How Much Does Mosquito Treatment Cost in Orlando in 2026?

Last updated: May 22, 2026

Mosquito treatment cost in Orlando ranges from $135 to $315 for a one-time professional barrier spray, with the median household paying around $155. Monthly recurring service falls between $36 and $72 per visit, and a full April-through-October seasonal plan runs $250 to $500. Misting systems start near $1,800 installed. Pricing skews to the lower end of the Southeast benchmark because Central Florida hosts dozens of FDACS-licensed pest operators competing across Orange, Seminole, Osceola, and Lake counties. Lakefront lots, large parcels in Windermere and Dr. Phillips, and properties along the Butler Chain typically land in the upper half of every range below.

$135 – $315
Average: $155
One-time mosquito treatment in Orlando
Estimated ranges based on national averages. Actual costs vary by provider, location, and scope of service.

This guide breaks down 2026 mosquito treatment pricing for the Orlando metro area, including Winter Park, Baldwin Park, Lake Nona, Kissimmee, Apopka, Altamonte Springs, Oviedo, Maitland, and Sanford. It covers what each service actually does, why prices vary block to block, the role of the Orange County Mosquito Control Division, and how to pick the right service level for a Central Florida property.

Orlando Mosquito Treatment Costs at a Glance

The table below shows current price ranges from independent Orlando pest control operators. Quotes vary by lot size, vegetation density, lake proximity, and whether the property is in an HOA with a community mosquito program in place.

Service Orlando Cost National Average Frequency / Duration
One-time barrier treatment $135 – $315 $150 – $350 21 – 30 days
Monthly barrier service (per visit) $36 – $72 $40 – $80 Every 21 – 30 days
Seasonal plan (Apr – Oct, 7 visits) $250 – $500 $300 – $560 Seven-month coverage
Annual plan (12 visits) $432 – $864 $480 – $960 Year-round coverage
Larvicide treatment (retention pond / standing water) $45 – $135 $50 – $150 30 – 150 days per application
In2Care station program $50 – $100 per month $60 – $120 per month Monthly service, 4 – 8 stations
Misting system installation $1,800 – $3,200 $1,800 – $3,500 Permanent system, 30 – 60 nozzles
Misting system monthly refill $90 – $180 $100 – $200 Monthly during active season
Special event treatment (wedding, party) $90 – $225 $100 – $250 24 – 72 hours protection
Natural / botanical barrier spray $54 – $108 per visit $60 – $120 per visit Every 14 – 21 days

Orlando pricing runs roughly 8 to 12 percent below the national mean, mirroring the broader 0.90x Southeast adjustment factor applied across the portfolio's regional models. The discount reflects competition rather than reduced effort; technicians here typically treat denser landscaping and more standing water than peers in Atlanta or Charleston. For a regional comparison, the same barrier service in Atlanta or Charleston usually runs $5 to $15 more per visit.

How We Research These Prices

The pricing data in this guide comes from industry surveys, contractor interviews, and analysis of real service quotes across US markets. All prices are estimated ranges based on our research, not guaranteed quotes. We review and update this data regularly. Read our full methodology

2026 Pricing Snapshot for Central Florida

Three pricing dynamics shaped the Orlando market entering 2026. First, fuel and pyrethroid raw-material costs rose 4 to 6 percent year over year, pushing per-visit barrier rates up roughly $3 to $5 across the metro. Second, the Florida Pest Management Association (FPMA) reports the number of FDACS-licensed mosquito operators in Orange County climbed by about 9 percent since 2024, keeping competitive pressure on annual contract pricing. Third, demand from short-term rental operators along U.S. 192 and International Drive continued to expand, creating a parallel "guest comfort" tier where monthly visits cost 15 to 25 percent more than residential equivalents because rental managers expect tight scheduling windows and after-hours treatment options.

Practical implication for homeowners: a monthly barrier plan that quoted $42 in 2024 typically quotes $45 to $47 in 2026, while annual prepay discounts have widened. Several Orlando operators now offer 10 to 15 percent off if the entire seven-month season is paid upfront in March or April. For homeowners confident they will use the service, prepay is the single biggest price lever in the local market.

Mosquito Treatment Methods Used in Orlando

No single approach handles every Orlando yard. Lakefront lots, oak-canopy neighborhoods like Audubon Park and College Park, new-construction subdivisions with fresh retention ponds, and high-rise balconies in downtown all require different combinations. The five methods below cover roughly 95 percent of professional residential treatment in the metro.

