📊 Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Fruit Fly | Fungus Gnat |
|---|---|---|
| Size | 2-3mm; slightly larger | 1-2mm; slightly smaller |
| Eye color | Distinctive bright red eyes | Dark eyes; not visible without magnification |
| Body color | Tan/yellow with dark abdomen | Dark grey to black throughout |
| Location | Near fruit, wine, drains, fermented food | Near overwatered houseplant soil |
| Flight behavior | Hover near food sources; circling flight | Erratic, weak flight; run on soil surface |
| Breeding site | Overripe fruit, wine residue, drain biofilm | Moist potting soil; soil with high organic content |
| Treatment | Remove food source; enzyme drain cleaner | Bti soil drench; let soil dry; yellow sticky traps |
🔑 Key Differences
Red eyes are the definitive fruit fly marker
Bright red compound eyes are the single fastest field ID. No other common small fly found near food has red eyes.
Location tells you which
Found hovering near fruit, wine, kombucha, or near drains = fruit flies. Found walking on or hovering near houseplant soil = fungus gnats.
Treatment is completely different
Fruit flies: remove the fermenting food source. Fungus gnats: treat the soil with Bti and reduce watering. Wrong treatment means weeks of ineffective effort.
⚠️ Which Is More Urgent?
Both are primarily nuisance pests with no significant health risk. Fruit flies are faster to resolve once the source is found. Fungus gnats require 6-8 weeks of consistent soil treatment. Neither warrants professional pest control in most cases.