Tampa's Termite Swarm Season — Emergency Response

Flying Termites in Your Tampa Home? Here's What to Do Right Now

Seeing flying bugs inside your house — especially in spring — is almost always a termite swarm alarm. Don't panic, but don't wait. An inspection within 24–72 hours is critical. Tier 1 Pest Solutions offers free same-day termite inspections across Tampa Bay. Right now: 50% off your first termite treatment.

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Flying Termites Inside — Your First 5 Minutes

A termite swarm inside your Tampa home is alarming, but what you do in the next few minutes can determine how easy or difficult the subsequent inspection and treatment will be. There are right moves and wrong moves. Here they are in order.

1
Don't panic — the swarm itself lasts minutes to hours Termite swarmers — the winged reproductive caste — are soft-bodied and short-lived. Without soil access, they die within a few hours. The swarm you're seeing is a signal event, not an active attack. The damage was occurring before you saw any swarmers, and it will continue after they're gone. Panic leads to bad decisions; a clear head leads to a phone call that actually solves the problem.
2
Collect a sample in a jar or with tape Catch two or three live or recently dead swarmers and place them in a sealed jar or press them onto a piece of clear tape. This sample is critical for species identification — Eastern subterranean termites, Formosan termites, and drywood termites have different anatomies, different colony behaviors, and require different treatments. Without a sample, identification requires more time on-site. With a sample, a trained inspector can confirm the species in seconds. If you see discarded wings on windowsills, save those too.
3
Do NOT spray OTC insecticide — it scatters the colony This is the most important don't. Spraying Raid, Hot Shot, or any aerosol near the swarm emergence point tells the colony there is a threat at that location. Workers retreat deeper into the structure and may seal off galleries, making the colony much harder for a professional to locate and treat. You're also killing the swarmers you need for identification. Suppressing visible activity does not suppress colony activity — it only makes the inspection harder and may push termites to other parts of your home.
4
Photograph the emergence point and discarded wings Note and photograph where the swarmers are coming from — a windowsill, a baseboard gap, a crack in the drywall, a doorframe, or a floor joint. Also photograph any piles of discarded wings on windowsills or near light sources; swarmer wings break off quickly after landing, and wing piles are diagnostic evidence. These photos help your inspector target the initial inspection and narrow down where the colony may be located. Include something for scale in the photo if possible.
5
Call a licensed termite professional today An inspection within 24–72 hours of a swarm event is important for two reasons: the soil around the emergence point may still show recent disturbance that helps confirm subterranean versus drywood species, and any active foraging activity will be easier to identify while the colony has not yet changed its behavior. Call (813) 548-6341 or submit the form below — we offer free termite inspections to Tampa Bay homeowners. See our main termite control page for full service details.

Termite Swarmer vs Flying Ant — How to Tell the Difference

Flying ants also swarm in spring and summer in Tampa, and the panic of finding dozens of winged bugs inside leads many homeowners to misidentify one for the other. This table gives you the exact anatomical traits to check — ideally with the sample you collected in step 2. When in doubt, call us: identifying the insect from a photo or sample is the first thing we do.

Trait Termite Swarmer Flying Ant
Antennae Straight, beaded (like a string of tiny pearls) Elbowed — bent at a sharp angle like an elbow joint
Waist Broad, no pinch — body is roughly the same width from thorax to abdomen Pinched — distinct narrow waist between thorax and abdomen
Wings Two pairs equal in length — all four wings are the same size Two pairs unequal — front wings noticeably larger than rear wings
Wing Shedding Yes — wings break off almost immediately after landing; you'll find wing piles on windowsills No — wings stay attached to the ant's body
Body Color Typically dark brown to black; wings clear to grayish; Formosans slightly lighter Variable — black, red-black, or red depending on species
Size Eastern subterranean: 1/4–3/8 inch; Formosan: 3/8–1/2 inch (larger) Variable by species; carpenter ants 1/2–3/4 inch with swarmer forms similar in size
Wing Veins Simple, few veins — wings look nearly translucent with minimal patterning Complex venation — more distinct vein pattern in wings

