⚠ Extreme Risk Disease Vector Indoor Specialist

German
Cockroach

Blattella germanica

The hardest roach to eliminate. One mated female produces 400,000 descendants in a year. Standard sprays make infestations worse. Here's what actually works.

Size1/2 – 5/8 inch
ColorTan, 2 dark stripes
Egg Capsule30–40 eggs each
Lifespan100–200 days
PeakYear-round indoors
🪳
Quick Reference Card
German Cockroach
ColorTan/light brown, 2 black stripes behind head
WingsYes — but rarely flies
Where FoundKitchens, bathrooms, warm/humid areas
Active WhenNight. Seeing them daytime = large infestation
Entry MethodGrocery bags, used appliances, luggage
Egg CapsuleBrown, carried by female until hatch
Risk LevelHIGH — Allergen + Disease
Spray Barrier?MAKES IT WORSE
📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
German cockroach (Blattella germanica) identification illustration with labeled anatomical features — PestControlBasics.com

Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification. For photo references, see the identification section below.

📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
Asian Cockroach (Blattella asahinai) identification illustration with labeled anatomical features — PestControlBasics.com

Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification.

📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
Brown Banded Cockroach (Supella longipalpa) identification illustration with labeled anatomical features — PestControlBasics.com

Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification.

📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
Oriental Cockroach (Blatta orientalis) identification illustration with labeled anatomical features — PestControlBasics.com

Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification.

📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
Smoky Brown Cockroach (Periplaneta fuliginosa) identification illustration with labeled anatomical features — PestControlBasics.com

Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification.

📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
Turkestan Cockroach (Shelfordella lateralis) identification illustration with labeled anatomical features — PestControlBasics.com

Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification.

🔍 Identification Photo

Use this photo to confirm your identification. Click to enlarge.

German cockroach (Blattella germanica) — tan, ½ inch; TWO dark parallel stripes behind the head are the definitive field

German cockroach (Blattella germanica) — tan, ½ inch; TWO dark parallel stripes behind the head are the definitive field ID mark

📷 Wikipedia / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

⚠️ Photo loaded live from Wikipedia/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA).

⚠️ Photos loaded from Wikipedia/Wikimedia Commons. Appearance varies by region, age, and sex.

Origin & Spread

Despite the name, it didn't come from Germany

The German Cockroach is misnamed — entomologists believe it originated in Southeast Asia, likely the Indian subcontinent. European traders called it "German" because it arrived in their countries via German trade routes in the 18th century. The name stuck, even though Germany had nothing to do with its origin.

Today it is the most common cockroach species inside structures worldwide. Unlike outdoor roaches that occasionally wander in, the German cockroach is an obligate indoor species — it cannot survive cold temperatures and has evolved to live exclusively in human structures. It travels not by flying or crawling in from outside, but by hitchhiking — in grocery bags, cardboard boxes, used appliances, furniture, and luggage.

🛒 How They Enter Your Home

The #1 source of new infestations is used cardboard boxes, secondhand appliances (especially microwaves and toasters), and grocery bags from infested stores. A single pregnant female with her egg capsule is enough to start a full infestation within 2–3 months. Always inspect secondhand appliances thoroughly before bringing them inside.

400K
Potential descendants from one female in a single year
30–40
Eggs per capsule — female carries it until hatching
6 wks
From egg to reproductive adult under ideal conditions
Identification Guide

German vs. other cockroaches — it matters

Treatment varies by species. American cockroaches (the big ones) are outdoor roaches that occasionally wander in — very different problem, very different solution. Here's how to confirm you're dealing with a German cockroach.

The Two Stripes
Two parallel dark brown/black stripes running from head to wingtip on the pronotum (shield behind head). This is the definitive marking. No other common household roach has this.
Size
Half to five-eighths of an inch fully grown. Much smaller than the American cockroach (1.5–2 inches). If the roach is large, it's likely a different species with different treatment needs.
Location
Almost always in kitchens and bathrooms. Prefers warm, humid, dark harborage near food and water. Found behind refrigerators, under stoves, inside cabinet hinges, under sinks.
Egg Capsule (Ootheca)
A brown, purse-shaped capsule about 1/4 inch long. The female carries this attached to her abdomen until just before hatching — a key biological difference from other species.
Daytime Sighting
German cockroaches are nocturnal. Seeing them during the day is a serious warning — it means the harborage is so overcrowded that lower-status roaches are being pushed out into the open. Indicates a large, mature infestation.
Fecal Spotting
Small, dark, pepper-like specks on walls and surfaces near harborage areas. You may also see dark smear marks in corners and along edges where they travel. A "musty" odor in heavy infestations.
⚠ Health Risks Are Serious

German cockroach allergens are a leading cause of childhood asthma — especially in urban environments. Their shed skins, feces, and saliva contaminate food surfaces and trigger allergic reactions. They mechanically spread Salmonella, E. coli, and dozens of other pathogens by walking across food preparation areas. This is not a "nuisance" pest — it's a genuine public health threat.

