Yes — you absolutely can bring bed bugs home for the holidays, and holiday travel is one of the most common ways they spread. Bed bugs are expert hitchhikers: they don’t fly or jump, but they’ll happily climb into luggage, bags, and clothing at a hotel, a rental, or even a relative’s guest room, then ride home with you and set up in your bedroom. The reassuring news is that a few simple habits dramatically cut the risk — inspect where you sleep, keep luggage off the floor and bed, and unpack carefully when you get home.
At Sasquatch Pest Control, we see the aftermath of holiday travel every winter across Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden, and the rest of Whatcom County. Here’s how to stay ahead of it.
How do bed bugs spread through travel?
Bed bugs move by hitchhiking. They can’t fly or jump, so they get around by crawling into portable items and being carried to new locations. During travel, that means they climb into suitcases, backpacks, purses, clothing, and other belongings while you’re staying somewhere, then travel home with your luggage. Once inside your home, they settle into the bedroom — mattresses, box springs, headboards, and nearby furniture — and begin establishing a population.
It’s worth clearing up a myth right away: bed bugs have nothing to do with cleanliness. They’re found in spotless luxury hotels and everywhere in between, because all they need is access to people to feed on and hiding spots nearby. A clean home offers no protection against bed bugs brought in on luggage — which is why prevention during travel matters for everyone, regardless of how tidy their house is.
How do I inspect a hotel room or guest room for bed bugs?
A quick, five-minute inspection when you arrive — before you unpack — is your best defense. Here’s what to do:
- Keep your luggage in the bathroom (the least likely spot for bed bugs) or up on a hard surface while you inspect, not on the bed or floor.
- Pull back the bedding and check the mattress seams, tufts, and folds — especially the corners and edges — for live bugs, dark spots, or shed skins.
- Inspect the headboard area, a favorite hiding spot; check behind and around it if you can.
- Check the box spring, bed frame, and nearby nightstand seams and crevices.
- Look at upholstered furniture and the seams of any chairs or couches in the room.
- Use your phone flashlight to see into seams and dark crevices clearly.
What are the signs of bed bugs I should look for?
Knowing the specific signs makes your inspection far more effective. Watch for:
- Live bugs — adults are about the size and shape of an apple seed, flat, and reddish-brown; younger ones are smaller and paler.
- Dark or rust-colored spots — tiny fecal stains on mattresses, sheets, and seams, often looking like small ink dots.
- Blood stains — small reddish smears on sheets or the mattress.
- Shed skins — pale, translucent exoskeletons bed bugs leave behind as they grow.
- Eggs — tiny, pale, and hard to see, usually clustered in seams and crevices.
- A sweet, musty odor — a heavy infestation can produce a distinctive smell.
If you find signs, don’t unpack. Ask to change rooms (ideally not one directly adjacent) or find other accommodations, and keep your luggage isolated until you can be confident it’s clean. It’s a hassle, but far less than dealing with an infestation at home.
How do I protect my luggage while traveling?
Even after a clean inspection, a few habits keep bed bugs from finding their way into your bags during your stay:
- Use the luggage rack — place it away from the bed and walls, or better yet keep luggage on a hard, elevated surface like a desk or in the bathroom.
- Keep luggage off the floor and bed, the two highest-risk spots.
- Consider hard-sided luggage, which offers fewer seams and crevices for bed bugs to hide in than soft bags.
- Use sealable plastic bags for clothing, especially worn items, to add a barrier.
- Keep bags closed when you’re not accessing them.
What should I do when I get home?
The homecoming routine is where you catch anything that might have slipped through — and heat is your best weapon, since bed bugs and their eggs are killed by high temperatures. When you return to Bellingham:
- Unpack in a hard-surface area like the garage, entryway, or bathroom — not on your bed or carpeted bedroom floor.
- Put all washable clothing straight into the dryer on high heat for at least 30 minutes (the heat matters more than the wash) — including clothes you didn’t wear, since bed bugs may have gotten in regardless.
- Inspect your luggage carefully over a hard, light-colored surface, checking all seams, pockets, and folds.
- Vacuum out your suitcase thoroughly, then empty the vacuum outside.
- Store luggage away from the bedroom — a garage or closet is better than under the bed.
What do I do if I think I brought bed bugs home?
First, don’t panic, and don’t reach for store-bought sprays and bug bombs — they tend to scatter bed bugs deeper into hiding and make the problem harder to treat, without eliminating it. Bed bugs are notoriously difficult to get rid of on your own; they hide in tiny cracks, resist many over-the-counter products, and reproduce quickly, so DIY efforts often let the problem entrench while you think you’re fixing it.