The Fastest Field Test

  • Check the antennae first. Straight and beaded = termite. Bent at the elbow = ant. This single trait is the fastest reliable identification step — you can often see it with your naked eye.
  • Look for wing piles without bodies. If you're finding piles of wings on windowsills with no bodies attached, you almost certainly have termite swarmers — ants don't shed their wings this way.
  • Swarmers emerging from the floor or baseboards near a moisture source are almost always termites. Flying ants in Tampa generally swarm outdoors or enter through doors and windows, rarely from structural emergence points.
  • If you're seeing swarmers at night near light sources in late May through July, suspect Formosan termites. This is the most dangerous scenario in Tampa Bay — Formosan colonies are significantly larger and more destructive than Eastern subterranean.
Don't Guess — Get Confirmed

Send Us a Photo or Call Right Now

If you have a clear photo of the insect — especially the antennae and wing shape — text or email it to us and we can confirm the species before you even schedule an inspection. When flying termites in Tampa are involved, speed matters.

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Critical Fact

Swarmers in your home mean a mature colony is within 300 feet — and swarmers emerging from inside your structure almost certainly mean the colony is already inside or directly adjacent to your home's framing. This is not a warning of a future problem. It is evidence of an active present one.

Tampa Termite Swarm Calendar by Species

The timing of your swarm event is one of the strongest clues for species identification. Eastern subterranean, Formosan, and drywood termites all swarm at different times of year and under different conditions in the Tampa Bay area.

Most Common in Tampa

Eastern Subterranean Termite

Time: Daytime — mid-morning to early afternoon
Season: February – May; peak March – April
Trigger: Warm sunny days after rain

Reticulitermes flavipes is endemic throughout Hillsborough County and every Tampa neighborhood from South Tampa to New Tampa to Brandon. Swarms occur on warm, humid days following rainfall — typically mid-morning when soil temperature rises. Colony size: up to 300,000 workers. This is the species behind the vast majority of flying termites Tampa homeowners call about in spring. Look for daytime swarms near windows and light sources. Mud tubes on the foundation exterior, framing, or plumbing penetrations are the primary evidence to look for between swarm events.

Most commonly reported in Tampa
Invasive — High Threat

Formosan Subterranean Termite

Time: Night — attracted strongly to lights at dusk
Season: May – July
Trigger: Warm nights, 70°F+, after rainfall

Coptotermes formosanus — the "supertermite" — arrived in Florida via Gulf ports and is actively expanding its range northward through the Tampa Bay corridor. Formosan swarms are nocturnal and occur in massive numbers around porch lights, streetlights, and illuminated windows. Colony size: up to 10 million workers. Feeding rate is 3–5× faster than Eastern subterranean. They can build "carton nests" — secondary above-ground colonies — inside walls or attic spaces that do not need soil contact. If you see swarmers around your lights on a warm May or June night in Wesley Chapel, New Tampa, or along the Hillsborough River corridor, treat this as a high-priority situation. Visit our termite control page for details on Formosan-specific treatment protocols.

Growing threat in Tampa Bay — treat urgently
Above-Ground Species

Drywood Termite

Time: Daytime — afternoon swarms
Season: Late spring through fall, May – November
Trigger: Hot days in late spring, summer, fall

Drywood termites (Incisitermes snyderi and related species) live entirely within dry wood — no soil contact required. They enter through unprotected wood surfaces, attic vents, roof intersections, and any exposed wood on the exterior. Unlike subterranean species, they produce distinctive frass — dry, hexagonal, sand-like pellets pushed out through tiny kickout holes in the wood surface. No mud tubes. No soil activity. A smaller colony (a few thousand versus hundreds of thousands), but the lack of ground-contact makes them much harder to detect and treat with perimeter liquid treatments. Spot treatment or localized injection is the standard approach. They're especially common in older Tampa homes and in structures where wood trim or siding is in direct sun without regular protective coating.

No soil contact — frass is the tell-tale sign

A Swarm Means an Established Colony Is Already Here

This is the most important thing to understand about termite swarmers: they do not come from young colonies. A termite colony must reach a certain maturity — typically 3 to 5 years old with thousands to hundreds of thousands of workers — before it produces swarmers at all. Swarmers are the colony's reproduction event, not its beginning.

When you see flying termites in your Tampa home, you are seeing evidence of an established, mature colony. The question is not "do I have termites?" — you do. The question is where they are and how long they've been there. That's what an inspection determines.