Barrier Sprays

Barrier sprays are the workhorse of Orlando mosquito control. A technician uses a backpack mist blower (typically a Stihl SR 450 or Solo 451) to apply a residual pyrethroid to the underside of leaves, shrubs, fence lines, eaves, ornamental palms, and the perimeter of bromeliads and other broadleaf landscape plants where mosquitoes rest during daylight. The most common active ingredients are bifenthrin (Talstar P), lambda-cyhalothrin (Demand CS), and deltamethrin (Suspend SC). Each treatment costs $36 to $72 on a monthly plan and delivers 21 to 30 days of protection.

Effectiveness drops sharply if a heavy thunderstorm hits within 4 to 6 hours of application before the product binds to leaf cuticles. Reputable Orlando companies monitor radar and rebook free of charge when storms arrive inside that window. Look for written language in the service agreement about weather-related re-treatments before signing an annual contract.

Larvicide Treatments

Larvicides target mosquitoes at the immature stage, before they emerge as biting adults. Orlando technicians most often use Altosid (methoprene) briquettes or BTI (Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis) granules in retention ponds, drainage ditches, French drains, bird baths, bromeliad cups, and the bottoms of empty pots. Methoprene blocks adult development for up to 150 days per briquette; BTI kills larvae within 24 hours by disrupting their midgut lining but breaks down faster.

Larvicide is the most cost-effective single addition to a barrier program. A $45 to $135 application that treats every standing-water source on a quarter-acre lot can cut adult mosquito pressure by another 20 to 30 percent on top of barrier coverage. Properties backing onto Lake Underhill, Lake Conway, the Butler Chain, or any subdivision retention pond benefit disproportionately.

Misting Systems

Automated misting systems use fixed nozzles installed along eaves, fence lines, and landscape borders. A reservoir of pyrethroid concentrate (most often permethrin or pyrethrin) feeds nozzles on a timer, typically firing 30 to 60 seconds at dawn and dusk when Aedes and Culex species are most active. A 30-nozzle system protecting a 2,000-square-foot back yard and pool deck costs $1,800 to $3,200 installed; larger systems for lakefront lots in Isleworth, Windermere, or Lake Mary can reach $4,000 to $5,500. Monthly concentrate refills run $90 to $180.

Misting systems shine on still nights with thick canopy because droplets settle slowly through resting habitat. They suffer on windy lakefront patios where droplets drift away from the protected zone before contact. If a property faces afternoon lake breezes, a tankless on-demand system with a remote trigger often outperforms a timed system.

In2Care Stations

In2Care stations are black plastic buckets that mimic ideal mosquito breeding sites. A female Aedes lays eggs in the treated water inside, picks up a slow-acting larvicide (pyriproxyfen) plus a fungal spore (Beauveria bassiana) on her legs, then carries both to every other site she visits before dying within 7 to 14 days. The contamination multiplies across the local population. Setup runs $150 to $300 for a typical Orlando property using 4 to 8 stations, with monthly service at $50 to $100. The stations work especially well in Aedes-dominated neighborhoods like Baldwin Park and College Park where backyard pots, bromeliads, and irrigation features create dozens of cryptic breeding sites a barrier spray cannot reach.

Source Reduction and IPM

Integrated Pest Management (IPM), endorsed by the EPA and the NPMA QualityPro program, treats chemical applications as one tool among several. Orlando operators following IPM principles will walk the property on the first visit and document standing water in clogged gutters, plant saucers, tarps over boats, rain barrels without screens, AC condensate drip lines, and Spanish-moss-filled bromeliads. Homeowners who eliminate or correct those sources after the inspection typically cut their per-visit treatment intensity (and sometimes their plan tier) by 15 to 25 percent. A no-cost inspection with a source-reduction checklist is now standard at most established Orlando operators.

Mosquito Species You Will Encounter in Orlando

More than 40 mosquito species have been documented in Orange County by the Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory in Vero Beach. Roughly six species drive nearly all the biting pressure on Orlando residential properties.

