Category: Termites

  • How to Tell If You Have Termites or Carpenter Ants

    How to Tell If You Have Termites or Carpenter Ants

    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 professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links.

    Termites and carpenter ants both damage wood but require completely different treatment. Misidentification wastes time and money. Here is the comparison.

    Side-by-side identification

    Feature Termite Carpenter Ant
    Body shape Straight, no waist Pinched waist
    Antennae Straight, beaded Elbowed (bent)
    Wings Two equal pairs Two unequal pairs
    Color Cream (workers), dark (swarmers) Black or red-and-black
    Eats wood? YES (digestion) NO (excavation only)
    Frass appearance Mud/soil-like (subterranean) or pellets (drywood) Sawdust-like
    Damage pattern Sponge-like galleries Smooth-sided clean galleries

    Mud tubes = termites only

    Subterranean termites build mud tubes. Carpenter ants do not. If you see mud tubes on foundation or walls, termites are present.

    Sawdust = carpenter ants typically

    Carpenter ants push sawdust-like frass out of nest galleries. Drywood termite frass is more pellet-like.

    Treatment differences

    Termites

    • Liquid Taurus SC perimeter treatment OR Sentricon bait stations.
    • Drywood termites may require tenting (whole-house fumigation).
    • Often requires professional treatment.

    Carpenter ants

    • Locate and treat the nest with Bifen IT or Taurus SC.
    • Address moisture source (carpenter ants follow water damage).
    • Can usually be treated DIY.

    Verdict

    The key visual differences: termites have straight bodies and antennae; carpenter ants have pinched waists and elbowed antennae. Mud tubes = termites. Sawdust frass = carpenter ants. Treatment is completely different — identify before treating.

    See Taurus SC →

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Termite Bait Stations — Sentricon vs DIY Options

    Termite Bait Stations — Sentricon vs DIY Options

    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 professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links.

    Termite bait stations are an alternative to liquid termiticide treatment. They use cellulose bait laced with insect growth regulator to eliminate entire termite colonies. Here is the comparison.

    Sentricon Always Active (professional system)

    Industry-leading bait station system installed by licensed pest control companies. Stations placed every 10-20 feet around home perimeter.

    • Cost: $1,500-$3,000 install + $200-$400 annual monitoring.
    • Effectiveness: Excellent — eliminates entire colonies including queen.
    • Maintenance: Pest control checks stations quarterly.
    • Warranty: Most installers offer transferable damage warranty.

    DIY bait stations (Spectracide, Hex-Pro, etc.)

    • Cost: $50-$200 for set of 4-10 stations.
    • Effectiveness: Mixed — depends on placement and termite pressure.
    • Maintenance: You must inspect monthly and refill bait.
    • Warranty: None.

    Sentricon vs DIY comparison

    Factor Sentricon DIY Stations
    Initial cost $1,500-$3,000 $50-$200
    Annual cost $200-$400 $30-$60 (refills)
    Active ingredient Noviflumuron (effective) Hexaflumuron or other (variable)
    Monitoring Professional quarterly DIY monthly
    Damage warranty Yes (transferable) No

    When Sentricon makes sense

    • You want hands-off termite protection.
    • You plan to sell home eventually (transferable warranty adds value).
    • You have had termite damage before.
    • You can budget the upfront and annual cost.

    When DIY makes sense

    • Budget tight.
    • You commit to monthly inspection.
    • You combine with liquid Taurus SC perimeter treatment.
    • You plan to monitor for years rather than expecting quick results.

    See Taurus SC →

    Verdict

    For most Florida homeowners, Sentricon professional installation is worth the cost — especially with damage warranty. DIY bait stations work but require commitment and combine best with liquid perimeter treatment.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Powderpost Beetles in Florida — Wood Damage Identification

    Powderpost Beetles in Florida — Wood Damage Identification

    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.

    Powderpost beetles damage hardwood floors, furniture, and structural wood. They are second only to termites in wood-destroying impact. Here is the Florida guide.