If you suspect bed bugs, the smart move is a professional inspection to confirm whether you have them and how far they’ve spread, followed by proper treatment. Catching an infestation early — right after travel, when it may be just a few bugs — makes it far easier to resolve than waiting until it’s established.
How Sasquatch handles bed bugs
If you’re worried you brought something home from holiday travel, we start with a thorough inspection to confirm whether bed bugs are present and assess the extent, then lay out a clear treatment plan matched to the situation. Bed bugs are one of the toughest pests to eliminate, which is exactly why a professional, methodical approach beats DIY guesswork — and why catching it early makes such a difference.
Because verifying activity matters, our bed bug inspection carries a $150 fee — and if activity is confirmed, that fee is applied toward your service. Treatment is then a flat $350 per room, with common areas included, so pricing is clear and predictable from the start. We serve Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden, and the surrounding Whatcom County area, and we do it the honest way: no contracts, no scare tactics, no hidden fees, and a 100% service guarantee behind the work.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you really bring bed bugs home from holiday travel?
Yes — holiday travel is one of the most common ways bed bugs spread. They’re expert hitchhikers that can’t fly or jump but readily climb into luggage, bags, and clothing at hotels, rentals, or a relative’s guest room, then ride home with you and settle into your bedroom. A few simple habits — inspecting where you sleep, keeping luggage off the floor and bed, and unpacking carefully at home — dramatically cut the risk of turning a trip into an infestation.
Do bed bugs mean a place is dirty?
No — this is a persistent myth. Bed bugs have nothing to do with cleanliness; they’re found in spotless luxury hotels and everywhere in between, because all they need is access to people to feed on and nearby hiding spots. A clean home offers no protection against bed bugs carried in on luggage, which is why prevention during travel matters for everyone regardless of how tidy their house is. Finding bed bugs somewhere isn’t a reflection of hygiene.
How do I check a hotel room for bed bugs?
Do a quick inspection before unpacking. Keep your luggage in the bathroom or on a hard elevated surface while you check. Pull back the bedding and examine the mattress seams, tufts, and corners for live bugs, dark spots, or shed skins; inspect the headboard area, box spring, bed frame, and nearby nightstand; and check upholstered furniture seams. Use your phone flashlight to see into crevices. If you find any signs, don’t unpack — change rooms or accommodations.
What are the signs of bed bugs?
Look for live bugs — adults are flat, reddish-brown, and about the size of an apple seed — plus dark rust-colored fecal spots on mattresses and seams, small reddish blood stains on sheets, pale translucent shed skins, tiny eggs clustered in crevices, and sometimes a sweet, musty odor with heavier infestations. The fecal spots and shed skins are often easier to spot than the bugs themselves, since bed bugs hide in seams and crevices during the day.
What should I do with my luggage and clothes when I get home?
Unpack in a hard-surface area like the garage or bathroom, not on your bed or carpet. Put all washable clothing — including items you didn’t wear — straight into the dryer on high heat for at least 30 minutes, since the heat kills bed bugs and their eggs. Inspect your luggage over a light-colored surface, vacuum it out thoroughly and empty the vacuum outside, and store the luggage away from the bedroom rather than under the bed.
What should I do if I think I brought bed bugs home?
Don’t panic, and don’t reach for store-bought sprays or bug bombs — they tend to scatter bed bugs deeper into hiding and make treatment harder without eliminating the problem. Bed bugs are notoriously difficult to get rid of on your own because they hide in tiny cracks, resist many over-the-counter products, and reproduce quickly. The smart move is a professional inspection to confirm and assess the situation, then proper treatment. Catching it early, right after travel, makes it far easier to resolve.
Do you treat bed bugs in Bellingham and Whatcom County, and what does it cost?
Yes. We handle bed bug inspection and treatment throughout Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden, and the surrounding Whatcom County area. Our bed bug inspection is a $150 fee to verify activity before treatment, and that fee is applied toward your service if activity is confirmed. Treatment is a flat $350 per room, with common areas included, so the pricing is clear up front. Because bed bugs are one of the toughest pests to eliminate, we start with that thorough inspection, then lay out a clear treatment plan. No scare tactics, no hidden fees, and a 100% service guarantee.
Worried After Holiday Travel?
If you’ve traveled and something doesn’t feel right, an early check brings peace of mind. Call Sasquatch Pest Control at 360-410-2199 to schedule a bed bug inspection in Bellingham and Whatcom County.
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