  • Aedes aegypti (yellow fever mosquito). Black with white lyre-shaped thorax markings. Aggressive daytime biter that breeds in containers smaller than a soda cap. Primary local vector for dengue and Zika. Heavily concentrated in older Orlando neighborhoods (Lake Eola Heights, Thornton Park, Audubon Park) where mature landscaping holds dozens of small water sources.
  • Aedes albopictus (Asian tiger mosquito). Black with distinctive single white stripe down the thorax and banded legs. Daytime biter that thrives in shaded suburban yards. The dominant biting nuisance in Winter Park, Maitland, College Park, and most of the I-4 corridor neighborhoods east of the lakes.
  • Culex nigripalpus. Brown, nondescript, primarily nighttime. The single most important West Nile virus and St. Louis encephalitis vector in Florida. Breeds in ditches, retention ponds, and partially polluted standing water; abundant near subdivisions in Hunters Creek, MetroWest, and Lake Nona.
  • Culex quinquefasciatus (southern house mosquito). Brown, nighttime biter that breeds in stagnant organic-rich water like clogged storm drains and dirty bird baths. Common around older urban Orlando properties with limited drainage maintenance.
  • Psorophora ferox and Psorophora ciliata. Large floodwater mosquitoes that emerge in massive broods within 24 to 48 hours after heavy rain, especially in Christmas, Bithlo, and the eastern unincorporated areas where pasture floods. Bite ferociously through clothing.
  • Anopheles crucians. Salt-marsh-edge species occasionally found on properties near the St. Johns River corridor and east toward Cape Canaveral. Historically a malaria vector; cases are now extremely rare in Florida.

Knowing which species dominates a yard changes treatment strategy. Aedes-heavy properties need In2Care stations and container source reduction. Culex-heavy lakefront properties get more value from larvicide programs in adjacent ponds. Floodwater Psorophora outbreaks after named storms usually require a one-time saturation barrier treatment rather than a routine monthly visit.

Why Orlando Has Such Severe Mosquito Pressure

Central Florida's mosquito problem stems from geography, geology, climate, and land use working in combination. Each factor adds to the pressure that drives treatment cost and frequency.

  • Hundreds of lakes within metro limits. Orange County alone contains more than 100 named lakes, including Lake Apopka (the fourth-largest lake in Florida), the Butler Chain (Pocket, Wauseon, Tibet-Butler, Sheen, Down, Isleworth, Louise, Chase, and Tilden), Lake Underhill, Lake Conway, Lake Eola, and Lake Ivanhoe. Lake margins host permanent Culex breeding habitat that no individual property treatment can eliminate.
  • Retention ponds in every subdivision. Central Florida's flat topography and high water table require stormwater retention under St. Johns River Water Management District and South Florida Water Management District permitting rules. Nearly every subdivision built since 1985 has at least one retention pond, placing larval habitat within 100 yards of most homes.
  • Theme park corridor microclimate. Disney World, Universal Orlando, SeaWorld, and the I-Drive corridor cover roughly 25,000 acres of intensively landscaped, irrigated, and water-feature-rich land. Surrounding neighborhoods in Lake Buena Vista, Doctor Phillips, and the U.S. 192 corridor inherit the elevated mosquito populations that this microclimate sustains.
  • Subtropical humidity and Zone 9b temperatures. Average summer relative humidity in Orlando exceeds 80 percent and overnight lows rarely drop below 70 degrees from June through September. Adult mosquitoes survive between blood meals without desiccating, and oviposition continues year-round.
  • Daily convective rain. Orlando averages 51 inches of rain per year, with roughly two-thirds falling between June and September in afternoon thunderstorms produced by sea-breeze convergence between the Atlantic and Gulf air masses. Each storm refills tiny breeding sites that drain or evaporate during the morning.
  • Karst topography and sinkhole ponds. The limestone bedrock that gives Central Florida its springs and aquifer system also creates countless small depressions and seasonal ponds that hold standing water for weeks. These are difficult for the Orange County Mosquito Control Division to inventory and treat preemptively.
  • Year-round Aedes activity. While peak season is April through October, the metro averages only 4 to 8 nights per winter at or below 32 degrees. Aedes eggs survive desiccation and freezing intact, and a single warm weekend in January can produce a hatch from leaf-axil water in bromeliads or clogged gutters.

What Drives Mosquito Treatment Cost in Orlando

Two homes a block apart can receive quotes that differ by $25 to $40 per visit. The drivers below explain most of that variance.