    Powderpost beetle types

    • Lyctid powderpost beetles: Attack hardwoods (oak, walnut, hickory, ash).
    • Anobiid powderpost beetles: Attack softwood and hardwood, including structural lumber.
    • Bostrichid powderpost beetles: Attack hardwoods.

    How to identify damage

    • Tiny round exit holes (1/16 to 1/8 inch) in wood.
    • Fine talc-like powder around holes.
    • Soft, hollow-sounding damaged wood.
    • Often in hardwood floors, furniture, or attic wood.

    Treatment options

    Spot treatment with Bora-Care

    Borate-based wood treatment for accessible wood. Apply to bare wood, allow penetration. Effective for furniture and unfinished structural wood.

    Tenting (fumigation)

    For widespread structural infestations or finished hardwood floors. Sulfuryl fluoride whole-house treatment. Same protocol as drywood termite treatment.

    Heat treatment

    Whole-structure heating to 140°F+. Available from specialty providers.

    Replace severely damaged wood

    Sometimes replacement is more cost-effective than treatment, especially for furniture.

    Prevention

    • Use only kiln-dried lumber for projects.
    • Seal hardwood floors and furniture with polyurethane.
    • Reduce indoor humidity below 50%.
    • Inspect furniture purchases (especially antiques) before bringing inside.

    Verdict

    For localized powderpost beetle damage in accessible wood, Bora-Care spot treatment works. For structural infestations or finished hardwood floors, professional fumigation or heat treatment is required. Florida humidity creates ongoing risk — maintain indoor humidity control.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Termite Bond and Warranty — What Florida Homeowners Should Know

    Termite Bond and Warranty — What Florida Homeowners Should Know

    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.

    Termite bonds in Florida cost $100-$400 annually and provide either retreatment-only or repair coverage. Understanding what you are buying matters before signing. Here is the framework.

    Two types of termite bonds

    1. Retreatment bond

    Pest control company will retreat for free if termites return. Does NOT cover damage repair. Cheaper option.

    2. Repair and retreatment bond

    Covers retreatment AND repairs damage caused by new termite infestations after initial treatment. More expensive but better protection.

    What termite bonds typically cover

    • Subterranean termite retreatment.
    • Periodic re-inspection (typically annually).
    • Some include drywood termite coverage (verify in contract).
    • Some include Formosan termite coverage (often excluded).

    What they typically EXCLUDE

    • Damage existing at time of contract.
    • Wood-destroying organisms other than specified termites.
    • Carpenter ants, powderpost beetles (unless specified).
    • Repairs above contract dollar limit.

    Florida-specific considerations

    • Most home sales require WDI (Wood-Destroying Insect) inspection report. Active termite bond simplifies this.
    • Bonds are often transferable to new owners (verify in contract).
    • Some lenders require active termite bond for mortgage approval.

    Cost reality

    • Initial treatment: $1,200-$2,500.
    • Annual bond renewal: $100-$400.
    • Cost over 10 years: $2,200-$6,500.
    • Without bond, single termite damage repair can cost $5,000-$15,000+.

    Verdict

    For Florida homeowners, a repair-and-retreatment termite bond is generally worth the annual cost. The risk of structural termite damage in Florida is high enough that the insurance value justifies the premium. Always read contract carefully and verify transferability.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Subterranean Termites in Florida — Identification and Treatment

    Subterranean Termites in Florida — Identification and Treatment

    Important: Panama City Pest Control is an independent DIY information site. We are not a licensed pest control company. For severe infestations, dangerous pests, or structural issues, hire a Florida-licensed pest control professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links — at no extra cost to you.

    Subterranean termites are the most destructive wood pest in Florida — causing an estimated $1+ billion annually in US damage. Native subterranean termites are widespread; Formosan termites cause even more rapid damage. Here is the Florida guide.

    How to identify subterranean termites

    • 1/8 to 3/8 inch long depending on caste.
    • Workers: cream-colored, soft-bodied.
    • Soldiers: tan head with large brown jaws.
    • Reproductive swarmers: dark with two pairs of equal-length wings.
    • Often confused with flying ants — termites have straight antennae and equal wings; ants have elbowed antennae and unequal wings.

