Real answers on what it costs, how scorpion and roach treatment works, recurring plans, termites, bed bugs, and pet safety. No fluff, hedged pricing throughout.
Home/FAQ
A first general pest control visit usually runs $125 to $200, with recurring quarterly service around $90 to $150. Scorpion control usually starts at $150 to $300, rodent control with exclusion runs $250 to $600, and bed bug treatment runs $400 to $700 per room. We post real ranges so you can compare before anyone steps on your property.
Most general jobs schedule within the same week, and we keep priority slots for stinging insects, active scorpion problems, and rodents already inside the living space. We will give you a real arrival window when you book, and if anything changes we call rather than leave you waiting.
Yes. Nevada requires every pest control business to hold a license through the Nevada Department of Agriculture, and the technician applying product must be a certified applicator. We are licensed and insured and will share our license number and a certificate of insurance on request, which is worth asking any company for before you let them treat your home.
The Arizona bark scorpion is established across the valley, and homes on the desert-facing edges of Henderson, Summerlin, and North Las Vegas see the most. They hunt insects and slip in through weep screeds, garage gaps, and utility penetrations. We treat the food source, seal the entry points, and offer a blacklight inspection so you can see the population. Sustained control comes from a maintained perimeter, not a single spray.
German cockroaches breed fast and hide deep in cracks, wall voids, and appliances where a surface spray never reaches, and over-the-counter sprays often scatter them into new harborage. We use targeted gel bait and growth regulators and schedule the follow-up that breaks the breeding cycle. That approach ends an infestation that repeated spraying only spreads.
Yes. Roof rats and house mice have spread through the valley’s older tree-lined neighborhoods and into new-build attics. We trap and remove the active population, then do the exclusion work - sealing roof lines, weep screeds, garage gaps, and utility penetrations. Trapping without sealing just invites the next one in, so the exclusion is the part that actually lasts.
Subterranean termites work the soil under valley slabs and rarely show themselves until there is damage. Warning signs include mud tubes on foundation walls, hollow-sounding or blistered wood, and discarded wings near windows after a swarm. We inspect, document active galleries, and treat with a liquid soil barrier or a monitored bait system. Inspection reports are written up for real-estate transactions.
In most cases, yes. We confirm the infestation, then treat with targeted application or whole-room heat depending on how far it has spread. Heat reaches the hiding spots a spray cannot and usually saves the furniture. We schedule a follow-up inspection to confirm the bugs are gone rather than just quiet.
Yes. Most valley homes do best on a quarterly plan that keeps the perimeter sealed through the summer push, running about $40 to $55 a month or $110 to $150 a quarter. Plans run month to month or quarter to quarter and you can cancel when the problem is solved. No long lock-in.
Yes - restaurants, short-term rentals, offices, multi-tenant buildings, and retail. We provide the documented monthly service that health inspections and property managers require, with logs and reports for each visit. Commercial pricing depends on square footage, pest pressure, and visit frequency, and we quote it after a walkthrough.
Last updated: 2026-05-28.