  • Proximity to lakes and wetlands. Properties within 1,500 feet of Lake Underhill, Lake Conway, the Butler Chain, the Wekiva River, or any of the metro's larger lakes face constant Culex re-invasion. Operators often charge a $5 to $15 surcharge per visit or recommend supplemental larvicide on the water margin.
  • Lot size. Quarter-acre lots in older neighborhoods price toward the bottom of every range; half-acre lots in Conway, Belle Isle, or Lake Mary land mid-range; full-acre and larger lots in Windermere, Isleworth, Heathrow, and Lake Nona Estates price near the top.
  • Vegetation density. Mature live oak canopy, dense palms, sago palms, bromeliads, and broadleaf ornamentals like ti and croton provide abundant resting habitat. Properties with these landscapes need 20 to 35 percent more product per visit than properties with St. Augustine lawn and minimal landscaping.
  • HOA community programs. Several Orlando-area HOAs (notably in Baldwin Park, Avalon Park, Hunters Creek, and Lake Nona) contract larvicide for common-area ponds. Properties within these communities often qualify for reduced individual treatment plans because community-level larviciding cuts the regional adult population.
  • Vacation rental status. Short-term rental properties along International Drive, U.S. 192, Reunion, Champions Gate, and Lake Buena Vista need monthly treatment to protect guest-review scores. Operators serving this segment often quote 15 to 25 percent above standard residential rates to cover scheduling flexibility and after-hours retreatment.
  • Pool and outdoor kitchen footprint. Large screened lanais, summer kitchens, fire pits, and pool decks expand the treatment perimeter. Properties with extensive outdoor living square footage often need targeted spot treatments on top of routine barrier service.
  • DIY versus professional choice. Store-bought thermal foggers ($15 to $40) and ready-to-spray hose-end products ($12 to $25) provide hours, not weeks, of protection. A homeowner spending $40 every 3 days through peak season spends roughly $1,400 across the April-through-October window, while a $250 to $500 seasonal professional plan delivers more consistent control.
  • Bundling with general pest service. Adding mosquito treatment to an existing ant, roach, or general perimeter pest contract typically reduces the per-visit mosquito charge by $5 to $15. Operators that already have the truck at the property amortize travel time across both services.

Are Professional Mosquito Treatments Worth It?

For most Orlando properties used for outdoor living between April and October, the answer is yes. The decisive factor is how many hours per week the household actually spends in the yard, on the lanai, or on the dock. A working calculation: a $50 monthly visit covers 30 days. At three usable hours per evening on the patio, that is roughly $0.55 per outdoor hour of mosquito-free use. Households that grill, swim, or entertain only on weekends should compare against a special-event treatment ($90 to $225 per event) instead of a monthly plan.

University of Florida IFAS Extension trials and Florida Pest Management Association field studies consistently put well-executed professional barrier sprays at 70 to 85 percent reduction in landing-rate counts for 21 to 30 days post-application. DIY foggers measure 60 to 80 percent reduction for 2 to 6 hours. The professional advantage is duration, not peak knockdown.

Where professional service is genuinely not worth it: small interior courtyards with no canopy or standing water nearby, balcony-only outdoor space on a high floor downtown, or rental units where the tenant is responsible for their own pest control and outdoor use is minimal.

Decision Guide: Picking the Right Service Level

The matrix below maps common Orlando property profiles to the most cost-efficient mosquito service tier. The decision depends on lake proximity, outdoor-use intensity, and whether the property is a primary residence, second home, or short-term rental.

Property Profile Recommended Service Annual Cost
Small inland lot (under 1/4 acre), light outdoor use Three on-demand treatments April / June / August $405 – $945
Suburban 1/4 to 1/2 acre, moderate outdoor use Monthly seasonal plan (Apr – Oct, 7 visits) $250 – $500
Lakefront or pondside, regular outdoor use Annual monthly plan + spring larvicide $500 – $1,000
Acre+ lot, frequent entertaining, pool deck Annual monthly plan + In2Care stations $1,000 – $1,800
Lakefront estate, pool deck and dock Misting system + monthly maintenance $2,000 – $3,500 first year, $1,100 – $1,800 ongoing
Short-term rental, theme park corridor Monthly plan + In2Care stations + larvicide on adjacent ponds $900 – $1,600
Wedding venue or event property Monthly plan + supplemental event treatments $1,200 – $2,500

Decision tree shortcut: if a property fronts standing water of any kind, default to the annual plan plus larvicide. If outdoor use is concentrated in a small footprint (screened lanai, defined pool deck), a misting system becomes worth pricing. If outdoor use is sporadic, single-treatment special-event service is more efficient than monthly.