    Signs of subterranean termite infestation

    • Mud tubes on foundations, walls, or pipes (most common indicator).
    • Discarded wings near windowsills or light fixtures after spring swarm.
    • Soft, hollow-sounding wood when tapped.
    • Damaged wood with mud or soil packed inside galleries.
    • Sagging floors or ceilings in advanced infestations.

    Florida termite season

    Spring (March-May) is peak swarming season. Native subterranean termites swarm during day; Formosan termites swarm at dusk near lights.

    DIY vs Professional decision

    DIY makes sense if

    • You see active termites in a small area only.
    • Damage is limited to one localized spot.
    • You can apply Taurus SC or Termidor SC perimeter treatment yourself.

    Hire a pro if

    • Mud tubes are throughout the structure.
    • You suspect Formosan termites (faster damage).
    • Damage is structural (floor joists, wall studs).
    • You want a transferable warranty for home sale.
    • Your home requires bait stations or fumigation.

    DIY treatment with Taurus SC

    Trench around foundation 4-6 inches deep, mix Taurus SC with water, pour into trench, backfill. Creates a treatment zone that worker termites traffic through and carry back to colony.

    See Taurus SC →

    Cost reality

    • DIY perimeter treatment: $200-$500 in materials.
    • Professional liquid treatment: $1,200-$2,500.
    • Sentricon bait system: $1,500-$3,000 install + annual monitoring fee.
    • Tenting/fumigation (drywood termites only): $2,500-$5,000.

    Verdict

    For minor subterranean termite activity, DIY Taurus SC perimeter treatment is reasonable. For widespread infestation, suspected Formosan termites, or any structural damage, hire a Florida-licensed pest control company with termite warranty.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow manufacturer safety instructions. For dangerous pests or large infestations, hire a licensed professional.

  • Drywood Termites in Florida — How to Spot and Treat

    Drywood Termites in Florida — How to Spot and Treat

    Important: Panama City Pest Control is an independent DIY information site. We are not a licensed pest control company. For severe infestations, dangerous pests, or structural issues, hire a Florida-licensed pest control professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links — at no extra cost to you.

    Drywood termites (Cryptotermes and Incisitermes) live entirely inside wood without contact with soil — different from subterranean termites. They are common throughout coastal Florida. Here is the identification and treatment guide.

    How to identify drywood termites

    • 3/8 to 1/2 inch long as adults.
    • Reproductive swarmers: dark brown to black with smoky wings.
    • Workers: cream-colored, similar to subterranean.
    • Live entirely within wood, no soil contact.
    • Most active in late summer (August-September swarming).

    Signs of drywood termite infestation

    • Frass (droppings) — distinctive 6-sided pellets the size of poppy seeds. Often piled below infested wood.
    • Kick-out holes — small holes in wood where termites push out frass.
    • Discarded wings near windowsills after swarming.
    • Hollow-sounding wood.
    • Surface blistering in painted wood as galleries develop near surface.

    Where drywood termites live

    • Door and window frames.
    • Attic rafters and roof structures.
    • Furniture (especially antiques).
    • Hardwood floors.
    • Decorative wood trim.

    Treatment options

    Option 1: Spot treatment with Bora-Care or Termidor

    For localized infestations, drill into wood and inject treatment directly. Most effective for early-stage discoveries in accessible wood.

    Option 2: Tenting (fumigation) for widespread infestations

    Whole-house tenting with sulfuryl fluoride. Required for severe drywood infestations throughout structure. $2,500-$5,000 typical Florida cost. Hire licensed fumigation specialists.

    Option 3: Heat treatment

    Whole-structure heating to 140°F+ for several hours. Chemical-free alternative to fumigation. Limited Florida providers; cost similar to tenting.

    Option 4: Liquid Taurus SC (limited use)

    Less effective on drywood termites than subterranean. May work for very localized accessible infestations.

