🔧 HOW-TO

How to Use the Texas A&M Two-Step Fire Ant Method

The two-step method developed by Texas A&M is the most effective fire ant control for residential properties. When broadcast bait alone outperforms individual mound treatment.

⏱️ 2-3 hours 💪 Easy

🧰 What You'll Need

Fire ant bait (Amdro or Extinguish Plus)Individual mound treatmentBait applicator or hand spreaderWarm dry day

📋 Steps

1
Step 1 — Broadcast bait over entire property
Apply fire ant bait (Amdro, Extinguish Plus, or Advion Fire Ant Bait) uniformly over the entire treatment area using a hand spreader or bait applicator. Don't pile it at mounds — broadcast uniformly at label rate. Foraging workers from ALL colonies collect and carry it back. This addresses the entire property at once.
2
Wait 2 weeks before Step 2
Allow workers to carry bait back to all colonies. Do NOT treat individual mounds during this period — disturbing mounds interrupts bait collection. Wait the full 2 weeks.
3
Step 2 — Treat persistent mounds individually
After 2 weeks, identify remaining active mounds and treat each individually with a fast-acting mound treatment (bifenthrin granules + water, or liquid drench). This finishes off colonies that didn't collect enough bait.
4
Time the application correctly
Apply when soil temperature is 65-95°F and workers are actively foraging — typically morning or late afternoon. Never apply bait when rain is expected within 24 hours — wet bait is not collected.

💡 Pro Tips

  • Bait freshness matters — use bait from a sealed container opened within the last 6 months. Rancid bait is not collected
  • For polygyne (multi-queen) populations in east Texas and Louisiana, broadcast bait alone is more important than individual mound treatment
  • Fall application (September-October) when soil is 70-85°F is often the most effective timing

💰 Cost to Fix This Problem

ApproachTypical CostBest For
DIY materials only$15–$40Mild or early-stage infestations
Professional service (one-time)$130–$300Active infestations or when DIY has already failed
Ongoing service contract$400–$800/yrPrevention and long-term peace of mind

Costs vary by region, property size, and severity. Get at least two quotes before hiring.

✅ How to Know It's Working

Pest control success is measured in weeks, not days. Here's what to look for:

💡 Monitoring tip: Place sticky traps in corners and along walls before you start treatment. Counting catches weekly gives you objective data on whether the population is declining.

👷 When to Call a Professional

DIY is appropriate for small, contained infestations caught early. Call a licensed professional when:

⚠️ Rule of thumb: If you've spent more on DIY materials than a professional visit would cost, it's time to call.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Texas A&M Two-Step Method?
Step 1: Broadcast a slow-acting bait across the entire yard at label rate. Step 2: Wait 7-10 days, then drench individual mounds that are still active with liquid insecticide. This eliminates both visible and hidden colonies across the property.
How often should I repeat the Two-Step Method?
University extension services recommend applying the Two-Step Method twice per year in spring and fall. Properties adjacent to untreated land may need a third application in midsummer.
Can I skip the broadcast step and just treat individual mounds?
Treating only visible mounds misses 50-80% of colonies in a typical yard. Many fire ant colonies have no visible mound, especially young colonies. The broadcast bait step reaches every colony, visible or not.
What bait should I use for the broadcast step?
Hydramethylnon (Amdro Pro), methoprene plus hydramethylnon (Extinguish Plus), or indoxacarb (Advion Fire Ant Bait) are the most effective broadcast options. Test by placing bait near a mound and checking if workers pick it up within 15-20 minutes.
📖 Related Guides: Fire Ant Control · Outdoor Ant Mounds
📚 Sources: Texas A&M Fire Ant Project · EPA Safe Pest Control
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026