Cost Scenarios From Three Orlando Neighborhoods

These scenarios are composites drawn from typical 2026 quotes in three distinct Orlando submarkets.

Scenario 1: Audubon Park bungalow, 1/4 acre, mature oaks, Aedes albopictus dominant. The homeowner uses a small back patio nightly and the front porch on weekends. The first quote was a $675 annual contract (12 visits at $56.25). After a free inspection identified two bromeliads holding water year-round and a gutter holding standing water near the chimney, the operator recommended a $375 seasonal plan plus four In2Care stations at $80 per month. Final program cost: $935 annually with measurably lower landing rates than the original quote would have delivered.

Scenario 2: Windermere lakefront, half-acre on Lake Down (Butler Chain), Culex-dominant. The owner entertains weekly on a covered dock and pool deck. Quoted options: $840 annual monthly plan ($70 per visit reflecting lake surcharge), $1,160 annual plan plus quarterly larvicide on the seawall, or a $3,100 misting system installed plus $1,440 annual refills. The owner chose the misting system because the dock and pool deck were both close to the house and the prevailing wind direction kept droplet distribution intact. Five-year cost: roughly $10,000 versus $7,000 for the annual plan with larvicide. The owner prioritized the on-demand control over the price difference.

Scenario 3: Kissimmee short-term rental, U.S. 192 corridor, half-acre with retention pond. A property manager handling 14 units sought a portfolio-wide program. The chosen plan combined monthly barrier service at $55 per unit, In2Care stations at $65 per unit per month, and quarterly larvicide on the shared retention pond at $90 per visit shared across all 14 units. Total monthly cost per unit: roughly $128, or $1,536 annually. Guest review scores mentioning mosquitoes dropped from 11 percent of reviews to under 2 percent within one season.

Orange County Mosquito Control Division

The Orange County Mosquito Control Division operates under the County's Public Works Department and follows surveillance protocols set jointly by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Florida Department of Health. The Division traps mosquitoes weekly across roughly 60 monitoring sites, tests pools for arboviruses at the state lab in Tampa, and dispatches truck-mounted ULV applicators when surveillance thresholds are exceeded or when sentinel chicken flocks show seroconversion for West Nile or Eastern equine encephalitis.

Residents can request a free inspection by calling 311 or the Division directly at 407-254-9120. The Division also operates an aerial larviciding program over saltmarsh and large freshwater wetland areas in the eastern county and along the St. Johns River basin. County operations reduce regional population averages but do not substitute for property-level treatment. The Division's own public guidance recommends residents continue source reduction and consider professional residential service during peak season.

Orlando's pest profile rarely stays mosquito-only. Households investing in monthly mosquito coverage frequently add one or more of the following services, often at a 10 to 15 percent bundle discount.

  • General quarterly pest control. Ant, roach, silverfish, and earwig perimeter treatment runs $90 to $180 per visit. Adding it to mosquito service usually reduces both per-visit charges.
  • Subterranean termite monitoring. Sentricon or Trelona ATBB bait station systems cost $1,200 to $2,500 installed plus $250 to $400 annual monitoring. Termidor SC liquid treatment is an alternative for active infestations. Termite questions are common in Central Florida; for local pricing see how much termite treatment costs in Orlando, and for a primer on coverage see are termites covered by homeowners insurance.
  • Carpenter ant treatment. Florida carpenter ants (Camponotus floridanus) nest in moist wood and frequently show up around homes with palms and live oaks. See the carpenter ant treatment cost guide and the carpenter ant versus termite identification guide for diagnostic help.
  • Rodent exclusion. Roof rats are common across Central Florida palm-heavy landscapes. Exclusion plus trapping runs $250 to $750.
  • Flea and tick yard treatment. Often combined with mosquito barrier sprays because the same pyrethroid actives are effective. Adds $15 to $30 per visit.
  • No-see-um (biting midge) treatment. Common near lakes and the St. Johns River corridor. Requires finer droplet barrier applications; typically billed at the mosquito service rate.
  • German cockroach interior service. Most often added by short-term rental managers; one-time treatment runs $150 to $350, follow-up at $75 to $125.

