Blog Post

What South Florida pest pros find in attics that homeowners never check

When was the last time you went into your attic?

Not thought about your attic. Actually climbed the ladder, pushed through the hatch, and looked around with a flashlight. Most South Florida homeowners answer that question with a long pause followed by “when we moved in” or “never.”

That gap between the last time you checked and right now is where the problems live. Attics in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast are the single most productive pest inspection zone on any residential property, and they are the zone homeowners are least likely to ever look at themselves.

Here is what our technicians actually find up there, in homes across Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Lantana, Port St. Lucie, Stuart, and Palm City, week after week.

"We have a concrete block home. Termites cannot get into concrete."

Before we dig in

Most South Florida attics contain evidence of at least one active or recent pest issue that the homeowner was completely unaware of.
Roof rat activity is the most common finding, with droppings, rub marks, and gnaw damage visible in the majority of attics where tree canopy touches or overhangs the roofline.


Drywood termite frass hidden behind blown insulation is the second most common finding, and the one with the most serious structural implications.
Wasp nests in soffit gaps, bat guano accumulation, and insulation damage from multiple pest species round out the top five.

None of these issues are visible from inside the living space until the damage becomes severe. Annual attic inspection is the only way to catch them early.

Roof rat droppings and runway evidence

This is the most common finding in South Florida attic inspections. Not close. Not by a small margin. By a wide margin.
Roof rats are nocturnal, and they spend most of their active hours in the attic space homeowners never enter. UF/IFAS documents roof rats as the most common commensal rodent in residential attics across South Florida, with populations that remain active year-round in the region’s climate.


What our technicians see: dark, pellet-shaped droppings concentrated along the tops of ceiling joists and in corners near entry points. Rub marks, which are dark greasy streaks left by the rats’ body oil as they travel the same routes repeatedly. Gnaw marks on wiring, PVC plumbing, and wood framing. Shredded insulation used for nesting material. Occasionally, a cached pile of fruit or pet food that the rats carried up from the living space below.

The homeowner’s experience before the inspection is usually limited to hearing scratching at night and wondering what it was. By the time a technician gets into the attic, the evidence trail tells a much more complete story about how many animals are present, how long they have been there, and where they are entering.

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Why it matters.

Gnawed wiring is a documented fire risk. Contaminated insulation loses thermal efficiency and creates air quality concerns. Droppings and urine in the attic space directly above your living area are a health issue that most homeowners do not think about because they cannot see it.

Drywood termite frass behind insulation

This is the finding that changes the conversation. Roof rat evidence is common and usually manageable. Drywood termite damage in attic framing is where real structural consequences start.

Drywood termites live entirely inside the wood they feed on. Their colonies produce small, hard, six-sided frass pellets that the insects push out of kick-out holes in the wood surface. In an uninsulated attic, these pellets accumulate on horizontal surfaces below the infested framing and are relatively easy to spot during inspection.

In most South Florida attics, blown insulation covers the frass. Pellets fall from the framing above, land on the insulation, and disappear. A homeowner who glances into the attic from the hatch sees nothing. A technician who moves insulation away from the framing finds piles of frass that have been accumulating for years.
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Why it matters.

Drywood termite infestations that go undetected in attic framing for multiple years can weaken structural members to the point where repair costs dwarf the treatment costs. Older Boca Raton and Boynton Beach homes with original wood framing are particularly vulnerable because the wood has been exposed to drywood termite pressure for decades.

Wasp nests in soffit gaps and eave cavities

Paper wasps and yellow jackets build nests in the protected spaces where the soffit meets the roofline, where eave vents open into the attic cavity, and inside the gaps between fascia boards and roof decking.

From the outside, the only visible sign might be a few wasps entering and exiting a small gap. From inside the attic, the nest can be substantial. Our technicians have found paper wasp nests the size of dinner plates tucked into soffit corners, and yellow jacket nests occupying entire sections of eave cavity.
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Why it matters.

Both species are aggressive when their nest is disturbed. A homeowner who enters the attic without knowing a nest is present can trigger a defensive response from dozens or hundreds of stinging insects in an enclosed space. This is also why we always inspect the attic before any insulation work, HVAC repair, or renovation that requires attic access.

