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Best Pest Control for Seniors in Phoenix, AZ

Pest Control for Seniors for seniors in Phoenix — patient pros who explain every step clearly, offer flexible scheduling, and never use high-pressure tactics. Browse 66 vetted contractors with senior-friendly pricing.

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66contractors

Typical cost in Phoenix

$150–$600 / service

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66 contractors in Phoenix

All Pest Control for Seniors Contractors66

Frontino Pest Control LLC

2301 N 13th St , Phoenix, AZ 85006-1717

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pest Control Services, Termite Control, Rodent Control ...

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Aimvo Pest Control LLC

2330 N 75 Ave Ste 203 , Phoenix, AZ 85035

Pest Control Services, Rodent Control, Exterminator

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Invader Pest Management

PO Box 939 , Glendale, AZ 85311-0939

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pest Control Services, Termite Control, Weed Control Services ...

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Pigeon Man AZ LLC

Phoenix, AZ 85014-5660

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pest Control Services, Bird Control

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Convenient Termite & Pest Control

6747 E. University Drive , Mesa, AZ 85205-7607

12 yrs in business

— Closed

Pest Control Services, Home Inspections, Termite Control. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Ecoshield Pest Solutions

190 E Corporate Pl Ste 1 , Chandler, AZ 85225-1001

4 yrs in business

— Closed

Pest Control Services, Home Inspections, Insulation Contractors. BBB Rating A.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Pest Busters Exterminating, Inc.

14882 , Tucson, AZ 85732-4882

15 yrs in business

— Closed

Pest Control Services, Home Inspections, Termite Control.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Allmite Pest And Pool Service LLC

3201 S 38th St , Phoenix, AZ 85040-1614

14 yrs in business

— Closed

Pest Control Services, Pool Contractors, Termite Control. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Cimex K9

74704 , New River, AZ 85087-1013

10 yrs in business

— Closed

Bed Bug Inspections, Pest Control Services, Bed Bug Removal. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Bill's Home Service Company

251 W Duval Rd , Green Valley, AZ 85614-4356

10 yrs in business

— Closed

Termite Control, Pest Control Services, Home Inspections. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Conn Pest Control

127 N Main St , Cottonwood, AZ 86326-3916

12 yrs in business

— Closed

Pest Control Services, Termite Control, Bed Bug Inspections. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Assured Pest Control

10165 E Hampton Ave , Mesa, AZ 85209

13 yrs in business

— Closed

Pest Control Services, Termite Control, Bed Bug Removal. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more

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Pest Control Cost Guide — Phoenix, AZ

What Phoenix Homeowners Pay for Pest Control in 2025

Phoenix pest control is a year-round necessity — not a seasonal one. The Sonoran Desert's warm winters mean pest populations never truly dormant. Scorpions are active 10–11 months per year. Termites (Arizona's two primary species — subterranean and drywood) remain active year-round. And the metro's explosive growth — 4.5 million residents across Maricopa County — has pushed new construction into previously undisturbed desert habitat, dramatically increasing human-wildlife pest contact. Understanding what each treatment type costs, and why Phoenix pest control often runs higher than the national average, is essential for budgeting correctly.


Phoenix Pest Control Price Ranges (2025)

General Pest Control (Scorpions, Black Widows, Cockroaches, Ants, Crickets)

ServiceDescriptionTypical Phoenix Price
One-time treatmentInterior + exterior perimeter spray + crack-and-crevice$150–$350
Quarterly service plan4 visits/year; guaranteed between$400–$700/year ($100–$175/quarter)
Monthly service planBest for scorpion-active homes or new construction zones$600–$1,200/year ($50–$100/month)
Scorpion-specific treatmentBlack light inspection + barrier treatment + entry sealing$150–$350 per treatment
Scorpion-exclusion (caulking)Sealing all roof line, utility penetrations, garage weatherstrippingadd-on: $200–$600

Termite Control — Two Primary Species in Phoenix

SpeciesTreatment TypeTypical Phoenix Price
Subterranean termiteLiquid soil barrier (Termidor SC)$800–$1,800 (standard home)
Subterranean termiteBaiting (Sentricon)$1,200–$2,500 initial + $300–$500/yr monitoring
Drywood termiteWhole-home tent fumigation (Vikane sulfuryl fluoride)$1,500–$4,000 (fumigation fee; 3-day structure vacancy)
Drywood termiteSpot treatment (localized injection/foam)$300–$900 per spot
Annual termite inspectionWDO inspection report$100–$175

