What Pests Are Common in Bellingham, WA? A Complete Seasonal Guide

If you live in Bellingham, Washington, you already know the Pacific Northwest is one of the most beautiful places on Earth. What the tourism brochures leave out is that the same mild, wet climate that makes Whatcom County so livable for people makes it extraordinarily hospitable for pests. The question we get asked more than almost any other is simple: which pests should you actually be worried about in Bellingham? This guide answers that completely, organized by season, so you know exactly what’s coming, when, and what to do about it.

Why Bellingham’s Climate Creates Unique Pest Pressure

Bellingham sits in a maritime climate zone: mild, wet winters, warm summers, and consistent rainfall. Those conditions do three things that matter for pest control. First, they keep pest populations active longer — the ground rarely freezes deeply enough to kill off rodent burrows, ant colonies, or overwintering insects, so pests don’t truly go away in winter, they go quiet and find shelter (often your home). Second, the moisture creates ideal conditions for wood-destroying organisms like termites and carpenter ants, especially in older homes. Third, our forested surroundings mean constant pest pressure at the perimeter, since neighborhoods back up to greenbelts and undeveloped land.

Winter Pests in Bellingham, WA (December – February)

Winter is prime time for one pest category above all: rodents.

Rats and Mice

Norway rats and house mice are the dominant rodent species in Whatcom County. As temperatures drop, they seek warmth, food, and nesting sites — and homes are the perfect candidate. A mouse can squeeze through a gap the size of a dime; a rat needs only a quarter. Signs of a winter rodent problem include:

  • Droppings along baseboards, in cabinets, or in crawl spaces
  • Gnaw marks on food packaging, wood, or wiring
  • Scratching or scurrying sounds inside walls, especially at night
  • Grease marks along walls where rodents travel
  • A musky, ammonia-like odor in enclosed spaces

What Sasquatch does differently: we don’t just set traps and leave. Our rodent control starts with a thorough inspection to find every entry point, then we seal those points, address structural vulnerabilities, and implement a trapping and monitoring program. Traps alone are temporary — exclusion is the permanent solution.

Cockroaches

German cockroaches are a year-round presence in Bellingham, particularly in apartments, restaurants, and multi-unit housing, thriving in heated interiors regardless of outdoor temperature. If you see one, assume there are many more hiding.

Spiders

Most of Washington’s spiders overwinter as adults or eggs inside homes. Late fall and winter is when many homeowners notice more indoor spider activity. Most spiders here are harmless, but the hobo spider and yellow sac spider — both capable of painful bites — are present in the region.

Spring Pests in Bellingham, WA (March – May)

Spring is when pest activity in Bellingham genuinely explodes.

Carpenter Ants

Carpenter ants are the pest we see most in spring service calls. Unlike termites they don’t eat wood — they excavate it to build galleries — but the damage is structurally serious, especially in older homes with moisture damage. The western black carpenter ant is our primary species, up to three-quarters of an inch, and often mistaken for termites when they swarm. If you’re seeing large black ants indoors in spring, don’t wait: a mature colony can contain thousands of workers.

Sugar Ants (Odorous House Ants)

The small dark ants invading kitchens each spring are usually odorous house ants, named “sugar ants” for their love of sweets. They trail in from exterior colonies through tiny cracks, and because a colony can have multiple queens and hundreds of thousands of workers, store-bought baits often fail.

Bees and Wasps (Early Season)

By May, overwintered yellowjacket queens are establishing new nests. This is the best time to address a wasp problem — nests are small and removal is far simpler than in August. Bees also become active; in most cases they’re not aggressive and we always assess whether a colony can be relocated rather than treated.

Termites

Spring is termite swarming season in Western Washington. Dampwood termites — our primary species — produce winged swarmers that emerge to establish new colonies. Piles of wings near windows or doors should be taken seriously. Dampwood termites require high moisture, which is why they’re so strongly tied to our wet climate and damp crawl spaces.

Summer Pests in Bellingham, WA (June – August)

Yellow Jackets and Hornets

By mid-summer, colonies that started with a single spring queen have grown to thousands — this is when yellowjackets become genuinely dangerous and when we get the most stinging-insect calls. Bald-faced hornets are also at peak population. A critical warning: never spray a nest with a consumer product and leave it in place — it agitates the colony, can drive them deeper into walls, and often fails. The nest needs to be fully removed.

Mosquitoes

Mosquito pressure peaks late June through August near standing water and low-lying areas. Effective control requires addressing breeding sites — gutters, yard low spots, water features — plus treating the vegetation where adults rest.

Bed Bugs

Bed bugs follow human travel, not seasons, and summer is peak travel and introduction season via hotels, rentals, and used furniture. They are extraordinarily difficult to eliminate without professional treatment; DIY approaches usually fail and scatter them.

Fleas

Flea season runs roughly June through October, peaking in July and August. If you have pets, prevention on the animal and in the home is essential — a single female flea can lay up to 50 eggs per day.

Fall Pests in Bellingham, WA (September – November)

Fall is the most underestimated pest season in Whatcom County.

