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Bradenton FL Pest Control

SWFL Pest Identifier

What Bug Is This?

Saw something in the kitchen at 2AM? Filter by where you found it and what it looks like — get the ID and an honest verdict, from harmless neighbor to call-a-pro. Built for Southwest Florida homes.

60
SWFL species, honest verdicts

Including the harmless ones and the helpful ones — not everything deserves a spray.

Free
Photo ID by text

Can't find it below? Text a photo and a licensed local tech will ID it — no strings.

Tell it where you saw it

Kitchen sink, lanai screen, lawn patch, attic — location cuts the suspect list faster than anything else.

Match what it looks like

Ant-like, roach-like, a winged swarm, a caterpillar, lawn damage — pick the closest shape and size.

Get the honest verdict

Some of these are allies you should leave alone. Some need watching. A few are worth a professional look — we tell you which is which.

Identify It

Narrow it down in three taps.

Where did you see it?
What does it look like?
How big?
60 of 60 pests match
  • Dark head, pale almost-transparent body and legs
  • Erratic fast trails to sweets and water
  • So small they seem to appear from nowhere
  • Sandy soil piles between pavers and along foundation
  • Two worker sizes in one trail — a few with visibly oversized heads
  • Foraging tubes of loose dirt up walls
  • Fluffy dome mounds with no entry hole on top, popping up after rain
  • Boil out of the mound in seconds when disturbed
  • Sting first burns, then forms a small white pustule next day
  • Large — among the biggest ants you’ll see indoors, reddish-and-black
  • Most active at night
  • Fine sawdust-like piles (frass) under trim or window sills
  • Erratic, zigzag "crazy" running — never a neat trail
  • Reddish-brown, all one size
  • Massive numbers — thousands, not dozens
  • Black body with pale feet (look close)
  • Long steady trails along fence tops, eaves, and screen frames
  • Loves sweets; ignores most baits
  • Pencil-width mud tubes climbing foundation, piers, or garage walls
  • Swarmers: straight waist, straight antennae, four equal-length wings
  • Daytime swarms, typically spring
  • Tiny six-sided pellets in neat piles under a pinhole in wood
  • No mud tubes — they live entirely inside the wood
  • Swarms at dusk, often after warm rain
  • Big dusk swarms around lights in late spring
  • Swarmers yellowish-brown, slightly larger than native subterraneans
  • Carton nest material (looks like packed cardboard) in walls or trees
  • Reddish-brown, 1.5–2 inches, yellowish band behind the head
  • Can glide-fly — usually from a high spot toward light (or you)
  • Mostly wanders in from outside, especially after heavy rain or drought
  • Small, tan, two dark racing stripes behind the head
  • Found near appliances, under sinks, in cabinet hinges
  • Seeing them in daylight = heavy population
  • Uniform dark mahogany, no light band
  • Strong flier, drawn to porch lights
  • Loves gutters, tree holes, and attics
  • Bites in DAYTIME, especially ankles and elbows
  • Black with white lyre-shaped marks on the back
  • Breeds in bottle-cap amounts of standing water
  • Single white stripe down the back, striped legs
  • Aggressive daytime biter
  • Same container-breeding habit as its cousin
  • You feel the burn but barely see the bug
  • Worst at sunrise and sunset near water
  • Gets through standard window screens
  • Black flies with red thorax, flying attached in pairs
  • Two flights a year: roughly May and September
  • Splatter accumulates on car fronts
  • Yellowing patches that start in the sunniest, driest spots and spread
  • Damage looks exactly like drought but doesn’t green up after watering
  • Part the grass at the patch edge: tiny black bugs with white wing marks
  • Raised, meandering surface tunnels like mini mole runs
  • Spongy turf that peels easily
  • The insect itself: velvety, with shovel-shaped front legs
  • Small tan moths flush up when you mow
  • Grass blades notched and chewed, patches look scalped
  • Damage appears fast in late summer
  • Lawn browns in patches seemingly overnight
  • Caterpillars with an inverted "Y" on the head, feeding in groups
  • Birds suddenly very interested in your lawn
  • Turf lifts like loose carpet — roots are gone
  • C-shaped cream grubs in the top few inches of soil
  • Armadillos and raccoons digging at night
  • White foam blobs on grass stems (the nymphs’ bubble shelters)
  • Adults: black with two orange-red stripes
  • Grass tips yellow then brown in patches
  • Huge (up to 3"), slow, can barely fly
  • Adults yellow-orange-red; young are black with a yellow stripe
  • Marches across yards in early summer
  • Big yellow-and-silver spider in a huge wheel web across paths
  • Web silk has a golden tint in sunlight
  • Sits head-down in the web center
  • No web — hunts on the ground at speed
  • Stout, hairy, brown with darker stripes
  • Eyeshine sparkles if you scan the lawn with a flashlight
  • Very large, flat, long-legged — fits behind picture frames
  • Legs angle forward like a crab
  • Explosively fast when startled
  • Tan-brown with an orange hourglass underneath
  • THE tell: spiky, spherical egg sacs like tiny WWII sea mines
