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🛒 Buying Guide

Best Ant Baits of 2026

Ranked by species effectiveness. The wrong bait for the wrong ant does nothing — this guide matches the right product to the right species, plus the no-spray rule that pest professionals live by.

⚠ The Rule That Changes Everything

Do not spray ants. Aerosol insecticides kill foraging workers but do nothing to the queen — who produces up to 800 eggs per day. Killing workers causes the colony to ramp up worker production and may cause colony "budding" in species like Pharaoh ants, creating multiple new colonies from one. Slow-acting bait is the only approach that reaches the queen and eliminates the colony.

Top Picks

The Best Ant Baits by Ant Type

1
TERRO T300 Liquid Ant Bait Stations
Borax sugar bait — for odorous house ants, pavement ants, Argentine ants
★★★★★
Best for Common AntsWidely AvailablePet-Safer

TERRO Liquid Bait is the most effective consumer ant bait for the species that most commonly invade U.S. homes — odorous house ants, pavement ants, and Argentine ants. The active ingredient is borax (sodium tetraborate) at 5.4% in a sweet liquid matrix. Borax is slow-acting by design — foragers consume it, survive long enough to return to the nest and share it through trophallaxis (food-sharing), carrying the borax to larvae, the queen, and other workers who never leave the nest.

What to expect: Ant activity at the bait station dramatically increases for 24–72 hours as workers recruit more colony members to the food source — this is not failure, it is success. The population then drops rapidly from day 4 onward. Full colony elimination takes 1–2 weeks. Resist the urge to spray the trail — you will disrupt the baiting process.

Active: Borax 5.4%Cost: $8–12 / 6-packWorks in: 1–2 weeks
✓ Best for: Odorous house ant, pavement ant, Argentine ant — the three most common household ant species. Place stations directly on the active ant trail. Replace when liquid is consumed (every 3–5 days in active infestations).
2
Advion Ant Gel (Syngenta)
Indoxacarb gel bait — professional-grade, broad spectrum
★★★★★
Professional GradeMultiple SpeciesPrescription Price

Advion Ant Gel is the product pest control professionals reach for when TERRO is insufficient or when dealing with species that don't respond to simple borax. The active ingredient, indoxacarb, is a "pro-insecticide" — it is converted inside the insect's body into its toxic form, making it extremely slow-acting and ideal for secondary kill through trophallaxis. A single application of Advion gel can eliminate an entire ant colony in 3–5 days.

Application: Apply in pea-sized dots (not smeared lines) at 6-inch intervals at the entry point and along the active trail. Ants need to be able to pick up the gel and carry it — dots allow this; smears don't. Highly effective for odorous house ants, pavement ants, fire ants (in conjunction with Two-Step Method), carpenter ants, and most tramp ant species.

For Pharaoh ants: Advion is effective but should be rotated with protein-based bait (Advance 375A) since Pharaoh ant nutritional preference shifts between sugar and protein seasonally.

Active: Indoxacarb 0.05%Cost: $20–30 / 4 tubesWorks in: 3–7 days
✓ Best for: Multiple ant species including ones that don't respond to TERRO. Ideal for German cockroach + ant combo treatments since the same gel works for both.
3
Advance 375A Granular Ant Bait
Protein bait granule — for carpenter ants, Pharaoh ants, fire ants
★★★★☆
Protein FormulaOutdoor/Indoor

Many ant species — including carpenter ants, Pharaoh ants during protein-seeking phases, and fire ants — require protein-based bait, not sugar-based bait. An ant ignoring sugar bait is almost certainly in a protein-seeking phase. Advance 375A uses abamectin (0.011%) in a protein matrix that mimics insect prey. It is highly effective for carpenter ants, fire ants (broadcast in lawn), and Pharaoh ants in protein-seeking cycles.

Active: Abamectin 0.011%Cost: $18–25 / 8ozWorks in: 1–3 weeks
✓ Best for: Carpenter ants (apply near the colony entry point), Pharaoh ant protein cycle, fire ants as part of the Two-Step Method (broadcast around mounds).
4
Amdro Fire Ant Bait (Broadcast)
Hydramethylnon granule — broadcast fire ant treatment
★★★★☆
Fire Ant SpecificLawn Use

Amdro is the most widely available fire ant broadcast bait in the U.S. It uses hydramethylnon (0.73%) in a corn grit matrix that mimics fire ant food — workers carry granules to the queen. The Two-Step Fire Ant Method (recommended by Texas A&M and the University of Florida) calls for broadcast treatment of the entire yard with Amdro, followed by individual mound treatment of problem mounds 1–2 weeks later. This combination is 80–90% effective in reducing mound counts.

Critical timing: Apply when fire ants are actively foraging — soil temperature 65–95°F, morning or evening when not too hot. Do not apply before rain (washes away the bait) or immediately after mowing (disturbed ants won't forage).

Active: Hydramethylnon 0.73%Cost: $12–18 / 1lbWorks in: 1–2 weeks
✓ Best for: Fire ant lawn control as part of the Two-Step Method. Broadcast at 1–1.5 lbs per acre. Do not apply more than twice per year.
5
Maxforce Quantum Ant Bait
Imidacloprid liquid gel — the Pharaoh ant specialist
★★★★☆
Pharaoh AntLong-lasting

Maxforce Quantum uses imidacloprid (0.03%) in a specially formulated clear gel that stays effective for up to 3 months when applied in cracks and crevices — significantly longer than most sugar gels that dry out within days. This longevity makes it particularly effective for Pharaoh ant control in wall voids and behind fixtures where access for re-baiting is limited.

Active: Imidacloprid 0.03%Cost: $30–40/tubeLasts: 3 months
✓ Best for: Pharaoh ants (never spray — always bait), multi-ant species indoor treatments where longevity matters. Use in wall void injection with crack-and-crevice tip.
💡 Matching Bait to Ant Species

Odorous house ant, pavement ant: TERRO Liquid Bait (start here). Argentine ant: TERRO or Advion Gel — slow bait is essential, never spray. Pharaoh ant: Maxforce Quantum + Advance 375A in rotation — never spray. Carpenter ant: Advance 375A protein bait near nest entry + Termidor foam void injection. Fire ant: Amdro broadcast + bifenthrin or spinosad mound drench (Two-Step Method).

📚 More on This Topic

Related guides and profiles:

🔗 Hantavirus — Safe Rodent Cleanup🔗 Red ImportedFire Ant🔗 Pavement, Odorous House, Argentine & Little Black Ants🔗 🐜 Odorous House Ant (OHA)
📚 Sources: Texas A&M Fire Ant Project · EPA Safe Pest Control
Published: Jun 1, 2024 · Updated: Apr 5, 2026
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Reviewed by Derek GiordanoContent on PestControlBasics.com is developed with input from certified pest management professionals and cross-referenced against EPA, CDC, and university extension guidance. Last reviewed: April 2026.