πŸ› Giant Water Bug (Toe Biter)

Lethocerus americanus Β· Hemiptera: Belostomatidae

Giant water bugs are the largest true bugs in North America β€” and they fly to lights at night, making them occasional alarming visitors to porches near water.

AquaticTrue BugHemipteraPainful BiteToe BiterWater Pest
πŸ›
Risk Level
Painful Bite
πŸ”¬
PestControlBasics Editorial Team
Reviewed by Derek Giordano Β· Updated 2026
Giant Water Bug identification guide illustration

Illustrated identification guide β€” PestControlBasics.com

πŸ” Identification

40-65mm (up to 4 inches); flattened oval; brown; front legs modified as raptorial grasping appendages; two short breathing tubes at abdomen tip. Breathes at water surface. Can fly β€” attracted to outdoor lights. Called 'electric light bug' in some areas. Found in ponds, streams, and slow water across North America.

🧬 Biology & Behavior

Apex aquatic predators β€” they attack prey much larger than themselves including tadpoles, small fish, and frogs. Inject digestive enzymes and consume liquefied prey contents. Females glue eggs to male's back in some species.

⚠️ Damage & Health Risk

Intensely painful defensive bite if handled β€” the same enzyme injected into prey. Immediate burning pain lasting 1-3 hours. No medical significance beyond pain and local swelling.

πŸ”§ DIY Treatment

Reduce exterior lighting near water. If found indoors, capture in a jar and release near water. No treatment warranted.

πŸ‘· When to Call a Pro

Never warranted.

❓ FAQ

Can a giant water bug bite you?
Yes β€” and it's genuinely very painful. The 'bite' is an injection of digestive enzyme. Don't handle with bare hands. They're completely harmless if not handled.
Why do they come to porch lights?
They fly at night and are attracted to lights near water bodies while migrating between water sources. Known as 'electric light bugs' for this reason.

πŸ—ΊοΈ Geographic Range & Distribution

FactorDetails
U.S. RangeAll 50 states
Regional DetailFire ants limited to Southeast/Southwest. Carpenter ants: Northeast and Pacific Northwest. Pavement ants: nationwide. Argentine ants: California and South.

πŸ“… Treatment Timing Guide

Treating at the right time dramatically improves results. Pest control timed to the life cycle uses less product and achieves better long-term control.

PeriodAction
February–MarchApply perimeter treatment before spring colonies emerge.
June–AugustPeak foraging season β€” bait stations most effective now.
SeptemberPre-winter perimeter treatment to prevent fall invasions.

πŸ’° Professional Treatment Costs

Service TypeDIY CostProfessional Cost
Initial inspectionFree (self-inspect)$75–$150 (often credited to treatment)
One-time treatment$30–$100 in materials$150–$500
Annual service contractN/A$400–$900/year
Severe infestationOften ineffective alone$500–$2,500+

Prices vary by region, property size, and infestation severity.

❓ Common Questions About πŸ› Giant Water Bug (Toe Biter)

How do I confirm I actually have this pest (not something similar)?
The most reliable confirmation is a physical specimen β€” capture one and compare to reference images on this page. For cryptic pests (bed bugs, termites), look for secondary signs: frass, shed skins, mud tubes, or bites with a specific pattern. When uncertain, a professional inspection is faster than months of misidentification.
Can I treat this myself or do I need a professional?
DIY is effective for small, accessible infestations caught early. Professionals are worth the cost when: the infestation is inside wall voids or structural elements, multiple rooms are affected, you have health-risk pests (hantavirus, venomous species), or DIY has already failed twice.
How long until the infestation is completely gone?
Expect 3–8 weeks for most infestations with proper treatment. Insects with dormant life stages (pupae, eggs) extend the timeline because those stages are impervious to most insecticides. Follow-up treatments at 2 and 4 weeks catch each new cohort as they emerge.
What's the most common mistake people make treating this pest?
Treating only the visible pest population while ignoring the harborage site, entry point, or breeding location. Killing adults provides temporary relief but the population rebuilds from hidden egg cases, pupae, or new arrivals through unaddressed entry points.
πŸ“š Sources: Texas A&M Fire Ant Project Β· EPA Safe Pest Control
Published: Jan 1, 2025 Β· Updated: Apr 7, 2026

πŸ—ΊοΈ US Distribution β€” Giant Water Bug

image/svg+xml
Common Occasional Not Present
States Present
14
Occasional
11
Primary Region
Southeast US
πŸ“Š Source: University extension services, USDA, CDC vector data, and published entomological surveys.