Rodents and Other Wildlife

ServiceTypical Phoenix Price
Roof rat exclusion + trapping$300–$800 initial; $75–$150 follow-up
Pack rat (woodrat) removal$150–$350; nesting site removal
Ground squirrel treatment$200–$500

Phoenix's Unique Pest Pressure — Desert Species With Real Consequences

Arizona Bark Scorpion (Centruroides sculpturatus): The only scorpion in North America considered medically significant. Arizona Poison and Drug Information Center data shows Phoenix metro receives several hundred bark scorpion sting calls per year — concentrated in new-construction neighborhoods in Surprise, Anthem, Peoria, Goodyear, and Buckeye built on recently bulldozed desert. Pain is severe; young children and older adults can require antivenin administration. Prevention protocol: Monthly perimeter treatment with a bifenthrin or lambda-cyhalothrin labeled for scorpion control; black light inspection at night; entry point caulking. Annual cost of professional scorpion prevention: $600–$1,200 for monthly service.

Subterranean Termite (Heterotermes aureus — desert subterranean): The Sonoran Desert subterranean termite is significantly more aggressive than the eastern subterranean termite that Kansas City pest control companies typically treat. Maricopa County is listed in USDA termite infestation probability zone — heavy to very heavy. The University of Arizona Cooperative Extension estimates that 1 in 5 Arizona homes will experience termite damage. Termidor SC applied by licensed AZ operators is the standard treatment.

Drywood Termite (Incisitermes minor): Unlike subterranean termites that enter through soil contact, drywood termites enter through roof line gaps, attic vents, and wood-to-air contact — common in Phoenix's aging wood-frame housing stock from the 1970s–1990s. Drywood infestations require either whole-home tent fumigation (Vikane gas) or spot injection; liquid soil treatments do not address drywood colonies. This distinction is critical — an operator treating drywood termites with a soil liquid barrier is applying the wrong product.

Roof Rat (Rattus rattus): Phoenix's established citrus trees (particularly in Arcadia, Scottsdale, Biltmore, and South Mountain neighborhoods) are prime roof rat habitat. Roof rats nest in citrus canopy, palms, and block wall cavities. Maricopa County Environmental Services advises citrus fruit retrieval before it falls as a primary prevention measure.


Licensing Requirements in Arizona

Pest control operators in Arizona must be licensed by the Arizona Office of Pest Management (OPM). OPM issues separate licenses for:

  • Branch 1: Urban/structural pest control
  • Branch 2: Termite control (also: WDO inspection license for reporting)

Verify any pest control company's Arizona OPM license at sb.state.az.us/opm/search. Companies performing termite work must hold a Branch 2 license. WDO inspection reports (commonly required for mortgage transactions in Arizona) must be issued by a licensed Branch 2 operator.


Cost Factors Specific to Phoenix

Home size and desert landscaping: Homes with extensive cactus and desert rock landscaping adjacent to foundation attract scorpions (scorpions shelter under rocks). Removing or modifying rock landscaping within 2 feet of the foundation reduces scorpion pressure and treatment frequency.

Year-round activity: Unlike northern markets where pest activity slows Oct–Feb, Phoenix operators provide full-intensity service 12 months per year — pricing reflects this.

New construction neighborhoods: Anthem, Surprise, Buckeye, Queen Creek — homes built on former desert have the highest scorpion and termite introduction rates. Monthly service is often the appropriate starting plan for the first 3–5 years in these neighborhoods.

Pest Control FAQ — Phoenix, AZ

Why Hire a Licensed Pest Control Operator in Phoenix, AZ

The Case for Hiring an Arizona OPM-Licensed Pest Control Company

Phoenix's pest control market is one of the highest-volume in the nation — Maricopa County's 4.5 million residents and year-round pest activity support hundreds of pest control operators. The Arizona Office of Pest Management (OPM) regulates this industry, but the volume of operators means quality varies significantly. Choosing correctly protects your family from medically significant pests and your home from termite damage that averages $5,000–$20,000 in repair costs.