  • Colony is within 300 feet — possibly inside your walls Subterranean termites do not travel long distances above ground. Swarmers found inside your structure almost always indicate the originating colony is in, under, or directly adjacent to your home — not from a neighbor's yard across the street.
  • The swarmers themselves won't survive — the colony will Every swarmer that fails to establish a new colony dies within hours. The parent colony that produced them is unaffected and continues feeding. The spectacle of the swarm disappearing does not mean the problem is resolved — it means the colony just completed its annual reproduction event.
  • There will be no swarm again for 12 months Most termite colonies swarm once per year. If you miss the inspection window after this swarm and wait until next year's, you've given the colony another full year of uninterrupted feeding. In Tampa's year-round warm climate, that's 365 days of active damage accumulation.
  • A WDO inspection documents the evidence for insurance and transactions If you're planning to sell your Tampa home or refinance, a WDO (Wood-Destroying Organism) inspection provides written documentation of current termite status — required by most lenders. An active infestation found before listing gives you time to treat; one found by the buyer's inspector does not.
3–5 yrs Minimum colony age before swarmers are produced
$3,000+ Average termite repair cost in Florida, undetected infestations
365 days Active feeding year-round — no winter slowdown in Tampa
FREE Termite inspections for Tampa Bay homeowners — call today
Honest Answer

Saw a Swarm Today — Do I Need Emergency Same-Day Treatment?

No — same-day treatment is almost never the right move. A swarm event alone doesn't tell us enough about species, colony location, or appropriate treatment method to act responsibly that same afternoon. What is critical is a professional inspection within 24 to 72 hours while the soil disturbance, emergence points, and any active foraging activity are still easy to identify.

The inspection is free, takes about an hour, and will give you a clear picture of what species you have, where the colony is likely located, and what treatment will actually solve the problem — not just suppress visible activity. Call us today to schedule that inspection.

Call (813) 548-6341

Six Signs of Active Termite Activity in Your Tampa Home

After a swarm, walk your property and look for these secondary evidence markers. Finding any one of them alongside your swarmer sighting significantly raises the probability of an active infestation — and tells your inspector exactly where to focus.

Mud Tubes on the Foundation

Eastern subterranean and Formosan termites build pencil-wide mud tubes — narrow tunnels made from soil, saliva, and feces — to travel from the ground to wood framing while maintaining humidity and avoiding light. Check the exterior foundation line, the garage stem wall, any concrete block, around plumbing entry points, and along piers or posts. Active tubes may have live termites inside when broken. Old tubes that crumble and don't get repaired indicate the colony may have moved on — but don't assume without an inspection. Mud tubes are the single most diagnostic sign of subterranean termite activity and one of the first things our technicians look for on every Tampa inspection.

Discarded Wings on Windowsills

Termite swarmers shed their wings almost immediately after landing — within seconds to minutes. Wing piles on interior windowsills, along baseboards near light sources, or at the bottom of sliding glass doors are one of the most commonly found post-swarm evidence items. The wings are translucent, roughly equal in size (both pairs), and about 1/4 to 3/8 inch long. Finding a significant accumulation of wings without any live swarmers means the swarm has already concluded — likely within the last 12 to 48 hours. Save the wings in a bag or tape them to a piece of paper and bring them when we arrive for the inspection. Flying termites in Tampa leave wing piles as their calling card.

Frass — Sawdust-Like Droppings

Drywood termites kick their excrement out of the colony through small kickout holes in the wood surface. This frass is dry, hexagonal, and pellet-like — often described as fine sand or sawdust. You may find small piles of it on windowsills, on floors below baseboards, or on horizontal surfaces near wood trim. Unlike the sawdust from carpenter ants or wood decay, termite frass has a distinctive uniform pellet shape. This is not a sign of subterranean termite activity — subterranean termites incorporate their frass into their mud tubes. Finding frass elsewhere in Tampa, without mud tubes, points strongly toward drywood termites and requires a different treatment approach than liquid soil perimeter treatment.

Hollow-Sounding Wood

Knock on floor joists, baseboards, door frames, window frames, and interior trim. Wood that has been hollowed out by termites feeding along the grain produces a characteristic papery, hollow sound when struck — very different from the solid knock of intact wood. Termites feed from the inside out, leaving a thin veneer of paint or wood surface intact for months or years before the damage becomes structurally visible or penetrates through. In Tampa homes, baseboards near bathrooms, kitchen cabinets against exterior walls, and wood framing near A/C condensation lines are especially common feeding sites due to the persistent moisture gradient that subterranean termites require.

