🧪 Pesticide Guide

Dust vs Liquid vs Bait vs Granular: Which Formulation to Use

Formulation Comparison Guide

The same active ingredient comes in different formulations - dust, liquid, bait, granular, aerosol, and foam. Each has specific advantages. Using the wrong formulation is one of the most common DIY pest control mistakes. This guide tells you which formulation to use for each situation.

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Type
Formulation Comparison Guide
Signal Word
N/A (Guide)

Target Pests / Scope

All pest control situations. The formulation you choose is as important as the active ingredient. Boric acid dust in wall voids works brilliantly; boric acid dust on a kitchen counter is useless and messy.

Products and Recommendations

See individual active ingredient pages for specific product recommendations in each formulation type.

Safety

Safety varies by formulation even for the same active ingredient. Dusts pose inhalation risk. Liquids pose skin absorption and drift risk. Baits are generally the safest because the active ingredient is contained in a matrix. Aerosols pose inhalation risk in enclosed spaces.

Detailed Guide

When to use each formulation:

FormulationBest ForAvoid WhenKey Advantage
Dust (powder)Wall voids, cracks, crevices, attics, electrical outletsExposed surfaces, damp areas, outdoors (blows away)Lasts indefinitely in dry voids; reaches hidden pests
Liquid concentratePerimeter treatments, crack and crevice spray, lawn/gardenInside wall voids, near food prep without proper techniqueMost versatile; adjustable dilution rates; residual barrier
Gel/paste baitCockroaches, ants (indoor colony elimination)Outdoor use (dries out); situations needing instant knockdownColony elimination via transfer; lowest exposure risk
Granular baitAnt mounds, outdoor perimeter, lawn pestsIndoor use on smooth surfaces (rolls away); vertical surfacesEasy application; rain-activated; lawn pest control
Aerosol (can)Flying insects, quick knockdown, flushing for inspectionLong-term control; large areas (expensive); around flamesInstant kill; reaches flying targets; convenient
FoamWall voids, nests in cavities, pipe penetrationsExposed surfaces; outdoor use in windExpands to fill voids; visual confirmation of coverage
Wettable powder/granule (WP/WDG)Professional applications, tank mix, suspension spraysHomeowners without proper equipmentHigher residual than EC formulations; less phytotoxicity

The most common mistake: Using aerosol spray cans for ants and cockroaches. Repellent aerosol sprays scatter colonies, push pests deeper into walls, and can cause budding in ant species. The correct approach for ants and roaches is GEL BAIT - applied in small dots in cracks and crevices. The colony eliminates itself.

Dust application rule: Less is more. If you can see piles or lines of dust, you have applied far too much. Insects will walk AROUND visible dust deposits. A barely visible film, applied with a hand duster or puff bottle, is ideal. Think talcum powder after a shower, not flour on a cutting board.

Liquid mixing tip: Always add the product to water, not water to product. This prevents concentrated chemical from splashing. Use the measuring cup that comes with the product - kitchen measuring tools get contaminated and should never be used for food again.

Bait placement strategy: Place gel bait in small pea-sized dots (not lines or globs) in cracks, corners, hinges, and behind appliances. More dots in more locations beats fewer larger dots. Refresh bait every 2-4 weeks or when consumed. Never spray near bait stations - the repellent chemical deters pests from feeding on the bait.

Key takeaway: Professional pest control operators spend more time choosing the right formulation than choosing the active ingredient. A mediocre active ingredient in the perfect formulation outperforms an excellent active ingredient in the wrong formulation every time. Formulation is the difference between amateur and professional results.
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Reviewed by Derek GiordanoContent reviewed by a licensed pest management professional. Last reviewed: April 2026.
📚 Sources: EPA Pesticide Labels · NPIC Pesticide Info
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026