Formosan subterranean termite, the most destructive termite in the United States, has been established across Harris County since the 1960s. We do escrow and homeowner inspections, identify active galleries, mud tubes, and swarmer evidence, and treat with a liquid soil barrier or a monitored bait system. Inspection reports are documented for real-estate transactions.
Learn more
Bed bugs move through apartments, rentals, hotels, and short-term rentals on luggage and shared laundry, and they hide where sprays cannot reach. We confirm the infestation, then treat with targeted application or whole-room heat depending on the spread, and we schedule the follow-up inspection that confirms the job is finished rather than just quiet.
Learn moreWe cover Houston, Sugar Land, Katy, The Woodlands, and Pearland - the core of Greater Houston, about 30 miles from the central metro. The same licensed crew that quotes the job is the crew that treats it, with products chosen for the home, the pest, and any pets or kids on site.
Houston's housing stock spans a century and the pest mix tracks straight to the neighborhood.
Houston pest controlSugar Land is a master-planned suburb of large-lot, manicured-lawn neighborhoods built mostly between 1990 and 2015.
Sugar Land pest controlKaty is the western growth corridor of the metro, and Cinco Ranch, Cross Creek Ranch, Firethorne, and Cane Island keep adding thousands of households a year on newly disturbed prairie soil.
Katy pest controlThe Woodlands is a master-planned community designed around preserved native pine forest north of Houston, and the heavy tree canopy drives a pest profile distinct from the open-prairie suburbs.
The Woodlands pest controlPearland sits between downtown Houston and Galveston Bay along the coastal prairie, and the proximity to the bay drives the highest sustained mosquito pressure in the service area.
Pearland pest controlA first general pest control visit usually runs $135 to $225, with recurring quarterly service around $95 to $165. Mosquito service runs $80 to $150 per visit, rodent control with exclusion runs $275 to $650, and bed bug treatment runs $450 to $750 per room. We post real ranges so you can compare before anyone steps on your property.
Most general jobs schedule within the same week, and we keep priority slots for stinging insects, active rodents already inside the living space, and post-storm mosquito surges. We will give you a real arrival window when you book, and if anything changes we call rather than leave you waiting.
Yes. Texas requires every pest control business to hold a license through the Structural Pest Control Service at the Texas Department of Agriculture, and the technician applying product must be a certified applicator. We are licensed and insured and will share our license number and a certificate of insurance on request, which is worth asking any company for before you let them treat your home.
Mosquito control here is a two-part job. First, we treat the shaded foliage and harborage where adult mosquitoes rest during the day. Second, we identify and reduce the standing water sources where they breed - gutters, bromeliads, pool covers, bird baths, plant saucers, and any low spot that holds water for more than four days. Recurring service every three to four weeks through April-to-October mosquito season is what keeps the yard usable, and a single visit usually buys two to three weeks of relief.
German cockroaches breed fast and hide deep in cracks, wall voids, and appliances where a surface spray never reaches, and over-the-counter sprays often scatter them into new harborage. American (palmetto) roaches push in from yard debris, mulch, and sewer lines after rain. We use targeted gel bait and growth regulators for German and perimeter and drain work for palmettos, and we schedule the follow-up that breaks the breeding cycle. That approach ends an infestation that repeated spraying only spreads.
Yes. Roof rats and Norway rats follow Houston's bayou network and the mature live oak canopy through Memorial, the Heights, and West University, and they push into attics, garages, and behind appliances. We trap and remove the active population, then do the exclusion work - sealing roof lines, soffit gaps, weep holes, garage gaps, and utility penetrations. Trapping without sealing just invites the next one in, so the exclusion is the part that actually lasts.