Darkened or Blistered Paint

When termites feed just beneath a painted surface, the moisture they introduce can cause the paint to darken, blister, or bubble — similar in appearance to water damage. Blistered paint on baseboards, door frames, or window casings in areas with no obvious plumbing or roof leak is a significant red flag in Tampa homes. The moisture that subterranean termites carry from the soil is enough to delaminate paint from wood over time, and the presence of this symptom in non-moisture-exposed locations almost always warrants a professional probe of the underlying wood. This evidence type is especially common in South Tampa and Tampa Heights older-construction homes where framing wood may be decades old and already compromised.

Sticking Doors or Windows

Doors or windows that suddenly stick, no longer close smoothly, or have shifted in their frames can be caused by moisture swelling in summer — but they can also indicate structural wood damage from termites. As framing lumber loses structural integrity from termite feeding, slight shifts in load distribution can cause door and window frames to distort. This is more likely to be termite-related when the sticking appears in an interior room that has no obvious moisture exposure, when it develops relatively quickly, and when it occurs alongside other evidence markers like hollow-sounding wood or mud tubes. In Tampa's slab-on-grade homes, sticking doors near the master bath or kitchen exterior wall deserve a closer look.

Why Tampa Homes Are Especially Vulnerable

Florida as a whole has the highest termite pressure of any state in the continental United States — but Tampa Bay has a specific combination of factors that amplify that pressure beyond the Florida average. Understanding why helps explain why termite activity in Tampa is not an occasional event but a near-constant management challenge.

  • Year-Round Humidity Creates Perfect Feeding Conditions Tampa's annual relative humidity averages 74–80%, and ground moisture never reaches the low levels that slow subterranean termite activity in drier climates. Eastern subterranean termites require a humidity gradient to survive — the Tampa soil provides it 12 months a year with no seasonal slowdown. This means colony growth and wood consumption never has the winter pause that homeowners in other states count on to limit damage.
  • Eastern Subterranean Termites Are Endemic — Not Introduced Unlike Formosans (which were introduced via port trade), Eastern subterranean termites are native to Florida and are endemic throughout all of Hillsborough, Pinellas, and Pasco counties. There is no practical way to eliminate them from the environment — the goal of treatment is colony control and structural protection, not eradication. Every Tampa home without active treatment or monitoring is at risk from local pressure that exists in every lawn, tree stump, and mulch bed in the neighborhood.
  • Formosan Termites Are Spreading Northward The Formosan subterranean termite — first established in Florida via Tampa, Miami, and New Orleans ports — has progressively expanded its range north and east. Hillsborough County is now within established Formosan territory, and sightings are increasing in Wesley Chapel, New Tampa, and the I-75 corridor communities. The combination of Formosan and Eastern subterranean pressure in the same area means Tampa homes can face two species simultaneously — requiring treatment approaches designed to address both.
  • Stucco-Over-Frame and Slab Construction Hides Entry Points The dominant construction types in Tampa — stucco-over-wood-frame and concrete block with interior wood framing — create conditions where termite entry points are hidden behind exterior cladding and where damage can progress for years inside wall cavities before becoming visible. Slab-on-grade construction, which comprises the majority of Tampa housing stock from the 1970s onward, places wood framing within inches of the soil — with only the concrete slab between them. Expansion joint cracks, plumbing penetrations, and weep holes in stucco are the entry highways that make Tampa homes uniquely vulnerable.
  • Mulch, Landscaping, and Irrigation Create a Perimeter Risk Tampa homeowners tend to use heavy landscape mulch, maintain irrigation systems that keep soil moisture high year-round, and plant dense tropical landscaping close to the foundation. Each of these factors increases termite pressure at the perimeter. Cellulose mulch (wood chips, pine straw) within 12 inches of the foundation is effectively an invitation. In New Tampa, Wesley Chapel, Riverview, and Brandon communities with HOA-maintained common landscaping, the soil along shared property lines and community beds is under continuous termite pressure that neighbors cannot individually control.
#1 Florida ranks highest in U.S. for subterranean termite pressure
10M Workers in a mature Formosan colony vs 300K for Eastern sub
74% Average annual humidity in Tampa — ideal for year-round termite activity
FREE Termite inspection — no obligation, same-day availability
Tampa-Wide Pest Services

Termite pressure doesn't exist in isolation — Tampa homes that have active termite activity often have concurrent general pest pressure from cockroaches, ants, and rodents that can complicate structural inspections. Our Tampa pest control service covers the full property, and our technicians are trained to identify signs of multiple pest types on every visit.