The Biggest Mistake

Why spray barriers make infestations worse

This is the single most important thing on this page. Most people grab a can of raid or a spray barrier product and treat their kitchen. This is exactly the wrong move — and here's why.

Roaches Detect and Avoid Repellents

German cockroaches are extraordinarily good at detecting repellent chemicals and simply routing around them. A spray barrier along baseboards does not kill the colony — it fragments it. Roaches scatter to new harborage areas throughout the structure, spreading the infestation to rooms that weren't previously affected.

Repellents Prevent Bait from Working

If you apply a repellent spray and then attempt to use gel bait (the correct treatment) in the same area, the roaches will smell the repellent and avoid the bait entirely. You've now poisoned your own treatment plan. Repellents and baits are mutually exclusive — you must choose one.

They Develop Resistance Fast

German cockroaches have the fastest-known resistance development of any urban pest. Populations exposed to pyrethroids (the most common spray ingredient) can develop resistance within a single generation. Some urban populations are now resistant to multiple classes of insecticide simultaneously.

💡 The Counterintuitive Truth

The best thing you can do if you have a German cockroach infestation is to put down your spray can and do nothing with chemicals until you're ready to apply gel bait correctly. A week of waiting is far better than a week of spraying that makes the problem worse and harder to treat.

MethodKills Roaches?Reaches Harborage?Eliminates Colony?Verdict
Spray Barrier (Raid, etc.)Some workersNoNo — spreads itAvoid
Gel Bait (Advion, Maxforce)Yes + colonyYes — they carry itYes, 1–2 weeksBest method
Boric Acid PowderYesIf applied correctlyPartialGood supplement
IGR (Gentrol)SterilizesYesPrevents re-growthUse with bait
Ultrasonic DevicesNoNoNoUseless
Bombs / FoggersSome workersNo — they hide deeperNo — spreads colonyAvoid
Reproduction

Why you can't afford to wait

No pest reproduces faster in a structure than the German cockroach. Understanding the math explains why small infestations explode and why early treatment is critical.

📅 German Cockroach Reproductive Timeline
1
Female
One mated female enters your home
6
Weeks
First egg capsule hatches — 30–40 nymphs
3
Months
Nymphs mature, each female begins reproducing
400K
1 Year
Potential population from one original female

A female German cockroach produces 4–8 egg capsules in her lifetime, each containing 30–40 eggs. She carries each capsule until just before hatching — meaning she is a mobile egg incubator that you can never catch and destroy with a spray. The only way to stop reproduction is to eliminate the females, which requires they consume bait and die before producing their next capsule.

Activity Pattern

Year-round threat — but peaks exist

📅 German Cockroach Activity — Indoor Structures (Year-Round)
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec

Unlike outdoor pests, German cockroaches are active year-round indoors. Activity peaks in summer when heat and humidity accelerate reproduction. However, winter infestations are equally serious — the warmth of your heating system provides ideal conditions. There is no "off season" for German cockroaches.

Treatment Guide

The protocol that actually eliminates them

The correct treatment sequence is: clean → declutter → gel bait → IGR → monitor → repeat in 2 weeks. No sprays. No bombs. Here's exactly what to use and how.

💡 Application Rule: Small Dots, Many Locations

Apply gel bait in pea-sized dots (NOT smears) in 10–20 locations per room — inside cabinet hinges, under appliances, behind the fridge, under the sink, along edges where roaches travel. Small dots in many places outperform large globs in few places. Replace every 2 weeks or when consumed.

