Pest Control in Rochester
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Typical price: $140–$2,750
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Pest Control prices in Rochester
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| One-time general treatment Inspection plus interior and perimeter treatment for common crawling insects | $140 | $280 | $510 |
| Rodent control program Baiting, trapping and entry-point proofing with follow-up visits | $180 | $370 | $640 |
| Bed bug treatment Multi-visit insecticide or one-day heat treatment for affected rooms | $280 | $1,100 | $2,750 |
| Termite treatment Localized spot treatment up to full liquid barrier or bait system | $230 | $550 | $2,300 |
| Annual quarterly plan Initial service plus four quarterly visits with retreatment guarantee | $370 | $600 | $830 |
How to hire a pest control pro in United States
- Verify the company's state pesticide applicator licence (most states run a structural pest control board with a public lookup)
- Ask for proof of general liability insurance before work starts
- Get the pest identified and a written treatment plan — not just a generic spray quote
- Confirm how many follow-up visits the price includes and the retreatment guarantee window
- Ask for the EPA registration numbers of products they'll apply
- Compare a one-time treatment vs a quarterly plan price over 12 months
- For termites, ask whether the quote includes a termite bond or damage warranty
Pesticide applicators must be licensed at the state level (state departments of agriculture or structural pest control boards), and only EPA-registered products may be applied. Interstate standards vary, so always check the licence in your own state's public registry.
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See the full breakdown of what drives pest control prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Are pest control chemicals safe for kids and pets?
Professionally applied products are used at low concentrations and are generally safe once dry, but ask the technician for the exact product names and labels before treatment. Keep children and pets off treated surfaces until dry (usually 2-4 hours), cover aquariums, and mention pets in advance — some treatments (e.g. certain flea products near cats) need adjusting.
Can I do pest control myself instead of hiring a pro?
DIY sprays and baits handle light ant or roach activity fine. Hire a professional for anything structural or persistent: termites, bed bugs, rodents inside walls, wasp nests in cavities, or repeat infestations. Pros have access to products and application methods retail products don't match, and misapplied DIY sprays can scatter colonies and make infestations harder to treat.
How do I get rid of mice permanently?
Bait and traps knock down the current population, but permanence comes from exclusion: sealing gaps bigger than a pencil around pipes, vents, doors and rooflines, plus removing food sources. Good rodent jobs are quoted as a program — initial treatment, follow-up checks, and proofing — not a single bait drop.
How often should I schedule pest control?
For prevention, quarterly service is the industry standard — barrier treatments wear off after 60-90 days. Active infestations (roaches, mice, bed bugs) usually need visits every 2-4 weeks until cleared. Food businesses and homes backing onto woodland or water often move to monthly service.
Why am I seeing more bugs right after treatment?
That's usually the flush-out effect: insecticides drive insects out of harborage areas, so activity spikes for 1-2 weeks before dropping sharply. If you're still seeing live pests after 2-3 weeks, call the company back — most guarantee retreatment within 30-90 days.
How long does a pest control treatment last?
Exterior barrier sprays typically remain effective 60-90 days, less in heavy rain. Gel baits keep working for weeks as insects share them. Rodent programs are about proofing, not just bait, so results last as long as entry points stay sealed. This decay is why prevention plans run quarterly.
What is a termite bond and do I need one?
A termite bond is an ongoing contract where the company inspects annually and covers retreatment (and sometimes repair costs) if termites return. In termite-heavy states, especially in the South, lenders and buyers often expect one; it typically costs $300-$900 per year after an initial treatment.
Does homeowners insurance cover pest damage?
Almost never. US homeowners policies treat termite, rodent and insect damage as preventable maintenance, so prevention plans and inspections are the only financial protection. A wood-destroying insect report ($75-$200) is standard in many real-estate transactions.
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