See our full termite control services

Tier 1's Termite Response — From Swarm Call to Treatment

A termite call from a Tampa homeowner who just saw swarmers triggers a specific inspection and treatment sequence. Here's exactly what happens from first call to completed treatment.

01

Free Inspection — Species ID First

Our technician arrives with a moisture meter, probe, and flashlight and performs a systematic inspection of the interior and exterior. We examine the foundation perimeter for mud tubes, probe baseboards and framing in common infestation areas (bathrooms, kitchens, utility rooms, garage walls), inspect the attic for any evidence of drywood activity, and check the crawl space or under-slab perimeter if accessible. Species identification using your collected sample or emergence point characteristics happens at this stage — everything downstream depends on knowing whether we're dealing with Eastern subterranean, Formosan, or drywood. This inspection is completely free for Tampa Bay homeowners.

02

Identify Species and Locate the Colony

Using the inspection findings, swarmer identification, mud tube mapping, moisture readings, and probing results, we assess the most likely colony location and determine whether the infestation is subterranean (soil-dependent), drywood (wood-internal), or a combination. For subterranean species, we identify the most probable entry points and map the perimeter to determine treatment linear footage. For drywood species, we identify the specific infested members and assess whether spot treatment or broader fumigation is warranted. This assessment drives the written treatment recommendation and quote.

03

Written Treatment Recommendation and Quote

We provide a written treatment recommendation that identifies the species confirmed, describes the treatment method selected, explains why that method is appropriate for your specific infestation type and construction, and provides a fixed price with no hidden charges. For subterranean infestations, we explain the choice between liquid soil treatment, bait systems, or a combination. For drywood infestations, we explain the spot treatment scope. You will never receive a pressure sales call after the inspection — the written quote is yours to review and decide on your timeline, though we do recommend acting within 2 to 4 weeks of the inspection.

04

Targeted Treatment — Right Method for the Species

Treatment method is matched to species and infestation characteristics. Eastern subterranean and Formosan infestations typically receive a Termidor-class liquid soil perimeter treatment — trenched and rodded along the foundation, applied under slabs at plumbing and conduit penetrations, and treating any wood-to-soil contact points. Bait systems (Sentricon-class) are installed in-ground at regular intervals around the perimeter when liquid treatment is not appropriate or when ongoing monitoring is a priority. Drywood infestations receive localized spot treatment with wood injection at confirmed infestation sites. We explain exactly what was applied, where, and what you should expect in the weeks that follow. Our termite control page describes each method in detail.

05

Follow-Up Inspection and Activity Verification

Termite treatment efficacy is not visible overnight. We schedule a follow-up visit 30 to 90 days after treatment to inspect for any new mud tube construction, new emergence points, or frass accumulation that would indicate ongoing activity. At this visit we confirm that treated areas show no new evidence, re-probe previously active areas, and assess whether any supplemental treatment is warranted. For liquid treatments, we also inspect at the perimeter for any gaps in treated soil that may require touch-up. You'll receive a written summary of the follow-up findings. If you have questions between the initial treatment and the follow-up visit, call us — that's what we're here for.

WDO

Need an Inspection Report for Real Estate or Refinancing?

If you need an official WDO (Wood-Destroying Organism) inspection report for a real estate transaction, mortgage closing, or insurance documentation in the Tampa Bay area, our licensed WDO inspectors provide the FL-standard report format required by lenders. This is a separate service from a treatment inspection. See our WDO inspection page for report format, timing, and scheduling. We cover all of Tampa and the surrounding metro area.

Three Treatment Approaches — Matched to Your Infestation

There is no universal termite treatment that works equally well for all species and all infestation types. The right treatment depends on species, infestation location, construction type, and severity. Here is an honest overview of the three approaches we use and what each one is best suited for.

