Blog Post
Mosquito-Borne Disease in South Florida: What the 2026 Surveillance Data Tells Palm Beach County and Treasure Coast Homeowners
- 10 Mins Read
What the 2026 numbers actually show
Travel-associated cases mean the infection happened elsewhere and the patient returned to Florida. That is different from local transmission, where mosquitoes here pick up the virus from an infected person and spread it to uninfected people in the same area. Local transmission has not been documented in either county yet for 2026.
The reason this matters is that travel-associated cases are how local transmission cycles begin. CDC tracks Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus as the primary vectors for dengue, Zika, and chikungunya in the continental United States, with both species established and breeding across South Florida. When a traveler returns home with an active infection and gets bitten by a local Aedes mosquito, the mosquito carries the virus to its next victim. That is how locally transmitted dengue and chikungunya outbreaks have started in South Florida in past years, and the conditions for it are present right now.
Why this is the moment to pay attention
Rainy season in South Florida begins in June. By July, mosquito populations across Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast will be at peak density. Every untreated container of standing water on a residential property becomes a breeding site for the same Aedes species that carry these viruses.
The pre-season window is the highest-leverage moment of the year for mosquito control. Source reduction work done in April and early May, gutters cleaned, planter saucers emptied, screens repaired, can prevent the population explosions that drive disease transmission later in the summer.
Professional barrier treatments applied before the first heavy rains have residual effectiveness measured in weeks, working through the early breeding cycles before populations get out of hand.
The Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory at UF/IFAS continues to track Aedes populations and arbovirus risks across the state, with emphasis on the importance of reducing container breeding sites on private property. Public mosquito control districts treat canals, ditches, and right-of-ways. Your yard is your responsibility.
What this means for your home
Walk your property this weekend. Eliminate every source of standing water you can find. Repair window and lanai screens before May. Reduce dense vegetation against exterior walls where adult mosquitoes rest during the day. Schedule a professional barrier treatment before the first heavy rains of rainy season.
These are the same steps health departments and mosquito control districts have been recommending for years. The 2026 surveillance data is a reminder that they are not abstract precautions. They are the difference between a livable summer and a season where your family is exposed to viruses that have already been documented in your county.
We Have 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
Sources:
Florida Department of Health — Week 5 2026 Arbovirus Surveillance Report covering Palm Beach County and St. Lucie County
CDC — Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus as primary vectors for dengue, Zika, and chikungunya in the continental United States
Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory at UF/IFAS — ongoing tracking of Aedes populations and arbovirus risks across Florida
UF/IFAS EDIS publication — Mosquitoes and their Control: Integrated Pest Management for Mosquito Reduction around Homes and Neighborhoods