    See Taurus SC →

    When DIY makes sense

    For a single small piece of infested furniture or a localized spot in accessible wood, DIY spot treatment can work. For anything in structural wood or multiple infested areas throughout the home, hire a licensed fumigation specialist.

    Verdict

    For drywood termites, scope determines treatment. Localized = DIY spot treatment. Widespread = professional tenting or heat treatment. Annual professional inspection is the smart move for Florida homes especially in coastal areas.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow manufacturer safety instructions. For dangerous pests or large infestations, hire a licensed professional.

  • Termites in Florida Panhandle Homes: DIY Prevention and When to Call a Pro

    Termites in Florida Panhandle Homes: DIY Prevention and When to Call a Pro

    Florida is the worst termite state in the country. Three of the four most destructive termite species in North America — eastern subterranean, Formosan, and West Indian drywood — are all established in the Panhandle. By the time most homeowners notice termites, the active colony has been at work for 12 to 36 months.

    This guide is honest about what DIY can and cannot do. You can prevent termite infestations with consistent perimeter treatment. You generally cannot eliminate an active subterranean termite infestation without a licensed pest control company. Here is the line, and how to handle each side of it.

    The three Panhandle termite species

    Eastern subterranean termite

    By far the most common. Lives in the soil. Builds mud tubes from the ground up to access wood structures. Tubes are pencil-thin tan-colored tunnels you can find on foundation walls, slab cracks, and crawl space joists. Causes about 80% of termite damage in the Panhandle.

    Formosan termite (super-termite)

    Also subterranean. Originally from Asia, established in the Gulf states since the 1960s. Builds aerial nests inside walls (carton nests) and can survive without ground contact if there is enough moisture. Colonies are 10x larger than native subterranean termites — up to 7 million individuals — and damage accumulates much faster.

    West Indian drywood termite

    Lives entirely inside dry, sound wood. No mud tubes, no soil contact. Common in older Panhandle homes. The signature evidence is small piles of frass — six-sided pellets the size of poppy seeds — that look like sawdust until you look closely.

    Signs you have termites

    Most homeowners discover termites three ways:

    1. A swarm. Both subterranean and Formosan termites release winged reproductives in spring (March to May in the Panhandle). If you see a cloud of small flying insects coming out of a wall, soffit, or windowsill, you have an established colony nearby. Swarmers shed their wings quickly. A pile of identical wings on a windowsill is the smoking gun.
    2. Mud tubes. Found on foundation walls, especially in garages, crawl spaces, and along exterior block. About the diameter of a #2 pencil. Break one open. If it is repaired the next day, the colony is active.
    3. Frass piles (drywood termites). Six-sided pellets accumulating in piles below ceilings, baseboards, or window casings. Means drywood termites are actively eating wood above the pile.

    Less obvious signs: bubbled paint, doors and windows that suddenly stick, hollow-sounding wood when tapped, and visible damage when you pry off baseboards or trim.

    What DIY can do: prevention

    Subterranean termites need three things to colonize a structure: soil contact, moisture, and an unsealed entry point. Eliminate any one and you can prevent infestation.

    Moisture management

    • Grade soil away from foundation — minimum 6 inches of fall over 10 feet
    • Direct downspouts at least 4 feet from the foundation
    • Fix all plumbing leaks immediately, especially in crawl spaces
    • Reduce indoor humidity (target 50% or below)
    • Repair leaking AC condensate lines and drain pans
    • If you have a crawl space, install a vapor barrier and check for standing water after heavy rain

    Wood-to-soil contact

    • No bark mulch within 12 inches of the foundation. Use rock or rubber mulch in that zone
    • Firewood stacked at least 20 feet from the house, raised off the ground
    • Remove dead tree stumps within 30 feet of the foundation
    • Cut tree branches and shrubs back so they do not contact the siding or roof
    • Check fence posts, deck posts, and porch supports — wood-to-soil contact here is a freeway in

    The DIY perimeter treatment

    The professional standard for subterranean termite prevention is a soil treatment with fipronil. The product most often used by licensed companies is Termidor SC. The same active ingredient is available to homeowners as Taurus SC — same fipronil concentration, same labeled use rate, sold without a license requirement.

