Pest library
Common pests in Maryland homes
Profiles of 22 pests that turn up in Maryland, grouped by type. Each one covers what it is, what it does, and how treatment works.
Maryland homeowners deal with a wide range of pests, and the mix shifts with the season and the part of the state. Subterranean termites are the defining threat, given Maryland's heavy pressure and older housing. The Chesapeake watershed drives a long, intense mosquito and tick season. The brown marmorated stink bug and the spotted lanternfly push toward homes every fall, and rodents move indoors once it turns cold. Use the profiles below to figure out what you have, then get connected with a licensed exterminator in your area. If you want pricing first, the cost guide breaks down real Maryland ranges, and the services pages explain how each type of treatment works.
Rodents
2 profiles
House Mouse
The most common rodent in homes year-round. Small, fast, and capable of squeezing through a gap the width of a pencil, house mice nest inside walls and breed quickly.
Read moreNorway Rat
The large, burrowing rat found near foundations, dumpsters, and sewer lines. Norway rats cause serious structural damage and carry diseases that pose real health risks.
Read moreCockroaches
2 profiles
American Cockroach
The largest common house cockroach, reddish brown and nearly two inches long, mostly found in basements, drains, and commercial buildings.
Read moreGerman Cockroach
The small light-brown roach behind most kitchen infestations. It breeds fast, hides in tight warm spots, and rarely clears up on its own.
Read moreAnts
2 profiles
Carpenter Ant
A large black ant that excavates wood to nest. It does not eat the wood, but a long-established colony can cause real structural damage.
Read morePavement Ant
A small dark ant that nests under sidewalks and slabs, trails indoors for food, and throws up fine soil at crack edges along driveways and foundations.
Read moreStinging Insects
2 profiles
Cicada Killer Wasp
A very large, solitary wasp that digs burrows in bare ground and hunts cicadas for its larvae, alarming to look at but not aggressive toward people.
Read moreYellowjackets, Wasps & Hornets
Social wasps that build paper nests and defend them aggressively, posing a genuine sting risk in summer and fall when colonies reach full size.
Read moreSpiders
3 profiles
Black Widow Spider
A shiny black spider with a distinctive red marking on the abdomen, whose venom is medically significant but rarely causes serious harm in healthy adults.
Read moreCommon House Spider
The small, tan-to-brown spider responsible for most cobwebs in homes and garages, harmless to people, and effectively controlled through web removal and basic exclusion.
Read moreWolf Spider
A large, fast-moving ground spider that hunts without a web and is harmless to people, often alarming homeowners by its size and speed alone.
Read moreFlies
2 profiles
Drain Fly
Small fuzzy flies that breed in the organic sludge inside drains and rarely go away until that sludge is physically removed.
Read moreFruit Fly
Tiny tan flies drawn to overripe fruit and fermenting liquids, capable of going from egg to adult in about a week under warm conditions.
Read moreTicks
2 profiles
American Dog Tick
A large brown-and-white tick found in grassy and brushy areas. It is the primary vector of Rocky Mountain spotted fever in the eastern United States.
Read moreDeer Tick
A small dark tick that carries Lyme disease. The nymph stage is the size of a poppy seed and accounts for most human infections in the Upper Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.
Read moreOccasional Invaders
3 profiles
Brown Marmorated Stink Bug
An invasive shield-shaped bug that enters homes by the hundreds each fall and releases a foul odor when disturbed. Harmless to people, serious to crops.
Read moreCamel Cricket
A large humpbacked cricket with no wings and very long legs that thrives in damp basements and crawl spaces. Startling but harmless.
Read moreSpotted Lanternfly
An invasive plant-hopper under quarantine in Maryland that damages trees and vineyards. An outdoor nuisance, not a structural or indoor pest.
Read moreNot sure what you are dealing with?
Describe what you are seeing and a licensed Maryland operator will help identify it and quote the fix.