Trapping alone never ends a rodent problem. We find how they’re getting in, seal the entry points and back it with monitoring so they stay out — safe for pets and kids.
A mouse squeezes through a gap the width of a pencil; a rat through a quarter-sized hole. Trapping thins the population you can see while the entry point keeps letting more in — and poison alone leaves rodents dying in your walls. Ending a rodent problem means finding and sealing the way in, then verifying the building is actually clear.
Get a Free QuoteWe trace how mice and rats are getting in — gaps, vents, utility penetrations, garage gaps.
Seal and screen entry points so the next rodent can’t follow the same path.
Tamper-resistant stations and traps placed where activity actually is.
Remove the food, water and harborage that drew them in.
Return visits to confirm activity has stopped, not just slowed.
Bait used responsibly in secured stations, away from kids and pets.
Rodents are an IPM problem, not a poison problem. Bait alone leaves dead rodents in walls and a door still open for the next one. We focus on exclusion — sealing the building — and use trapping and monitoring to verify the population is actually gone.
No. Bait alone leaves rodents dying in walls and the entry point still open. We seal them out first, then trap and monitor to confirm they’re gone.
Yes. Any bait is used responsibly in tamper-resistant, secured stations placed away from kids and pets.
Most homes see activity drop within the first week or two; we schedule follow-up visits to confirm the problem is fully resolved.