Years Of Collective Experience
Emergency Pest Control Calls
Years Serving NYC & Long Island
A Spider Problem That Keeps Coming Back Isn't Random
If you’re finding spiders every few days in corners, along baseboards, in the basement it’s not bad luck. Spiders follow their food source. Where there are ants, flies, and gnats, spiders won’t be far behind. Treating the spiders alone without addressing what’s feeding them is why store-bought sprays only work for a week or two. Our spider pest control service covers the full picture. We inspect your property, identify the species, assess what’s drawing them in, treat both the spiders and the underlying insect population, and seal off the entry points we find along the way. That’s how you get lasting results not just a short-term fix.
What Changes After We Treat Your Home
From the first visit forward, here's what you can realistically expect when spider control is done right.
New York City Buildings Have More Entry Points Than Most
Brooklyn brownstones, Queens rowhouses, and Manhattan pre-war buildings weren’t designed with pest exclusion in mind. Aging mortar, deteriorating window seals, foundation cracks, shared walls, basement access — these structures give spiders dozens of ways in, and most residents never realize how many openings exist until someone actually looks.We’ve been working inside these building types for over 50 years. We know where spiders hide in a Marine Park basement, how they move through the walls of a Flatbush brownstone, and why a Forest Hills home with a crawl space sees more wolf spiders in fall than a Manhattan high-rise ever will. That kind of building-specific knowledge makes a real difference in how thoroughly we treat and what we recommend to prevent re-entry.Our team’s collective experience exceeds 100 years. When a technician walks through your door, they’ve seen this spider problem in every variation — in every New York City borough, in every season.
What You Actually Need to Know About New York City Spiders
One of the most common calls we get starts with: “I think I have brown recluse spiders.” Here’s the honest answer brown recluse spiders are not established in New York State. They cannot survive or reproduce in New York City’s climate. What you’re almost certainly seeing is a yellow sac spider, a grass spider, or a southern house spider. Being straight with you about that is more useful than feeding the fear. That said, not every New York City spider is harmless. Northern black widows do exist in New York and have been found in the basements and undisturbed outdoor areas of Brooklyn and Queens properties. Yellow sac spider bites can cause real pain and nausea. And a female spider can lay up to 100 eggs at once so what looks like a minor problem can escalate quickly if left alone. Species identification matters before any treatment begins. Knowing exactly what you’re dealing with determines how we treat, where we focus, and what we recommend going forward.