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Find a Licensed Pest Control Professional

Every state requires pest control technicians to hold a license. Here's how to verify credentials, what to ask before hiring, and what a fair price looks like in your area.

๐Ÿ” How to Find a Verified Pro

The most reliable way to find a licensed pest control company is through your state's licensing database โ€” not review aggregators, which don't verify credentials. Use these official sources:

MethodWhat It VerifiesHow to Use
State licensing databaseActive license, license type, disciplinary historySearch your state agriculture or environmental protection dept website for "pest control license lookup"
NPMA member searchNPMA membership (voluntary, but signals professionalism)npmapestworld.org โ†’ Find a Pro
BBB lookupComplaint history, accreditationbbb.org โ†’ search company name
Google reviewsCustomer experience (unverified credentials)Look for reviews from the past 6 months specifically

โ“ 8 Questions to Ask Before You Hire

  1. What is your state license number? โ€” Verify it yourself before the visit.
  2. What pesticides will you apply? โ€” You have the right to know the active ingredients.
  3. What are the re-entry intervals? โ€” How long must children and pets stay out?
  4. Do you provide a written treatment plan? โ€” Professional companies always do.
  5. What does the warranty or guarantee cover? โ€” Free retreatment if the problem persists?
  6. Are you a member of the NPMA or a state pest control association?
  7. How many years have you treated this specific pest in this region?
  8. Will you provide references from customers with the same pest problem?

๐Ÿ’ฐ What Pest Control Should Cost

National averages for a single-family home. Prices vary by region, property size, and infestation severity. Always get at least two in-home quotes.

ServiceOne-TimeAnnual Contract
General pest (ants, roaches, spiders)$150โ€“$300$400โ€“$700/yr
Termite inspection$75โ€“$150Included in warranty plans
Termite treatment$500โ€“$2,500$200โ€“$500/yr (bait station)
Bed bug treatment (heat)$1,200โ€“$3,000N/A
Mosquito barrier spray$75โ€“$150/visit$400โ€“$700/season
Rodent exclusion$300โ€“$900$150โ€“$300/yr monitoring
โš ๏ธ Red flags on pricing: Quotes significantly below market rate often mean unlicensed operators, watered-down products, or bait-and-switch contracts. A quote you can't verify in writing is not a quote.

๐Ÿชช Verify Licensing by State

Licensing is administered at the state level. To verify a pest control company's license, search for your state's pest control licensing database:

Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Florida Georgia Illinois New York North Carolina Texas Virginia All States โ†’
Should I get a one-time treatment or an annual contract?
One-time treatments resolve an active infestation but provide no ongoing barrier. Annual contracts (typically quarterly visits) prevent re-infestation and are cost-effective once you've solved the initial problem โ€” usually cheaper than repeated emergency calls.
What's the difference between a pest control company and an exterminator?
The terms are used interchangeably, but modern pest management professionals (PMPs) focus on Integrated Pest Management (IPM) โ€” targeting root causes, not just visible pests. Ask any prospective company whether they use IPM principles.
Is pest control covered by homeowners insurance?
Almost never. Standard policies exclude pest damage and treatment as maintenance issues. Termite damage warranties from licensed pest control companies are the primary financial protection available.