Arizona OPM Licensing — What to Verify

The Arizona Office of Pest Management licenses pest control operators in specific branches. For Phoenix residential service:

License BranchWhat It CoversHow to Verify
Branch 1 — StructuralGeneral pest control (scorpions, cockroaches, ants, rodents)sb.state.az.us/opm/search
Branch 2 — TermiteBoth subterranean and drywood termite treatment; WDO inspectionSame OPM license search
Branch 11 — VertebrateRodent and wildlife controlSame OPM license search

A company offering termite control without a Branch 2 license is operating illegally. A company issuing WDO reports (required for most Arizona home sales/purchases) without a Branch 2 WDO license is producing invalid reports. Always verify before signing any service contract.


Scorpion Control — Why Protocol Matters More Than Product

The Arizona bark scorpion is resistant to many common pesticide applications. University of Arizona researchers have documented that bark scorpions can survive direct spray contact with pyrethroids and still recover — unlike cockroaches or ants that die on contact. This means:

  1. Product matters: Bifenthrin (Talstar, Bifen I/T) and lambda-cyhalothrin (Demand CS) remain the standard effective products; some newer formulations targeting scorpion nervous systems show improved efficacy. Operators who simply spray the perimeter with a broad pyrethroid and call it a scorpion treatment are not applying the best available protocol.

  2. Black light inspection: Professional scorpion operators conduct regular black light inspections at night (scorpions fluoresce under UV light), providing population monitoring and targeted follow-up treatment. This service is not performed by operators simply refilling spray tanks on a quarterly schedule.

  3. Exclusion sealing: Bark scorpions can enter through gaps as small as 1/16 inch — any gap where light shows through a closed door or around a pipe is a scorpion entry point. Comprehensive caulking of roofline, utility penetrations, garage door gaps, and exterior light fixtures is the highest-ROI scorpion control action. Professional operators who include exclusion in their protocol outperform those who treat only.


Termite Treatment: Matching the Pest to the Treatment

Phoenix homeowners must understand that subterranean and drywood termites require completely different treatments, and a professional responsible for their diagnosis must correctly identify the species before recommending treatment:

FactorSubterranean TermiteDrywood Termite
Entry pointSoil contact — mud tubes on foundationRoof line, attic vents, wood-to-wood crevices above ground
EvidenceMud tubes, damaged wood near soilFrass (dry fecal pellets) near damaged wood; no mud tubes
Correct treatmentLiquid soil barrier (Termidor) or baiting (Sentricon)Tent fumigation (whole structure) or localized spot injection
What doesn't workSoil treatment for an aerial drywood colonyAerial treatment for soil-entering subterranean colony

A licensed Branch 2 termite operator who performs a proper inspection will identify the species and recommend the appropriate treatment. Operators who default to soil liquid treatment without confirming species are misapplying product and leaving drywood infestations untreated.


Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Phoenix Pest Control Company

  1. What is your Arizona OPM license number, and which branches are you licensed in?
  2. For scorpions: does your program include black light inspection and entry point sealing, or only perimeter spray?
  3. For termites: how do you determine whether the infestation is subterranean or drywood before recommending treatment?
  4. What is your re-treatment guarantee if scorpions are found inside between scheduled treatments?
  5. For termite tenting: which fumigant are you using, and how long does the clearance period last?
  6. Do you carry the Arizona-required commercial pesticide applicator insurance?

National Pest Management Association Certification

The NPMA QualityPro certification is an industry credential that requires companies to meet standards for insurance, training, business practices, and environmental stewardship. Phoenix has several QualityPro-certified companies. While not a guarantee of superior service in every instance, QualityPro certification indicates a company that has passed external vetting — a useful starting point when comparing multiple quotes.

DIY vs. Professional Pest Control — Phoenix, AZ

DIY vs. Professional Pest Control in Phoenix

Phoenix is one of the few U.S. metro areas where DIY pest control has genuinely higher stakes than most cities. The Arizona bark scorpion is the only medically significant scorpion in North America; drywood termites require species-specific treatment unavailable at retail; and roof rats in citrus neighborhoods require professional exclusion to resolve permanently. This comparison addresses each pest category honestly.