  • Liquid Soil Perimeter (Termidor-class): The most widely used treatment for Eastern subterranean and Formosan termite infestations. A continuous treated zone is created in the soil around the foundation — workers crossing through it are killed and carry the non-repellent termiticide back to the colony. Effective against both species. Requires trenching and rodding around the foundation and treatment at all penetration points. Best for: established subterranean infestations where the colony is known to be foraging through the perimeter soil.
  • In-Ground Bait Systems (Sentricon-class): Bait stations are installed in the soil at regular intervals around the perimeter. Foraging termites discover the bait, take it back to the colony as a food source, and share it — the active ingredient disrupts molting and colony reproduction, eventually collapsing the entire colony. Slower to act than liquid treatments (60–120 days for colony suppression) but achieves full colony elimination versus perimeter containment. Best for: properties where liquid treatment is not practical (tight access, patio slabs, wells), or where ongoing monitoring with physical evidence of termite activity is preferred.
  • Localized Drywood Spot Treatment: For drywood termite infestations confined to specific structural members, we use direct wood injection at confirmed infestation sites. A termiticide is injected through small drilled ports into the infested wood, creating lethal contact with the colony inside. Effective for contained drywood infestations where fumigation is not warranted. Not appropriate for subterranean species. Best for: limited drywood activity in specific attic members, window frames, or door casings where the infestation boundaries are clearly defined.
  • Note on termite bonds: We currently offer treatment-only services. We do not offer annual termite bond or warranty programs at this time. We will be transparent about this during your inspection so you can make an informed decision about your protection strategy. See our general pest control plans for ongoing monitoring options.
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Treatment Summary

Right Treatment for the Right Termite

We never recommend a single treatment to every homeowner regardless of species. A liquid perimeter treatment for a drywood infestation is ineffective. A bait system for an aggressive Formosan infestation may be too slow. The inspection drives the recommendation — not a package price list.

  • Free inspection — no charge, no obligation
  • Species-specific treatment protocol
  • Written quote before any work begins
  • 50% off first treatment — permanent promo
  • Follow-up inspection 30–90 days post-treatment
  • FL Licensed JB321482 | JE132152
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What Sets Us Apart

We work across Tampa Bay every week — from South Tampa bungalows to New Tampa slab-construction homes to Wesley Chapel new builds. We know the construction types, the species pressures, and the soil conditions that make each neighborhood's termite risk profile different. This is local, expert service — not a national chain dispatching a franchise technician.

Free Inspections — No Pressure, No Obligation

We don't charge for the inspection and we don't show up expecting to sell a treatment the same day. The inspection gives you information; you decide what to do with it. Our job is to give you an accurate picture of what's there, not to maximize per-visit revenue.

Species-Specific Treatment — Not One-Size-Fits-All

Most pest companies have a standard termite package they quote to every caller. We don't. The treatment we recommend is determined by the species identified in the inspection, the construction type, the infestation location, and the severity — because treating a drywood infestation with a subterranean protocol wastes your money and doesn't work.

Honest About What We Don't Offer

We currently offer treatment-only services. No termite bond. No annual warranty program. We tell you this upfront — not after you've scheduled a treatment and asked about coverage. If a bonded warranty is important to you, we'll tell you that clearly so you can make an informed decision about your service provider.

Local Team, Tampa Bay Knowledge

Our technicians work in Brandon, Wesley Chapel, Riverview, Westchase, Carrollwood, Lutz, and across Tampa every week. We know that South Tampa's older homes have different construction vulnerability than slab-on-grade New Tampa builds, and that Formosan pressure is higher near the Hillsborough River than inland. Local knowledge makes inspections faster and more accurate.

Saw Swarmers Today?

Call (813) 548-6341 Now

Flying termites in your Tampa home are not a future problem — they're a present one. Free same-day termite inspection. 50% off your first treatment. Licensed Florida pest control professionals serving all of Tampa Bay.

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Frequently Asked Questions — Flying Termites & Swarm Season in Tampa

Every question Tampa homeowners ask us after seeing termite swarmers — from flying termites vs. flying ants to treatment costs to insurance coverage.

