Flea Treatment in Lewisville, TX
Flea calls in Lewisville climb every summer once pets spend more time outdoors. The egg-larva cycle keeps reinfesting for weeks even after adults look gone — which is why one visit usually isn't enough.
- Fast dispatch
- Same-day windows
- DFW-wide coverage
Flea Treatment in Lewisville, TX
Flea Treatment dispatches fast to Lewisville, TX addresses in Denton County. The local pest profile centers on fire ant, asian tiger mosquito, roof rat.
Flea Treatment in Lewisville, TX works the same way it does in the rest of Denton County: inspection first, targeted treatment second, follow-up to confirm zero activity. Lewisville homes carry their own pressure profile — Lake Lewisville's eastern shoreline pushes mosquito pressure higher than most DFW cities — and the protocol adjusts accordingly.
Lewisville coverage runs ZIP codes 75029, 75056, 75057, 75065, 75067, and 75077 across Denton County, with a population near 125,000 and a low-density build pattern. The local profile leans toward fire ant, asian tiger mosquito, roof rat, subterranean termite. Denton County stretches from the urban core out to Lake Lewisville and the rural northwest. Lakeside mosquito pressure is heavy; older Denton city wood-frame housing keeps carpenter ant volume up; newer master-planned developments drive termite swarm calls. Fire ants dominate yards across the county.
Coverage runs every Lewisville address — including Old Town Lewisville, Castle Hills, Lakeland Hills, Highland Village (Lewisville border).
How Flea Service Runs in Lewisville
Every visit opens with inspection; targeted treatment follows once the technician confirms what's active and where. For flea treatment in Lewisville, the workflow runs: interior treatment with insect growth regulator to halt the egg-larva cycle; adulticide application to carpets, baseboards, and pet-resting areas; exterior yard barrier where pets spend time; two-week follow-up visit to catch the next emergence wave.
Seasonal Pressure in Denton County
Flea egg counts surge with warming soil temperatures.
Pests Covered
- Cat fleas
- Dog fleas
Signs to Watch For
- Pet scratching, biting, or grooming excessively
- Tiny black flecks (flea dirt) on pet bedding
- Bites in clusters on ankles and lower legs
- Adult fleas jumping when carpet is disturbed
Ready for service at a Lewisville address? Call the number above to reach dispatch and confirm the next available window.
Lewisville Service Area
Coverage runs every Lewisville address — ZIP 75029, 75056, 75057, 75065, 75067, and 75077.
Flea in Nearby Cities
Other Services in Lewisville
Flea FAQs — Lewisville, TX
How fast can a technician get to a Lewisville address?
Most Lewisville addresses can be scheduled within 24 to 48 hours. Active infestations and stinging-insect calls move to same-day when the schedule allows. Call the dispatch number on this page and the agent will confirm the next available window for Lewisville.
Do you offer recurring plans?
Yes. Quarterly is the most common cadence for Lewisville homes. Monthly is available for high-pressure addresses or commercial properties. The agent confirms the right cadence based on the species, the structure, and the surrounding harborage.
Do you service rentals and HOA properties in Lewisville?
Yes. Flea Treatment runs for single-family homes, rental properties, condos, and HOA-managed addresses across Lewisville. For tenant-occupied units, the dispatcher coordinates entry access with the property manager or owner directly.
How do I get on the schedule?
Call the number listed at the top of this page. A dispatcher takes the address, the activity description, and any access notes, then books the next available Lewisville window. Same-day service depends on time of day and current route load.
What time of year is worst for pests in Lewisville?
Spring is the heaviest swarm and emergence window in Lewisville — flea egg counts surge with warming soil temperatures. Summer pressure stays high across Denton County — peak flea pressure on pets and indoor populations. Fall introductions accelerate as temperatures drop — indoor infestations persist as outdoor populations move inside with pets. Winter activity continues indoors — eggs and pupae survive indoors through the winter; reinfestation possible without treatment.