Bat guano accumulation

Bats roost in soffit gaps, barrel-tile cavities, and the openings between fascia boards and roof decking. A small colony of bats using a soffit entry point produces guano that accumulates on the attic floor below the roost.
Fresh bat guano looks similar to mouse droppings but has a slightly different shape and crumbles into a fine, powdery texture when disturbed. Over months and years, guano accumulates into visible deposits that are unmistakable during inspection.


The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission documents multiple bat species as established in residential structures across South Florida, with colonies that can persist for years in soffit and attic spaces when entry points are not excluded.

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Why it matters.

Bat guano carries the fungus Histoplasma capsulatum, which can cause histoplasmosis when spores are inhaled. Disturbing a guano deposit without proper protection creates a real health risk. Bats are also legally protected in Florida, with exclusion prohibited during maternity season (April 15 through August 15). Finding bat evidence in an attic triggers a specific response protocol that is different from any other pest finding.

Insulation damage from multiple pest species

Insulation is the silent victim of almost every attic pest issue. Roof rats shred it for nesting material and contaminate it with droppings and urine. Squirrels tunnel through it. Bats deposit guano on it. Insects nest in it.

Our technicians evaluate insulation condition as part of every attic inspection, and the findings regularly surprise homeowners who assumed their insulation was performing normally. Compressed, displaced, and contaminated insulation loses thermal efficiency, which directly affects energy costs and indoor comfort in South Florida’s climate.
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Why it matters.

Insulation replacement after a significant pest infestation is one of the most common follow-up recommendations in South Florida attic inspections. Addressing the pest issue without addressing the insulation leaves a contaminated layer between your living space and the roof that continues affecting air quality and energy efficiency.

What you cannot see from the hatch

Most homeowners who check their attic do it by opening the hatch, looking up from the ladder, and scanning what is visible from that position. In a typical South Florida home, that view covers maybe 10 to 15 percent of the attic space. Roof rat droppings concentrated in the far corners are not visible from the hatch. Drywood termite frass behind insulation along the ridge line is not visible. Wasp nests tucked into soffit gaps at the eave edges are not visible. Bat guano deposited along the soffit line on the opposite side of the attic is not visible.

A thorough attic inspection requires physically entering the space, moving through it carefully, and examining framing, insulation, soffit junctions, and entry points across the entire footprint. This is part of what a professional pest inspection includes, and it is the part most homeowners cannot or will not do themselves.
At Wise House Pest Control, the attic inspection is one of the most valuable parts of every service call across Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast. Most homeowners are surprised by what we find, not because their home is in terrible condition, but because the attic is the one place nobody ever looks.

If you have not had a professional attic inspection in the past year, or if you have been hearing sounds at night and wondering what is up there, this is the right week to schedule one.

We Have Two Convenient Locations:

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Lantana Office

1177 Hypoluxo Rd Suite C-31 Lantana, FL 33462 (561) 727-8239

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Port St Lucie Office

464 NW Peacock Blvd, Unit 106 Port St Lucie, FL 34986 (772) 783-4300

Have Questions? We've Got Answers

Frequently Asked Questions

At least once a year. Most South Florida attics contain evidence of pest activity that is not visible from the living space, and annual inspection catches issues before damage becomes severe.
Roof rats, by a wide margin. Droppings, rub marks, gnaw damage on wiring, and shredded insulation are the most common findings in attic inspections across Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, and the Treasure Coast.
Yes. Drywood termite colonies in attic framing produce frass that falls behind blown insulation and accumulates invisibly. Structural damage can progress for years before any sign appears on finished surfaces below.
Bat guano carries the fungus that causes histoplasmosis, which can be serious when spores are inhaled. Professional cleanup with proper protection is recommended. Disturbing guano deposits without respiratory protection creates a real health risk.
A hatch-level visual check covers roughly 10 to 15 percent of the attic space. Thorough inspection requires physically entering the space and examining framing, insulation, soffit junctions, and entry points, which most homeowners cannot safely do without training and equipment.
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