Category: Fleas & Ticks

  • Florida Tick Identification and Prevention

    Florida Tick Identification and Prevention

    Important: Panama City Pest Control is an independent DIY information site. We are not a licensed pest control company. For severe infestations, hire a Florida-licensed pest control professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links.

    Florida has multiple tick species, each carrying different disease risks. Identification and prevention matter for outdoor enthusiasts and pet owners. Here is the guide.

    Common Florida ticks

    1. American dog tick

    Brown with white markings. Carries Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever and tularemia. Most common Florida tick.

    2. Lone star tick

    Brown with single white spot on female. Carries Ehrlichiosis and Alpha-gal syndrome (red meat allergy). Aggressive biter.

    3. Brown dog tick

    Reddish-brown. Primarily affects dogs but can bite humans. Found indoors in dog living areas.

    4. Black-legged tick (deer tick)

    Tiny, dark legs. Carries Lyme disease (less common in Florida than Northeast but still present).

    5. Gulf Coast tick

    Brown with white markings. Carries Spotted Fever group rickettsiosis.

    Tick prevention

    Personal protection

    • DEET-based repellent (20-30% concentration).
    • Permethrin-treated clothing for hiking/yard work.
    • Long sleeves and pants tucked into socks.
    • Light-colored clothing (easier to spot ticks).
    • Tick check after outdoor activity.

    Pet protection

    • Year-round flea/tick prevention (Frontline, Bravecto, Simparica).
    • Tick collar on outdoor dogs.
    • Daily tick check on pets after outdoor time.

    Yard treatment

    • Bifen IT spray to wooded areas, leaf litter, fence lines.
    • Maintain short grass.
    • Remove leaf litter and brush piles.
    • Keep wood piles away from house.

    See Bifen IT →

    If bitten

    1. Remove tick promptly with fine-tipped tweezers.
    2. Grasp tick close to skin and pull straight up.
    3. Clean bite area with rubbing alcohol.
    4. Save tick in plastic bag (for ID if symptoms develop).
    5. Watch for symptoms (rash, fever) for 30 days.
    6. Consult doctor if symptoms develop.

    Verdict

    For Florida tick prevention, personal repellent + pet medication + yard treatment with Bifen IT covers most exposure. Always perform tick checks after outdoor activity in wooded or grassy areas. Save any biting tick for identification.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Best Flea Treatment for Carpets and Upholstery

    Best Flea Treatment for Carpets and Upholstery

    Important: Panama City Pest Control is an independent DIY information site. We are not a licensed pest control company. For severe infestations, hire a Florida-licensed pest control professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links.

    Indoor flea infestations require multi-step treatment because eggs and larvae hide in carpets, upholstery, and pet bedding. Here is the proven protocol.

    Why fleas are hard to eliminate

    The flea life cycle has 4 stages — egg, larva, pupa, adult. Treatments only kill some stages. Eggs and pupae can survive months. Multi-step treatment over 4-6 weeks is required for full elimination.

    The 5-step indoor flea treatment

    Step 1: Treat pets first

    Without treating pets, indoor treatment fails. Use prescription flea preventatives (Frontline, Bravecto, Simparica). Continue year-round.

    Step 2: Vacuum thoroughly

    Vacuum all carpets, upholstery, pet beds, baseboards. Empty vacuum bag/canister into sealed bag and dispose outside immediately. Vacuum daily for 2 weeks.

    Step 3: Apply IGR (insect growth regulator)

    Tekko Pro or Precor IGR applied to carpets and upholstery breaks the flea reproductive cycle. Eggs and larvae cannot mature into adults.

    See Tekko Pro IGR →

    Step 4: Apply adulticide

    Bifen IT spray to carpets, baseboards, and pet bedding kills adult fleas immediately.

    See Bifen IT →

    Step 5: Apply DE in cracks and crevices

    Diatomaceous earth in baseboards and crevices provides long-term protection.

    See Diatomaceous Earth →

    Wash all pet bedding

    Hot water wash (130°F+) and high-heat dry of all pet bedding, soft toys, blankets pets sleep on. Repeat weekly during treatment.

