Rodent Control in Irving, TX
Roof rats are the dominant attic rodent across Irving and the rest of Dallas County. Pecan and oak canopies along older streets give them highway access to rooflines.
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Rodent Control in Irving, TX
Rodent Control runs across Irving, TX with same-day windows when the schedule allows. Crews cover 13 Irving ZIP codes in Dallas County. Dallas County's mix of pre-war housing and post-war slab construction creates two distinct pest profiles.
Active pest problem at a Irving address? Same-day appointments are available across Dallas County when the schedule allows, and dispatch answers calls fast. This page covers what Rodent Control looks like for a Irving home — what we treat, how the visit runs, and what to expect after the technician leaves.
Irving coverage runs ZIP codes 75014, 75015, 75016, 75017, 75038, 75039, 75059, 75060, 75061, 75062, 75063, 75326, and 75368 across Dallas County, with a population near 255,000 and a low-density build pattern. The local profile leans toward fire ant, german cockroach, bed bug, subterranean termite. Dallas County's mix of pre-war housing and post-war slab construction creates two distinct pest profiles. Older neighborhoods drive carpenter ant and roof rat volume; newer subdivisions see most of the termite swarmer calls. German roach pressure runs heavy in older multifamily stock, and fire ants own the yards.
Coverage runs every Irving address — including Las Colinas, Valley Ranch, Hackberry Creek, Song.
How Rodent Service Runs in Irving
The first stop on any visit is the active area, then the technician works outward through harborage points before treating. For rodent control in Irving, the workflow runs: attic, crawlspace, and exterior inspection to find entry points; hardware-cloth and copper-mesh exclusion of every gap larger than 0.25 inch; snap-trap and tamper-resistant station deployment per ipm protocol; two-week follow-up to confirm zero activity, then ongoing exterior stations.
Seasonal Pressure in Dallas County
Roof rat populations peak in attics following winter sheltering.
Pests Covered
- House mice
- Roof rats
- Norway rats
Signs to Watch For
- Droppings along baseboards or in pantry
- Scratching or rolling sounds in the attic after sundown
- Gnaw marks on wood, drywall, or food packaging
- Greasy rub marks along utility lines
Same-day windows are available for Irving addresses when the schedule allows. Call the number above to lock one in.
Irving Service Area
Coverage runs every Irving address — ZIP 75014, 75015, 75016, 75017, 75038, 75039, 75059, 75060, 75061, 75062, 75063, 75326, and 75368.
Rodent in Nearby Cities
Other Services in Irving
Rodent FAQs — Irving, TX
Will one visit clear the problem?
Sometimes — for low-pressure exterior issues like wasp nests or surface ant trails, one visit usually finishes the job. Rodent Control for established infestations runs a two-visit protocol: initial knockdown, then a follow-up two to three weeks later to confirm reproductive cycles broke.
How fast can a technician get to a Irving address?
Most Irving 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 Irving.
Do you treat both inside and outside the home?
Yes. Standard Rodent Control runs interior baseboards, kitchen and bath voids, garage perimeter, and the full exterior band around the foundation. Attic and crawlspace inspections are part of the first visit for any Irving home where activity reaches that area.
Are the products safe around children and pets?
Yes. Rodent Control in Irving uses EPA-registered products applied per label rate. After treatment, indoor surfaces are dry within about an hour. Pets and children can re-enter treated rooms once visible product has dried — typically before the technician finishes the exterior.
Are bait stations enough on their own?
No. Bait stations alone do not solve a rodent problem in a Irving attic. The fix is exclusion — sealing every entry point larger than a quarter inch — combined with snap-trap deployment inside, then exterior stations to suppress reintroduction. Skip exclusion and the rodents come back.