Head-to-Head Comparison

FactorDIYArizona OPM-Licensed Professional
Scorpion preventionLimited efficacy — retail pyrethroids cause scorpions to disperse rather than die; black light inspection not feasible for entire structure without trainingProfessional-grade bifenthrin/lambda-cyhalothrin; black light inspection; entry point sealing program
Bark scorpion entry sealingSteel wool + silicone caulk available at hardware stores; effective if all penetrations identifiedSystematic exclusion of roofline, soffit gaps, utility penetrations, garage door weatherstripping
Subterranean termiteNot feasible — Termidor SC is restricted-use; soil trenching and injection equipment requiredLicensed Branch 2 operator; correct product application per label; warranty coverage
Drywood termite (fumigation)Not possible — Vikane (sulfuryl fluoride) is a regulated restricted-use pesticide; tenting requires certified fumigant operatorLicensed fumigant operator; certified clearance before re-entry
Drywood (spot treatment)Premise Foam (imidacloprid) available retail — appropriate for confirmed small spot infestationsProfessional foam injection with professional-grade product; drilling capability for wall void access
German/American cockroachRetail sprays repel and scatter; gel baits (Combat Max, Advion consumer) are effective for small populationsNon-repellent protocols; professional Advion (indoxacarb) gels + insect growth regulator; eliminating resistance issues
Roof ratSnap traps and bait boxes available; effective for 1–3 rats; citrus management DIY effectiveProfessional exclusion (sealing roof line, conduit entry, block wall gaps); tamper-resistant bait stations
Pack rat (woodrat) nest removalMessy and complex; pack rat nests sometimes harbor cone-nose (kissing) bugs that vector Chagas diseaseProfessional identification and safe nest removal
Arizona OPM license requiredNo (for own home)Yes (for commercial application)
Re-treatment guaranteeNoneIncluded with most quarterly plans

Where DIY Works in Phoenix

Black light scorpion monitoring: A $20 UV flashlight from Amazon and a nightly check of garage, entryways, and patios gives you accurate population monitoring. Finding scorpions with a black light does not eliminate them, but it quantifies your problem and locates where they are entering. DIY monitoring + professional monthly treatment is the optimal combined approach in high-pressure neighborhoods.

Basic ant and cockroach prevention (exterior):

  • Ortho Home Defense exterior barrier spray: effective for pavement ants and occasional invaders if applied correctly
  • Keeping exterior lights off or switching to yellow "bug" bulbs: reduces cricket and roach attraction at night, which reduces scorpion food source

Citrus tree management (roof rat prevention):

  • Harvesting citrus before it falls: removes the primary food source for roof rats in Arcadia, Biltmore, and Coronado neighborhoods
  • Maricopa County Environmental Services specifically recommends this as the cornerstone of roof rat prevention — entirely DIY

Small drywood termite spot (confirmed, visible, accessible):

  • Premise Foam (retail imidacloprid foam) injected into the exact visible gallery location: effective for isolated, accessible drywood spots
  • You must be certain of species identification. If there is any uncertainty, call a licensed Branch 2 inspector

Where DIY Fails Specifically in Phoenix

Any scorpion infestation inside living areas: Finding bark scorpions inside — not just in the garage — means entry points exist that require identification and sealing. DIY caulking without systematic inspection of the entire envelope (roofline, all utility penetrations, all door and window frames, all conduit entries) is incomplete. Professional operators performing scorpion exclusion systematically work the entire structure exterior, which is a 2–4 hour job — not a weekend caulk gun project.

Any drywood termite whole-home infestation: Whole-home tent fumigation with Vikane is the only treatment that eliminates an established drywood colony throughout a structure. No retail product replicates this. A colony left untreated causes structural damage at an average of 170 pounds of wood consumed per year per colony.

Subterranean termites breaching the foundation: Once mud tubes are visible on the foundation wall or interior framing, a professional soil treatment is required. Termidor SC — the industry standard — is a restricted-use product. Arizona OPM records show that unlicensed application of restricted-use termiticides is a civil violation with fines up to $5,000.


Phoenix Seasonal Pest Calendar — When DIY vs. Professional Treatment Is Most Critical

MonthPrimary PestDIY ActionProfessional Priority
January–MarchScorpions emerge early (AZ winters mild)Black light monitoringMonthly treatment; entry sealing
April–JuneDrywood termite swarmers, subterranean swarmersCheck attic vents; seal exterior gapsAnnual termite inspection; WDO report
July–SeptemberMonsoon surge: cockroaches, crickets (scorpion food increase)Exterior lights off; seal door gapsMonthly scorpion + cockroach treatment
October–DecemberRoof rat citrus season; pack rat nest buildingHarvest citrus; check attic for accessRodent exclusion + trapping

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