Properties tracking pest activity across the calendar year often benefit from the portfolio's best time of year for pest control reference, which lays out monthly priorities for the Southeast climate zone. Homeowners doing initial vetting of operators can start with the pest control company comparison guide before requesting quotes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to treat for mosquitoes?

Professional mosquito treatment costs $135 to $315 per visit in Orlando, averaging $155. Monthly recurring service runs $36 to $72 per treatment, and seasonal plans covering April through October typically fall between $250 and $500. Misting systems cost $1,800 to $3,200 installed with $90 to $180 monthly refills during the active season.

Are professional mosquito treatments worth it?

For Orlando properties near lakes, retention ponds, or shaded landscaping, professional barrier sprays cut adult mosquito activity by 70 to 85 percent for 21 to 30 days. The math favors professional service when outdoor use time exceeds three hours per week between April and October. DIY foggers cost $15 to $40 but last only hours; a $50 professional treatment averages to roughly $1.70 per day of coverage.

What is a mosquito's worst enemy?

Dragonflies are mosquitoes' primary natural predator; a single adult dragonfly eats hundreds of mosquitoes per day. Purple martins, barn swallows, and Gambusia affinis (mosquitofish) also consume large numbers. On the microbial side, Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis (BTI) is a soil bacterium that kills mosquito larvae without harming other species and is the active ingredient in most professional larvicide dunks used in Orlando retention ponds.

How much does TruGreen charge for mosquito control?

TruGreen mosquito service in the Orlando market typically runs $50 to $80 per treatment, with annual plans falling between $400 and $600. That sits at the higher end of the local range. Independent Central Florida pest control companies often quote $36 to $72 per monthly visit for comparable barrier-spray coverage, particularly outside the immediate I-Drive and downtown corridors.

How long is mosquito season in Orlando?

Mosquitoes are active year-round in Orlando because the metro sits in USDA Hardiness Zone 9b. Peak season runs April through October, with the worst pressure from June through September when daily afternoon thunderstorms refill breeding sites. Activity drops in December and January but rarely stops; a single warm week in winter can produce a hatch from leaf-axil water in landscaping.

Does Orange County spray for mosquitoes?

The Orange County Mosquito Control Division, part of the County's Public Works Department, conducts truck-mounted ULV (ultra-low-volume) spraying and aerial larviciding in response to surveillance data and disease detection. Residents can request an inspection by calling 311 or the Division at 407-254-9120. County operations target public health threats over large areas and do not eliminate mosquitoes from individual yards.

What mosquito-borne diseases are tracked in Orlando?

The Florida Department of Health in Orange County tracks West Nile virus, Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE), St. Louis encephalitis (SLE), dengue, and Zika. Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus transmit dengue and Zika; Culex nigripalpus and other Culex species carry West Nile and SLE. The CDC has issued historical advisories for locally acquired dengue cases in Central Florida.

Is a mosquito misting system worth installing in Orlando?

Misting systems make sense for lakefront homes, large pool decks, and properties with frequent outdoor entertaining. Installed cost runs $1,800 to $3,200 with $90 to $180 monthly refills. Payback against monthly barrier service takes three to five seasons. They underperform on properties with strong prevailing winds or dense oak canopy that disrupts droplet distribution.

Do vacation rentals near the theme park corridor need different mosquito treatment?

Short-term rentals along International Drive, Lake Buena Vista, and the Kissimmee 192 corridor benefit from continuous monthly barrier spray service at $36 to $72 per visit. Guest reviews mentioning mosquitoes correlate with reduced repeat bookings. Many property managers add an In2Care station program at $50 to $100 monthly for units backing onto retention ponds or canals.

What pesticide do Orlando companies use for mosquito barrier sprays?

The most common active ingredients are bifenthrin (sold as Talstar P), lambda-cyhalothrin (Demand CS), and deltamethrin (Suspend SC). These pyrethroids bind to leaf cuticles and provide 21 to 30 days of residual activity against resting adults. Reputable Central Florida operators rotate actives across the season to slow resistance and follow FDACS application records under Chapter 482 of the Florida Statutes.
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Pest Control Pricing is an independent research team focused on transparent home services pricing. Our cost guides are based on industry research, contractor surveys, and publicly available data to help you make informed decisions and avoid overpaying.

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