🍇
Gel Bait — #1 Recommended
Advion Cockroach Gel Bait (Indoxacarb)
How it works: Roaches eat the bait, return to harborage, die, and are eaten by others — cascading kill effect through the colony. Indoxacarb is a metabolic activator — roaches activate the poison themselves. Extremely palatable to even bait-averse populations. Apply 3–5 small dots per 10 sq ft in harborage areas. Do not apply near sprays or cleaning products.
★★★★★
Gold Standard
💊
Gel Bait — Strong Alternative
Maxforce FC Magnum (Fipronil)
How it works: Fipronil-based bait with a secondary kill effect — a roach that consumes it and contacts others transfers the active ingredient. Good choice when alternating with Advion to prevent bait aversion. Roaches can develop preference fatigue with any single bait — rotating every other treatment cycle improves results significantly.
★★★★★
Excellent
🧪
IGR — Sterilizes the Colony
Gentrol Point Source IGR (Hydroprene)
How it works: Insect Growth Regulator — disrupts the juvenile hormone that allows nymphs to mature into reproductive adults. Treated nymphs become sterile adults. Used alongside bait, it prevents the colony from rebounding between bait applications. Place Gentrol discs in enclosed spaces (under sink, inside cabinets). Long-lasting — one disc works for 3 months.
★★★★★
Essential Add-On
🪟
Desiccant Dust — Harborage Treatment
CimeXa Dust (Amorphous Silica Gel)
How it works: Applied as a thin layer in voids, wall gaps, and under appliances. Physically destroys the roach's waxy cuticle causing death by dehydration — no chemical resistance possible. Last resort for heavy harborage areas where bait alone isn't reaching. Apply with a bulb duster into wall voids and under major appliances. Lasts years unless disturbed.
★★★★Ⓒ
Very Good
😐
Monitoring Tool
Catchmaster or Victor Sticky Traps
How it works: Not a treatment — a diagnostic tool. Place in corners and under appliances to track population levels and harborage locations. Count captures weekly to gauge whether treatment is working. If captures are declining week-over-week, you're winning. If flat or increasing, adjust bait placement or switch products.
★★★★★
Must Have
🔒 When to Call a Professional

DIY treatment is effective for light-to-moderate infestations when done correctly. However, if you've had a German cockroach infestation for more than 3 months, are seeing them during the day, or have multiple rooms affected — professional treatment with access to commercial-grade products and equipment will achieve faster, more complete results.

Commercial Gel — Licensed Only
Vendetta Plus (Clothianidin + IGR)
Combines a neonicotinoid insecticide with a built-in IGR in a single gel formulation. The IGR component prevents bait-surviving nymphs from reaching reproductive maturity. Professionals apply this in larger volumes with commercial applicator guns, reaching harborage areas DIYers typically miss. Colony elimination in 7–14 days in most cases.
★★★★★
Pro Standard
💨
Void Treatment — Licensed Only
Actisol Pyrethrin Injection System
A motorized injection system that forces insecticide mist deep into wall voids, under cabinetry, and behind appliances — reaching harborage areas that no spray, bait, or dust can access by hand. Used as a flush-and-kill treatment to drive roaches out of deep harborage so they contact bait. Typically used in severe infestations or commercial kitchens.
★★★★★
Severe Cases

🔗 Active ingredient deep-dive: Indoxacarb (Advion) — How the Cascade Kill Works

📚 Sources: EPA Cockroach Control · CDC Cockroach Allergens
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026
GermanCockroach
GermanCockroach

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I have GermanCockroach?

Signs of GermanCockroach include physical sightings, droppings or frass, damage to food or materials, and unusual odors. Inspect hidden areas like wall voids, behind appliances, and in storage spaces. A flashlight inspection after dark is often most revealing.

Are GermanCockroach dangerous to humans or pets?

GermanCockroach can pose health risks including bites, allergic reactions, food contamination, and disease transmission. Children, elderly, and pets are especially vulnerable. Consult a pest management professional when an infestation is confirmed.

Can I eliminate GermanCockroach myself?

Light infestations may be manageable with DIY baits, traps, and targeted treatments. Established infestations typically require professional intervention. Misapplied products often scatter pests and worsen the problem long-term.

How long does GermanCockroach treatment take?

Timelines vary by infestation size and method. Baits may take 1–4 weeks to work through a colony. Chemical treatments often require 2–3 applications spaced 2–4 weeks apart. Monitor for 30–60 days after treatment to confirm elimination.

What attracts GermanCockroach to my home?

GermanCockroach are typically drawn by food sources, standing moisture, warmth, and shelter. Sealing entry points, reducing clutter, fixing leaks, and storing food in airtight containers are the most effective long-term prevention measures.

Related Resources

📚 Full Pest Library🧪 DIY vs. Pro Quiz💰 Cost Guide🌿 IPM Guide🔍 Find a Pro
🧪 Recommended Treatment Products
Cockroach Gel Bait Guide Advion/Indoxacarb Bait Gentrol IGR Boric Acid Dust Fipronil
Full product guides with mixing rates, safety info, and brand comparisons. → Browse All 121 Pesticide Guides
🔗 Related Pests
Brown Banded Cockroach American Cockroach Oriental Cockroach Smoky Brown Cockroach Wood Roach
Compare similar pests to confirm your identification. → Use our ID Flowchart
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German Cockroach Identification & Treatment
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Reviewed by Derek GiordanoContent on PestControlBasics.com is developed with input from certified pest management professionals and cross-referenced against EPA, CDC, and university extension guidance. Last reviewed: April 2026.

🗺️ US Distribution — German Cockroach

image/svg+xml
Common Occasional Not Present
States Present
51
Occasional
0
Primary Region
All 50 states (indoor pest)
📊 Source: University extension services, USDA, CDC vector data, and published entomological surveys.