  • Web in furniture joints, meter boxes, pool cage corners
  • Glossy jet black, red hourglass underneath
  • Messy, strong, low web in undisturbed corners
  • Hides by day, hangs upside down at night
  • Nighttime scurrying in the attic or ceiling
  • Hollowed-out citrus on the tree
  • Sleek, dark, tail longer than the body; travels power lines and palm fronds
  • Burrows along foundations and under slabs
  • Heavier build, tail shorter than body
  • Grease rub marks along baseboards and pipes
  • Rice-grain droppings in drawers and under sinks
  • Gnawed food packaging corners
  • Fits through a gap the width of a dime
  • Pets scratching, bites around human ankles
  • Black specks on pet bedding that turn red when wetted (flea dirt)
  • Tiny jumpers in carpet, especially shaded rooms
  • Ticks crawling up walls or in baseboard gaps (yes, indoors)
  • Flat reddish-brown before feeding, gray-blue after
  • Dog kennel and bedding hotspots
  • Apple-seed-sized, flat, reddish-brown; hides in mattress seams and frame joints
  • Pepper-like dark spotting on seams
  • Bites in lines or clusters, often on arms
  • Open umbrella-shaped comb under eaves, no paper shell
  • Long legs dangle in flight
  • Calm away from the nest
  • Organ-pipe or urn-shaped mud tubes on walls
  • Slender wasp with a thread waist
  • Solitary — no swarm, no defense
  • Ground nest — steady traffic in and out of a hole in the yard
  • Compact, bright yellow-and-black, fast
  • Aggressive around food and drinks in late summer
  • Fuzzy, golden-brown, carries pollen on hind legs
  • Beard-shaped cluster of thousands on a branch or fence — calm and temporary
  • No nest, no comb — they’re between homes
  • Steady bee traffic in and out of one gap in soffit, wall, or meter box
  • A low hum in the wall on warm afternoons
  • Activity persists for weeks — a swarm would have moved on
  • Perfectly round 1/2" holes in fascia, pergolas, unpainted wood
  • Big black shiny abdomen (bumble bees are fuzzy)
  • Males hover and dive-bomb — but males can’t sting
  • Looks like a tiny blonde toupee — completely furry, teardrop shape
  • On oaks, elms, citrus; sometimes drops onto railings
  • Fall is peak season
  • Neon green with a red-and-white racing stripe
  • Branched spines all over
  • On oaks, hibiscus, and many shrubs
  • Carrot-shaped, silvery, wiggles side-to-side as it runs
  • Three tail bristles
  • In books, boxes, closets — anywhere starchy and still
  • Rear pincers (harmless to people)
  • Under pots, mats, and mulch — moisture followers
  • Wanders in after heavy rain
  • Coils into a spiral when touched
  • Slow, round-bodied, legs ripple in waves
  • Shows up in numbers after soaking rain
  • Fifteen pairs of very long legs, moves like a ghost
  • Found in tubs and sinks it can’t climb out of
  • Fast, but always running away from you
  • Rolls into a perfect ball
  • Gray, armored, under pots and stepping stones
  • Needs damp — dies quickly indoors
  • Shield-shaped body
  • Gathers on sunny walls and around windows in cooler months
  • Releases odor when crushed — hence the name
  • Fuzzy, moth-like micro-fly resting on bathroom walls
  • Weak, hopping flight near sinks and showers
  • Worse after a drain sits unused
  • Tiny dark flies hovering around potted plants
  • Larvae in constantly-damp potting soil
  • Weak fliers that drift rather than dart
  • Big warty treefrog (up to 5") around porch lights at night
  • Giant toe pads
  • Skin secretions irritate eyes — wash hands
  • Brown lizard doing push-ups on your walkway
  • Orange-red throat fan (dewlap)
  • Ground and low-perch dweller
  • Pale, almost translucent lizard on walls at night
  • Hangs around porch lights
  • The chirping you hear at night? Probably him
  • Half-moon burrow entrance, sandy apron in front
  • Stumpy elephant-like back legs, shovel front feet
  • Grazes on grass and low plants by day
  • Shallow cone-shaped holes dug overnight
  • Armored, cat-sized, terrible eyesight
  • Digs where soil is soft and grubs are plentiful
  • White waxy spirals on palm frond undersides
  • Sticky "honeydew" film on cars, pool decks, furniture below
  • Black sooty mold following the sticky film
  • White cottony clusters at stem joints and leaf bases
  • Sticky leaves below the clusters
  • Ants running protection patrols nearby
  • Soft green/black/orange specks clustered on new growth
  • Curling, sticky leaves
  • Ladybugs showing up = nature responding
  • White/brown flecking stuck to leaf undersides (camellias, hollies)
  • Yellow blotches on the leaf top side
  • Doesn’t wipe off easily — they’re glued down
  • Chalk-white weevil with a short snout
  • Leaf edges notched like pinking shears
  • Drops and plays dead when the branch is bumped

Not seeing yours?

Text a photo — free ID from a licensed local tech, no strings attached.

Text (941) 326-5011

Identified it and want it handled?

The Pest Library covers signs, risks, and how we treat each pest group — or price your fix online in about 60 seconds, no phone call needed.

Still Not Sure What It Is?

Text us a photo. A licensed local tech will identify it for free and tell you honestly whether it even needs treatment.

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