Stink Bugs and Asian Lady Beetles

The invasive brown marmorated stink bug aggregates in huge numbers on south- and west-facing walls before forcing its way inside. Asian lady beetles behave similarly and, unlike native ladybugs, can bite and leave a yellow stain. Sealing entry points in September — before they seek shelter — is far more effective than treating them once inside.

Rodents (Return Season)

September through November is the second major rodent season, as animals scout homes for overwintering habitat. This is the most important time of year for exclusion work.

Spiders

Fall is mating season for many spiders, driving a dramatic increase in visible spiders indoors and out, especially mobile males searching for mates.

Earwigs, Millipedes, and Clover Mites

These “occasional invaders” don’t breed indoors but enter in large numbers as temperatures drop. They aren’t dangerous, but heavy numbers often signal moisture or structural vulnerabilities worth addressing.

Year-Round Pests in Bellingham, WA

Rodents never truly stop — established colonies remain active year-round, so ongoing monitoring matters. German cockroaches persist in multi-unit and commercial buildings regardless of season. Spiders have hundreds of species with some active any time of year. And pigeons, seagulls, starlings, and swallows are year-round nuisances, especially for commercial and waterfront buildings — our bird exclusion service (netting, spikes, and deterrents) addresses nesting, roosting, and the hazards that come with it.

Pest Prevention: The Foundation of Pest Control

Prevention is always more effective and less expensive than treatment. The biggest vulnerability factors in Whatcom County are moisture (the single biggest driver of NW pest problems), entry points (gaps around pipes, foundation cracks, utility penetrations, poorly sealed doors and windows), vegetation and debris against the home, and food and water sources like unsecured garbage or pet food left outdoors.

When to Call a Professional Pest Control Company in Bellingham

Call a professional when you’ve seen multiple rodents or an established colony, found carpenter ant frass indoors, have a wasp or hornet nest on your structure, suspect bed bugs, see termite swarmers or wood damage, have a problem that persists despite your efforts, or manage a rental or commercial facility. Sasquatch Pest Control offers a 100% free inspection with no obligation, no contracts, and no scare tactics — we’ll tell you exactly what we find and give you an honest assessment of what you actually need.

The Sasquatch Approach to Pest Control in Bellingham

We built Sasquatch Pest Control on honesty, expertise, and genuine care for the community — not scare tactics, unnecessary upsells, or contracts you don’t need. Every service starts with a real inspection by a trained technician who tells you the truth. We offer a 100% service guarantee, no contracts, no skip fees, and no cancellation fees. If you’re seeing pests in your Bellingham home or business, call 360-410-2199 or request your free inspection online.

Frequently Asked Questions: Pests in Bellingham, WA

What is the most common pest in Bellingham, WA?

Rodents — specifically Norway rats and house mice — are the most commonly treated pest in Bellingham and throughout Whatcom County. Our mild, wet climate keeps rodent populations active year-round, and the density of older housing with accessible crawl spaces makes residential rodent pressure especially high.

Do termites live in Bellingham, WA?

Yes. Dampwood termites are present throughout Western Washington, including Bellingham. They require high moisture and are most often found in damp crawl spaces, wood in contact with soil, and older water-damaged structures. Subterranean termites are also present, though less common here.

Are there dangerous spiders in Whatcom County?

The Pacific Northwest doesn’t have the concentrations of dangerous spiders found elsewhere, but the hobo spider and yellow sac spider — both present in Whatcom County — can produce painful bites. The black widow is rarely found west of the Cascades. If you’re finding large numbers of spiders indoors, professional treatment is reasonable.

What time of year are wasps worst in Bellingham?

Yellowjacket and hornet colonies reach peak size in July and August, when they’re most aggressive. Activity declines after the first hard frost, which here often isn’t until October or November. Addressing nest sites in May, when queens are just establishing, is the most effective prevention.

Why do I suddenly have ants in my house in spring?

Warmer temperatures trigger foraging. The ants you see in March and April are scouts from established exterior colonies following scent trails for food and moisture. Killing visible ants with sprays rarely solves it because it doesn’t reach the colony.

What is the best way to prevent rodents in Bellingham?

Combine exclusion (sealing entry points), habitat reduction (removing food, nesting sites, and harborage around the perimeter), and monitoring. Traps are a response, not a prevention strategy. The key window is September through November, before rodents seek winter shelter.

Do I need year-round pest control in Bellingham, WA?

For most Whatcom County homeowners, ongoing management is worthwhile given year-round pressure. At minimum, an inspection in early spring and early fall helps catch vulnerabilities before they become active problems. Commercial and multi-unit properties generally need scheduled service.

How do I know if I have carpenter ants or termites?

Carpenter ants are large (up to ¾ inch), dark, and have a pinched waist; termite swarmers are smaller with a thick waist, straight antennae, and equal-length wings. Carpenter ants excavate wood and push out frass; termites consume wood and leave mud tubes. Both need professional treatment, but the approaches differ entirely.

Dealing with a pest problem in the Bellingham area?
Sasquatch Pest Control offers honest, local, no-contract pest control — backed by our 100% service guarantee.
Get a Free Quote

Related Pages

  •