    Yard treatment

    Indoor flea treatment fails if outdoor source persists. Bifen IT broadcast spray to entire yard, focusing on shaded areas where pets rest.

    Verdict

    For indoor flea infestation, the IGR + adulticide + vacuum + pet treatment + yard treatment combination eliminates fleas in 4-6 weeks. Skip any step and treatment fails. Consistency matters more than aggressive single-treatment.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Fleas and Ticks in the Florida Panhandle: Pet, House, and Yard Plan

    Fleas and Ticks in the Florida Panhandle: Pet, House, and Yard Plan

    Florida is the worst flea state in the country and a top-five tick state. The combination of mild winters, year-round humidity, abundant wildlife, and a heavy pet population means flea pressure never really stops. A pet that goes outdoors without flea prevention will pick up fleas within days during peak season — and once fleas are in the house, the carpet is full of eggs within a week.

    This guide covers the integrated approach to fleas and ticks: pet treatment first, indoor decontamination second, yard treatment third. All three layers together are required to actually solve the problem.

    The flea life cycle (why this is harder than it looks)

    Fleas have four life stages — egg, larva, pupa, adult. The adult fleas you see are about 5% of the total population at any given time. The other 95% are eggs and pupae living in the carpet, between floorboards, and in pet bedding.

    The adult flea jumps onto a host, feeds, and lays 50 eggs per day. Eggs roll off the host and into carpet and bedding. Eggs hatch in 1 to 12 days into larvae, which feed on flea dirt (adult flea feces) and other organic debris. Larvae spin cocoons and pupate. Pupae can survive 5 to 12 months waiting for a host. Vibration triggers emergence.

    This is why flea problems do not “go away” after one treatment, and why professional pest control quotes typically include three follow-up visits. Pupae keep emerging for months.

    Step 1: Pet treatment (start here, always)

    Topical and oral flea preventives do the heavy lifting. The most effective products on the market in 2026:

    • Oral monthly: Bravecto, NexGard, Simparica Trio. Highly effective, work systemically. Require veterinary prescription.
    • Topical monthly: Frontline Plus (over-the-counter), Advantage II (over-the-counter), Revolution (Rx).
    • Collars: Seresto. 8-month duration, water-resistant. Effective if applied correctly.

    Critical points most pet owners get wrong:

    • Treat every pet in the household. One untreated cat or dog is a continuous reservoir.
    • Year-round, not seasonal. Florida fleas do not die in winter. Skip a month and the cycle restarts.
    • Match dose to weight. Underdosing is the #1 reason topicals “stop working.”
    • Ask the vet about resistance. Some Florida flea populations have developed reduced sensitivity to fipronil. If your topical is not working after 60 days of correct use, switch active ingredients.

    Step 2: Indoor decontamination

    If you have already seen fleas in the house, you are dealing with eggs, larvae, and pupae throughout the carpet, soft furniture, and pet bedding.

    Vacuum every other day for 3 weeks

    Aggressive vacuuming pulls eggs, larvae, and triggers pupae emergence (then those adults die from your treatment). Hit the seams of upholstery, the pet’s favorite resting spots, baseboards, and under furniture. Empty the canister or seal the bag and discard outside immediately — eggs hatch and re-infest if you leave the bag indoors.

    Wash all pet bedding

    Hot water (130°F minimum), then dry on hot. Repeat weekly during active treatment. If the pet sleeps on a couch, a removable washable cover is worth installing for the duration.

    Indoor IGR + adulticide treatment

    The professional protocol uses two products: an insect growth regulator (methoprene or pyriproxyfen) that prevents eggs from hatching and larvae from maturing, plus a pyrethroid adulticide that kills emerged adults. Combined products like Precor 2000 Plus or Vet-Kem Siphotrol Plus II contain both.

    Apply per label directions to all carpeted areas, baseboards, pet bedding zones, and under furniture. Treat once, then again 2 weeks later when the next wave of pupae emerges.

    For homes with hard floors, mop with a diluted IGR solution along baseboards and in pet sleeping zones. Spray-treat upholstery according to product labeling.

