🧪 Pesticide Guide

Termiticide Comparison: Liquid vs Bait vs Foam vs Wood Treatment

Termite Treatment Comparison Guide

Choosing the right termite treatment depends on your specific situation - the type of termite, severity of infestation, construction type, environmental concerns, and budget. This guide compares all major termiticide approaches with honest assessments of when each one is the right choice.

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Type
Termite Treatment Comparison Guide
Signal Word
N/A (Comparison Guide)

Target Pests / Scope

Subterranean termites (most common - 95% of US infestations), drywood termites (primarily coastal/southern), dampwood termites (Pacific Northwest). Each type requires a different treatment approach.

Products and Recommendations

See individual product pages for detailed information on each active ingredient and brand.

Safety

DIY termite treatment is risky. Unlike ant or cockroach control where DIY can be effective, termite treatment failure can result in tens of thousands of dollars in structural damage. Professional inspection and treatment is strongly recommended for all confirmed termite infestations. A free professional inspection costs nothing and provides critical information about the extent of the problem.

Detailed Guide

Subterranean termite treatment options:

MethodHow It WorksSpeedDurationCost RangeBest For
Liquid barrier (fipronil/Termidor)Chemical barrier in soil around foundation; transfer effect kills colonyStops damage immediately; colony death in weeks10+ years per application$1,200-2,500Active infestations needing fast response
Bait stations (Sentricon)In-ground stations monitored quarterly; workers carry bait to colonyColony elimination in 2-6 monthsOngoing protection (annual service)$1,500-3,000 install + $250-400/yearPreventive, eco-sensitive, well construction
Liquid barrier (bifenthrin/permethrin)Repellent chemical barrier - termites avoid treated soilImmediate barrier5-7 years$800-1,800Budget option, no colony elimination
Wood treatment (Boracare/Tim-bor)Borate solution penetrates wood, making it toxic to termitesImmediate protection of treated woodLife of the wood (permanent)$2-4 per linear footNew construction, crawlspace, exposed wood

The Termidor advantage (and why it dominates):

Fipronil (Termidor SC) is the #1 professional termiticide because of its unique transfer effect. Unlike repellent barriers (bifenthrin, permethrin) that only keep termites out, Termidor is non-repellent - termites walk through it unknowingly, pick up a lethal dose, and transfer it to nestmates through grooming. This eliminates the colony, not just the foragers hitting your foundation. In field trials, Termidor provided 100% control at every test site over 15+ years.

Sentricon vs Termidor:

This is the most common debate in termite control. Both are highly effective but work differently. Sentricon eliminates the colony through baiting over 2-6 months and provides ongoing monitoring/protection. Termidor creates an immediate barrier AND eliminates the colony through the transfer effect. Many professionals recommend Termidor for active infestations (faster protection) and Sentricon for preventive monitoring (continuous detection). Some homeowners use both - Termidor for the immediate threat and Sentricon for long-term monitoring.

Drywood termite treatment:

Drywood termites live entirely inside wood (no soil contact), so soil treatments do not work. Options include: whole-structure fumigation with sulfuryl fluoride (Vikane) for severe infestations, localized treatment with foam or injectable termiticides for small infestations, or heat treatment (raising wood temperature to 120F+ for 35 minutes). Fumigation is the only option that guarantees 100% elimination of drywood termites throughout the entire structure.

What about DIY termite treatment?

Liquid termiticide concentrates (Taurus SC, generic fipronil) are available to homeowners online. However, proper application requires specialized equipment (drill, injection rod, high-volume sprayer), knowledge of foundation construction, and the ability to apply hundreds of gallons of solution in a precise trench pattern. Inadequate treatment leaves gaps that termites will find. For most homeowners, the cost of professional treatment is justified by the stakes involved - the average termite damage repair costs $3,000-8,000.

Key takeaway: Termites cause more structural damage in the US than fires, floods, and earthquakes combined - over $5 billion annually. The average homeowner discovers termite damage only after significant structural compromise has already occurred, because termites work entirely inside wood and soil. Annual professional inspections are the best investment a homeowner can make in structural protection.
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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