Flying termites — also called swarmers or alates — are not dangerous to people. They do not bite, sting, or carry disease. The danger they represent is entirely structural: swarmers are the reproductive caste of an established termite colony, and their presence in or around your Tampa home means a mature colony is nearby. The swarmers themselves will die within hours; it's the colony behind them that causes damage. Don't panic about the swarmers themselves — do act quickly on what they're telling you about the colony. See our termite control page for full treatment information.
You can kill the swarmers themselves with a standard aerosol insecticide, but this is one of the worst things you can do for the actual problem. Spraying OTC insecticides near a termite swarm can scatter the colony and cause them to retreat deeper into the structure, making it harder for a professional to locate and treat the colony. The swarmers you're seeing are only a tiny fraction of the colony — killing a few hundred swarmers does nothing to the hundreds of thousands of workers actively eating the wood. Collect a sample in a jar or piece of tape for identification and call a professional instead of spraying. If you need to do something right now, vacuum the live swarmers and discard the bag — this removes them without chemically alarming the colony below.
It depends on the species. Eastern subterranean termites — the most common species involved in flying termites Tampa calls — typically swarm during daylight hours, usually mid-morning to early afternoon on warm days following rainfall, primarily from February through May. Formosan termites are night swarmers attracted to lights, typically emerging at dusk from May through July. Drywood termites swarm during daylight in late spring through fall. If you saw swarmers at night near your porch lights between May and July, you're likely dealing with Formosans — which are a more aggressive and destructive species requiring immediate attention. The timing of your swarm event is one of the strongest clues we use for species identification before the inspection.
The absence of visible mud tubes doesn't mean termites aren't present. Mud tubes are built by subterranean termites, and they're often hidden — inside wall voids, under insulation, behind stucco, under the slab, or in crawl spaces that homeowners never access. Drywood termites don't build mud tubes at all; they live entirely inside the wood. Additionally, a swarm can originate from a neighboring property — colonies within 300 feet can produce swarmers that end up inside your home. A professional inspection uses probing, moisture meters, and structural knowledge to find evidence that isn't visible from a casual walk-around. In Tampa homes with stucco cladding, virtually all mud tube activity is hidden behind the exterior finish until it reaches a visible exit point.
A mature Eastern subterranean termite colony of 300,000 workers can consume roughly a pound of wood per day — but the structural impact depends on where they're feeding. Termites feeding on non-load-bearing framing can go undetected for years before causing significant damage. Termites feeding on sill plates, joists, or support posts can cause structural problems much faster. Formosan termites are significantly more destructive: a Formosan colony can be three to ten times larger and feeds far more aggressively. In Tampa's warm climate, termites feed year-round without seasonal slowdowns, meaning damage accumulates faster than in colder states. Homes in South Tampa, Temple Terrace, and older Brandon neighborhoods with original construction framing are particularly vulnerable to undetected damage accumulation. This is why prompt inspection after seeing subterranean termite swarmers or termite swarmers Tampa homeowners see indoors matters so much.
Almost never. Standard homeowner's insurance policies in Florida explicitly exclude termite damage, classifying it as a "gradual damage" or "pest infestation" exclusion rather than a sudden covered event. This exclusion is nearly universal across all major carriers including Citizens, Heritage, and all private market Florida insurers. It is not a fine-print surprise — it is a defined exclusion in the policy declarations. The only financial protection most homeowners have against termite damage costs is a termite bond or warranty from a pest control company — a separate contract from insurance. Tier 1 currently offers treatment-only services without a bond program, so if ongoing warranty coverage is a financial priority for your Tampa home, discuss this specifically when you call us.
Yes — for Tampa Bay homeowners, an annual termite inspection is one of the most important routine home maintenance steps available. Florida has the highest termite pressure of any U.S. state: Eastern subterranean termites are endemic throughout Hillsborough County, Formosan termites are actively spreading northward from the Gulf Coast, and drywood termites can enter through any unprotected wood surface. Annual inspections catch early activity before damage becomes extensive and expensive. Many mortgage lenders and real estate transactions require a current WDO inspection report anyway. For homes in Brandon, Riverview, Wesley Chapel, and New Tampa — communities with heavy landscaping and high soil moisture — annual inspection provides the earliest possible detection window. We offer free inspections to Tampa Bay homeowners — call (813) 548-6341 to schedule.
