🔧 HOW-TO

How to Treat Wooden Furniture for Bed Bugs

Bed bugs hide in every crack and joint of wooden furniture — especially headboards. Treating furniture correctly is one of the most important and most often botched parts of bed bug control.

📋 Steps

1
Inspect every joint, crack, and screw hole
Bed bugs hide in the smallest gaps. Use a credit card to probe all joints. Use a flashlight at a low angle — bed bug fecal spots (dark dots), shed skins, and live bugs are visible under good lighting. Headboards, bed frames, and nightstands are primary harborage — inspect every surface.
2
Apply CimeXa dust into all crevices
Use a bellows duster to apply a very light coating of CimeXa into all joints, screw holes, cracks, and the underside channel of bed frame rails. CimeXa is the most effective desiccant for furniture treatment — it works in low humidity (unlike regular DE) and has 10+ years residual in undisturbed areas.
3
Apply residual spray to surfaces (not where people contact)
Apply bifenthrin or Temprid SC to the underside and back surfaces of furniture — not to sleeping surfaces, seating surfaces, or anywhere skin contact occurs. Headboard backs, bed frame undersides, and nightstand bottoms are appropriate spray surfaces.
4
Steam treat visible harborage areas
A clothes steamer applied slowly to cracks and joints achieves lethal temperature (>122°F) on contact. Hold the steam nozzle 1-2 inches from the surface and move slowly. Effective for surface treatment where spray can't be used.
5
Seal or discard extremely damaged furniture
Furniture with significant splitting, open joints, and extensive infestation may be more effectively discarded than treated. If discarding: clearly mark 'BED BUGS' before setting at the curb to prevent others from taking infested furniture.

💡 Tips

  • Never wrap and seal heavily infested furniture to 'contain' bed bugs — they will survive for months inside the wrapping and be released when the wrap is eventually opened
  • Bed bugs in metal furniture (metal bed frames) can still hide in the hollow tubes — check the ends of hollow tubes and spray inside if accessible
  • The headboard is the single highest-priority piece of furniture to treat — more bed bugs are found in headboards than mattresses in most infestations
  • Do not reassemble treated furniture until all surfaces are completely dry — wet surfaces track pesticide to areas where it shouldn't be
⚖️ Educational use only. Disclaimer →

💰 Cost to Fix This Problem

ApproachTypical CostBest For
DIY materials only$100–$250Mild or early-stage infestations
Professional service (one-time)$800–$2,000Active 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

Do mattress encasements kill bed bugs?
Encasements do not kill bed bugs. They trap bugs already inside, preventing them from reaching you to feed. Without blood meals, trapped bed bugs die within 6-12 months. Encasements must remain installed for at least one full year.
What type of mattress encasement works for bed bugs?
Use encasements specifically labeled as bed-bug-proof with bite-proof fabric, reinforced seams, and a secure zipper closure. Products like SafeRest and Protect-A-Bed meet these standards. Standard waterproof protectors lack the sealed zipper needed to trap bed bugs.
Should I encase both the mattress and box spring?
Yes, both must be encased. Box springs are actually the more common harborage because the fabric stapled to the bottom provides easy access to the wooden frame interior. Encasing only the mattress defeats the purpose.
Can I remove the encasement after treatment?
Leave encasements in place for a minimum of 12-18 months after the last confirmed sighting. Many professionals recommend keeping them on permanently, as they also protect against dust mites and allergens.

📚 More on This Topic

Related guides and profiles:

🔗 Bed Bugs🔗 Bed Bug Protocol for Apartment Buildings🔗 Bed Bug Life Cycle: 5 Nymph Stages Explained🔗 Does Raid Kill Bed Bugs?
📚 Sources: EPA Bed Bug Guide · CDC Bed Bug FAQ
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026