At a glance
Most residential pest control treatments, including those used by Terminix, are considered low-risk for pets after the product has dried or cured. That is the standard industry position and it is generally accurate for healthy adult dogs in well-ventilated spaces.
The nuance is in the details that most homeowners never think to ask about.
Dogs are at higher risk than humans because they walk barefoot on treated surfaces, lick their paws and fur, and spend more time close to the floor where residue settles. Pyrethroids at high concentrations can cause tremors and seizures in dogs, particularly smaller breeds.
Cats are significantly more sensitive than dogs. The ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center documents that cats lack the liver enzyme needed to metabolize pyrethrins and pyrethroids efficiently, which means products considered safe for dogs can be toxic to cats. This is not a Terminix-specific issue. It is a chemistry issue that applies to any pest control company using pyrethroid-based products in a home with cats.
Fish and birds are the most vulnerable household pets. Many common pest control sprays are highly toxic to aquatic animals and birds. Fish tanks must be covered and air pumps turned off during treatment. Bird cages should be moved to an untreated area or covered completely.
Any reputable company should provide this without hesitation. If the technician cannot tell you what product they plan to use, that is a red flag regardless of the company name on the truck.
Good pest control companies adjust their product selection and application methods based on the pets in the home. A house with cats requires different product choices than a house with only dogs. A house with a fish tank or bird cage requires additional precautions during application.
EPA guidance on pesticide safety around pets recommends allowing adequate ventilation and drying time before allowing pet re-entry, with specific precautions varying by product type and application method. Most veterinarians recommend a longer window than the standard "until dry" guidance.
Cats groom themselves compulsively, and any residue they pick up on their paws from a treated floor will be ingested during grooming. Mopping after the recommended re-entry period removes surface residue from the areas where cats walk.
IPM approaches use fewer chemicals overall, with targeted application to specific harborage areas rather than broadcast spraying across open surfaces. Fewer chemicals on open surfaces means less pet exposure.
Transparency about product selection is the foundation of pet-safe service. A company that will not tell you what they plan to spray in your home is not a company you should trust around your pets.
Pet-specific treatment adjustments are not automatic. The company and the technician need to know what animals are in the home and adjust accordingly.
Not every pest problem requires the strongest available chemistry. A company that defaults to the heaviest products regardless of the situation is not practicing IPM.
Re-service policies matter. A company that charges full price for a callback visit is not standing behind its work.
The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services maintains a public database of licensed pest control operators. Verify before signing.
Palmetto bugs, ghost ants, fire ants, Formosan termites, and the Aedes mosquito species that breed in this region all require specific treatment approaches. A company with South Florida experience knows the species and the products that work best against them in this climate.
1177 Hypoluxo Rd Suite C-31 Lantana, FL 33462 (561) 727-8239
464 NW Peacock Blvd, Unit 106 Port St Lucie, FL 34986 (772) 783-4300