Termite treatment costs in Tampa vary significantly based on the species identified, the size of your home, the extent of the infestation, and the treatment method selected. Liquid soil perimeter treatments for a standard Tampa home typically range from $800 to $2,000 depending on linear footage of the foundation and soil conditions. In-ground bait systems range from $1,200 to $2,500 for initial installation plus annual monitoring fees. Localized drywood spot treatments are generally less expensive for contained infestations. Our current promotion is 50% off your first treatment — which is a permanent promotion with no expiration. We provide a free inspection and written quote before any treatment — there is no obligation, and the price you're quoted is the price you pay. Visit our termite control page for more pricing context.
Formosan subterranean termites (Coptotermes formosanus) — sometimes called the "Formosan termite swarm Florida" species — are an invasive species from East Asia that arrived in Florida via port cities and are now established across the Gulf Coast and spreading northward. They are significantly more destructive than the native Eastern subterranean termite for several reasons: Formosan colonies can reach 3 to 10 million workers versus 300,000 for Eastern subterranean; they feed three to five times faster; they can build "carton nests" — secondary above-ground nest structures made from chewed wood and soil — that allow them to survive without ground contact; and they are far more aggressive in penetrating treated barriers. Formosan swarmers are attracted to lights at night in late May through July and are slightly larger than Eastern subterranean swarmers. If your Tampa Bay neighborhood is near the Hillsborough River, the bay, or any Gulf-adjacent corridor, Formosan pressure is a real and growing concern.
Termites cannot chew through solid concrete, but they don't need to. Subterranean termites can exploit hairline cracks in concrete slabs as thin as 1/64 of an inch — a gap too small to see with the naked eye. They also travel through expansion joints, plumbing penetrations, conduit entry points, and the interface between the foundation and any wood framing. In Tampa's stucco-over-frame and concrete block construction, termites frequently enter through stucco cracks, weep holes, and any point where wood or cellulose material is in contact with or close to the soil. Slab-on-grade construction, which dominates Tampa's housing stock built since the 1970s, has no crawl space buffer between the colony and the framing — making the entry path very short and difficult to inspect visually. This is one reason subterranean termite swarm season Tampa calls are so common even from recently built homes.
For liquid soil treatments, the termiticide creates an immediate barrier that kills termites on contact, but complete colony elimination typically takes 30 to 90 days as foraging workers carry the product back to the colony. You should not see new structural damage progression after treatment, but confirming colony death takes time. Bait systems typically show colony suppression within 60 to 120 days and work more slowly but achieve full colony elimination versus perimeter containment. We schedule follow-up visits after treatment to inspect for any new activity and confirm treatment efficacy. Active mud tube construction or new frass accumulation after 90 days post-treatment is a signal to reassess. Between treatments, if you notice anything concerning — new wings, new mud tubes, or wood damage that wasn't there before — call us immediately rather than waiting for the scheduled follow-up.
Not yet. Tier 1 Pest Solutions currently offers termite inspection and treatment services on a treatment-only basis. We do not currently offer termite bonds or annual warranty programs. We provide a thorough inspection, a clear treatment recommendation, professional application of the appropriate termiticide or bait system, and follow-up visits to confirm results — but we want to be transparent that a formal termite bond with re-treatment guarantees is not currently part of our service offering. If a bonded warranty program is a requirement for your mortgage, real estate transaction, or property insurance, we recommend asking about that specifically when you call so we can discuss your options honestly. See our general pest control plans for our ongoing service options.

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Fill out the form and we'll reach out to schedule your free inspection. If you just saw swarmers today, call us directly — we prioritize same-day and next-day inspections for homeowners who have active swarm events. Serving all of the Tampa Bay area including Wesley Chapel, New Tampa, Brandon, Riverview, Westchase, Carrollwood, Lutz, Temple Terrace, South Tampa, St. Pete, and Clearwater.

Hours Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Address 3902 Corporex Park Dr, Suite 450, Tampa, FL 33619

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Tampa Bay Communities We Serve for Termite Control

We perform termite inspections and treatments across the entire Tampa Bay metro area — from South Tampa and Hyde Park to the I-75 corridor communities in Hillsborough, Pasco, and Pinellas counties.

Tampa (All Areas)
South Tampa
New Tampa
Brandon
Riverview
Westchase
Carrollwood
Odessa
Lutz
Temple Terrace
St. Petersburg
Clearwater
Land O' Lakes
Seminole Heights
Hyde Park
Palma Ceia
Tampa Heights
Apollo Beach
Gibsonton
Dunedin
Safety Harbor

Not on the list? We serve all of Hillsborough, Pasco, and Pinellas counties. Call (813) 548-6341 to confirm coverage in your neighborhood. See our Tampa pest control page for the full service area.

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