Blog Post
South Florida rainy season pest control - drought prep guide
- 10 Mins Read
This guide walks through what the drought has been doing, why the return of rain matters more than usual this year, and what you can do at home before things flip.
What the drought has been doing to your home
For pests, dry weather means one thing. Water is harder to find outdoors, so they move closer to the places that have it. That is how ants end up in kitchens, roaches show up around dishwashers, and rodents start scratching inside walls. You may have noticed more ant trails than usual in the last few weeks. That is the drought talking.
Subterranean termites do the opposite of becoming visible. According to UF/IFAS research from entomologists Phil Koehler and Roberto Pereira, when termites lose access to water, they stay underground. They do not stop eating wood. They just hold off on swarming until conditions are right.
Why the first heavy rain will trigger a surge
Several termite species swarm during this exact window in South Florida:

Eastern subterranean termites swarm during the day, often after spring rain.

Asian subterranean termites swarm at night from March through May, peaking late in that window.

Formosan termites swarm at night from May through early July and are strongly attracted to porch lights.

West Indian subterranean termites swarm at dusk and at night during the May and June rainy season onset.
The 2026 NPMA Bug Barometer forecast already calls for boosted termite, mosquito, and ant activity across the Southeast through spring and summer. So the drought-to-rain pivot is landing on top of an already active forecast.
What to do this week, before the rain returns

Walk your foundation.
Look for wood-to-soil contact on fence posts, deck supports, and trim near the slab. Subterranean termites use those bridges as direct entry points.

Pull mulch back from the house.
Thick organic mulch holds moisture against the foundation. Keep it under two inches deep and a few inches away from siding and stucco.

Check gutters and downspouts.
Clogged gutters dump water against the slab during a storm. Extend downspouts so they discharge several feet from the house.

Trim back vegetation.
Branches and shrubs touching the exterior wall act as ant and roach highways once the rain pushes pests up off the ground.

Seal door sweeps and window gaps.
Wind-driven rain pushes both water and insects through worn seals.

Drain anything that holds water.
Buckets, plant saucers, pool covers, kids' toys, even bottle caps. As Palm Beach County Mosquito Control reminds residents, Aedes mosquitoes lay eggs in containers as small as that.
What to watch for once the rains start
Discarded translucent wings on windowsills, near light fixtures, or in spider webs are one of the clearest signs of a recent termite swarm. So is a small pile of what looks like sawdust or pepper near baseboards, which can be drywood termite frass.
Ant trails appearing along new paths, especially near sinks and bathrooms, often follow a moisture change. Mosquito activity in shaded areas of the yard can ramp within a few days of standing water forming.
When it's time to bring in a pro
An annual termite inspection is the single most effective protection a South Florida home has, and the weeks before the rainy season are the best time to schedule one. If you have already seen swarmers, frass, or mud tubes on the foundation, that is a same-week call rather than a same-month one.
Wise House Pest Control serves Palm Beach County from our Lantana office and the Treasure Coast from our Port St. Lucie office. We can walk your property, identify which species you are dealing with, and recommend the right level of treatment before the next storm cycle does the deciding for you.
Our Two Convenient Locations:
Lantana Office
1177 Hypoluxo Rd Suite C-31 Lantana, FL 33462 (561) 727-8239
Port St Lucie Office
464 NW Peacock Blvd, Unit 106 Port St Lucie, FL 34986 (772) 783-4300