    Diatomaceous earth for the long-term layer

    Food-grade diatomaceous earth dusted lightly into carpet, baseboard cracks, and the pet’s resting spots provides long-term residual that keeps killing emerging adults. Use a small hand duster for thin application — heavy piles do nothing extra and create dust hazard. Vacuum after 48 hours, then reapply.

    DE is mechanical (kills by abrading insect exoskeletons) so resistance is not possible. Safe around pets and humans when used correctly. Wear a dust mask during application — silica dust is a respiratory irritant.

    Step 3: Yard treatment

    Outdoor fleas live in shaded, moist, humid zones — under shrubs, in mulch beds, beneath decks, and especially where pets rest in the shade. Treat those zones, not the whole yard.

    Bifen IT mixed at 1 oz per gallon plus an IGR like Tekko Pro IGR (Tekko Pro IGR) sprayed in the targeted zones every 60 days during peak season provides the outdoor layer. The IGR sterilizes flea eggs, while the bifenthrin kills adults and larvae.

    Skip the open lawn — fleas die in direct sun within hours. Focus on:

    • Under decks and porches
    • Shaded mulch beds and shrub bases
    • Pet rest spots (especially shaded ones the dog uses for naps)
    • Property edges where wildlife crosses (raccoons, opossums, and feral cats are the primary outdoor flea vector)

    Tick-specific notes

    The Panhandle has lone star tick, American dog tick, and Gulf Coast tick as the common species, with brown dog tick and black-legged tick (deer tick) less common but present.

    On-pet prevention

    Most modern flea preventives also cover ticks — Bravecto, NexGard, Simparica Trio, and Frontline Plus. Confirm tick coverage on the specific product. Seresto collars are particularly strong for tick prevention.

    Tick checks after outdoor activity

    If you, your kids, or your pets have been in tall grass, brush, or wooded areas, do a tick check within 4 hours of coming inside. Common attachment spots: behind ears, hairline, armpits, groin, behind knees. On dogs, also check between toes, in collar area, and around the tail base.

    Removing an attached tick

    1. Use fine-tipped tweezers or a tick remover tool
    2. Grasp the tick as close to the skin as possible
    3. Pull straight up with steady, even pressure. Do not twist
    4. Clean the bite with rubbing alcohol or soap and water
    5. Save the tick in a sealed bag with the date — useful for diagnosis if symptoms develop

    Skip the petroleum jelly, hot match, and twisting tricks. They increase pathogen transmission risk.

    Symptoms to watch for

    Tick-borne diseases in the Panhandle include Rocky Mountain spotted fever, ehrlichiosis, and (rarely) Lyme disease. If you develop a fever, rash, or flu-like symptoms within 1 to 3 weeks of a known tick bite, see a doctor and mention the bite. Early antibiotic treatment is curative for most tick-borne illnesses.

    The yard tick reduction plan

    If your yard has tick pressure (wooded property, deer activity, brushy edges):

    • Maintain a 3-foot wood-chip or gravel buffer between lawn and woods
    • Keep grass cut short — ticks need vegetation height for questing
    • Remove leaf litter from beds and yard edges
    • Trim back vegetation along walkways
    • Apply Bifen IT to wooded edges and tick travel zones in spring and again in fall

    The realistic timeline

    If you start a complete flea treatment program today:

    • Week 1-2: Adult fleas die from pet topical and indoor treatment. Pupae continue emerging.
    • Week 3-4: Visible flea sightings drop sharply. Eggs no longer hatching successfully due to IGR.
    • Week 5-8: Pupae emergence tapers. Occasional sightings only.
    • Week 8-12: Cycle effectively broken. Maintenance only required (year-round preventive on pets, monthly yard reapplication during peak season).

    When to call a pro

    Call a professional pest control service for indoor flea infestations if:

    • You have done full DIY treatment correctly for 6 weeks and infestation is not declining
    • You have wall-to-wall carpet across an entire home and the labor of vacuuming + treating is beyond your capacity
    • You inherited a home with prior heavy flea infestation (often the case in rentals) and need a full reset

    For ordinary household flea problems where pets are properly treated, DIY indoor + yard treatment costs about $80 in product and beats a $300+ visit because pros use the same products and you have to do the prep work either way.