🔧 HOW-TO

How to Eliminate Blow Flies — Finding the Dead Animal Source

Blow flies (bottle flies) breed in dead animals. If they're inside your home, something has died in the walls or attic.

📋 Steps

1
Identify blow flies vs house flies
Blow flies (bottle flies): 6-14mm; metallic blue, green, or bronze body — the metallic sheen is the key ID. Cluster flies: dull grey, no metallic sheen. House flies: grey, dull. If you have metallic-shiny flies, something is dead nearby.
2
Follow the flies
Blow flies emerge from the dead animal and fly toward light. Observe which window or light source they gather at most heavily — this often points toward the direction of the source within the wall or ceiling.
3
Inspect the attic
If flies are concentrated in a specific room and the attic is accessible, inspect for: dead squirrel, bird, or rat; a bat maternity colony that may have had die-off. Smell the attic — the odor is strong and localized near the source.
4
Check accessible wall voids
Remove outlet covers near the room with highest fly concentration. Smell and listen for fly activity inside the wall. A dead rodent in the wall produces flies for 7-21 days depending on temperature.
5
Remove if accessible; wait if not
If the dead animal is accessible: remove in sealed heavy bags; clean and disinfect; apply odor eliminator. If in an inaccessible wall: wait 2-3 weeks for the population to run its course — the odor and flies both subside as the animal desiccates.

💡 Tips

  • The blow fly cycle is self-limiting — once all the larval food (animal tissue) is gone, the population collapses within 7-14 days even without treatment
  • Fly strips and light traps provide relief during the emergence period without addressing the source
  • In summer heat, a dead squirrel produces flies for about 7 days; in winter cold, the same animal produces flies for 3-4 weeks as the cooler temperature slows development

💰 Cost to Fix This Problem

ApproachTypical CostBest For
DIY materials only$25–$75Mild or early-stage infestations
Professional service (one-time)$150–$400Active 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

Why are blow flies suddenly appearing inside?
A sudden appearance almost always indicates a dead animal in a wall void, crawl space, or attic. A single dead mouse can produce dozens of blow flies over 1-2 weeks. Other sources include forgotten garbage or rotting food.
How do I find the source?
Follow the concentration pattern since flies cluster nearest to their breeding source. Check attic spaces, wall areas that feel warm (decomposition generates heat), and any area with unusual odor. The problem resolves once the carcass decomposes.
How do I get rid of them quickly?
Fly strips and UV light traps capture adults while the source decomposes. If you can locate and remove the dead animal, the problem ends immediately. Otherwise, fly emergence tapers off within 2-3 weeks.
Are blow flies a health concern?
They carry bacteria from decaying matter and can contaminate food surfaces. Cover food, clean counters, and use traps to reduce contact with living areas. Remove the dead animal if accessible.
📚 Sources: CDC Rodent Control · EPA Rodenticide Safety
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026