    Application is involved but straightforward. You dig a 6-inch wide, 6-inch deep trench around the entire foundation. Mix Taurus SC at 0.06% (about 0.8 oz per gallon) and apply 4 gallons of solution per 10 linear feet of trench. Backfill with the displaced soil, which traps the treated zone underground. Termites foraging from soil cannot cross the treated zone without picking up the fipronil and carrying it back to the colony.

    This treatment lasts approximately 8 to 10 years if undisturbed. The DIY cost: about $150 in product for an average home, plus a Saturday of digging.

    Realistic disclosure: Most homeowners will not do this themselves. Trenching around an entire foundation, working around plumbing penetrations, AC line sets, gas lines, and concrete porches, while remembering to keep treatment continuous around the entire perimeter — it is a real project. If you have the will, the products work as well as a pro application. If not, this is the one place where paying a pro is genuinely worth it for many people.

    What DIY cannot do: active subterranean infestations

    If you found mud tubes and the colony is active, do not try to handle it yourself. Here is why:

    • Subterranean termite colonies extend 100 to 300 feet from the structure. Treating the visible tubes leaves 99% of the colony untouched.
    • Whole-structure treatment requires injecting termiticide into soil under slabs, around bath traps, and inside wall voids — work that requires drilling concrete, accessing crawl spaces, and using equipment most homeowners do not own.
    • The bait-station approach (Sentricon, Trelona, Advance) requires placing 10-15 stations on a schedule and monitoring them quarterly. Effective but slow (6 to 18 months for colony elimination).
    • Liability: if you DIY and the home is later resold, you have no termite warranty to transfer. A licensed company gives you a renewable bond that follows the property.

    For an active subterranean infestation, get three quotes from licensed Florida pest control companies. Ask whether they use liquid termiticide (Termidor, Premise) or bait (Sentricon). Both work; liquid is faster, bait is less invasive. Expect $1,200 to $2,500 for an average home, with annual renewal contracts of $200 to $400.

    Drywood termite specific advice

    Drywood termites do not contact soil, so soil treatment does nothing. Localized DIY for drywood includes:

    • Spot treatment with borates. Drill small holes into the affected wood every 6 inches and inject borate solution. Effective for small, isolated drywood infestations in accessible furniture, trim, or framing.
    • Replace and treat. If the affected wood is removable (a damaged door frame, a section of trim), cut it out, dispose of it, and apply borate to the surrounding wood before replacing.

    For widespread drywood termite infestation — multiple frass piles in different rooms, swarms inside the house — the only reliable treatment is whole-structure fumigation. That requires a licensed fumigator, a tarp covering the entire home, and 3 days of vacating. Pricing varies by home size, typically $1,500 to $4,000.

    Annual termite inspection: do it yourself

    Even with a pro contract, walk the property twice a year (spring and fall). Look for:

    • Mud tubes on foundation walls, especially garage walls and crawl space piers
    • Swarmer wings on windowsills
    • Frass piles inside or below trim and baseboards
    • Sticking doors and bubbled paint
    • Hollow-sounding wood (tap with a screwdriver handle)
    • Unexplained sawdust below window casings

    The earlier you find it, the cheaper it is to fix.

    The honest summary

    For Florida Panhandle homeowners, the right termite plan is:

    1. Year 1 — DIY perimeter Taurus SC trench treatment OR pay a licensed pro for the same work
    2. Year 2 onward — annual self-inspection in spring and fall
    3. Maintain moisture management and wood-to-soil separation continuously
    4. If active termites appear — call a licensed company. This is not a DIY job at that stage

    Termites cause more damage to U.S. homes than fires and storms combined. In Florida specifically, every home will be exposed to termite pressure within 5 years of construction. The cost of prevention is dramatically lower than the cost of repair plus treatment after damage.