Blog Post

How to get rid of cockroaches in Florida: every species and what actually works

“How to get rid of cockroaches” is one of the most searched pest questions in the state, and the reason most answers fail is that they treat all cockroaches the same.

A palmetto bug that wandered in through the garage and a German cockroach colony breeding behind the dishwasher are completely different problems requiring completely different responses.

Florida is home to more cockroach species than almost any other state. The warm, humid climate supports year-round activity for every one of them, and the treatment that eliminates one species does nothing against another. Here is the species-by-species guide.

Before we dig in

Florida has four cockroach species that account for nearly all residential pest calls: the American cockroach (palmetto bug), the German cockroach, the smokybrown cockroach, and the Asian cockroach.

Identifying which species you have is the single most important step because the treatment approach is completely different for each one. A surface spray that deters a palmetto bug will scatter a German cockroach colony and make the problem worse.

Indoor species (German cockroach) require bait-based treatment targeting the colony inside your walls and appliances. Outdoor species (American, smokybrown, Asian) require perimeter treatment and exclusion work to keep them from entering.

American cockroach (the palmetto bug)

The palmetto bug is the one most Floridians recognize. Large, reddish-brown, two inches or longer, with full wings and the ability to fly short distances when startled. Seeing one sprint across a Boca Raton garage floor at midnight is a universal South Florida experience. UF/IFAS documents the American cockroach as the most common large cockroach in Florida, with populations concentrated in mulch, palm trees, sewer systems, and outdoor areas with consistent moisture.
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Where they live.

Outdoors. Mulch beds, palm tree bases, sewer systems, leaf litter, and landscape debris. Indoor sightings are usually lone individuals that wandered in through a door gap, drain, or utility penetration.

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How to get rid of them.

A single palmetto bug inside your home does not indicate an infestation. Remove it and move on. For persistent indoor sightings, the fix is exterior: reduce mulch depth near the foundation, seal gaps around doors and plumbing penetrations, treat the perimeter with a professional barrier application, and address any drainage issues creating moisture near the structure. Interior spraying is generally unnecessary for palmetto bugs.

German cockroach

This is the species that actually requires professional intervention, and it is the reason most “how to get rid of cockroaches” searches happen in the first place.


German cockroaches are small (about half an inch), light brown with two distinctive parallel stripes behind the head, and live exclusively indoors. UF/IFAS confirms that a single female German cockroach can produce up to 400 offspring over her lifetime, with multiple generations active simultaneously inside an infested space.

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Where they live.

Inside your home. Behind appliances, inside wall voids, in motor housings of refrigerators and dishwashers, behind outlets, inside cabinet hinges, and in the plumbing chase areas of kitchens and bathrooms. The visible roaches on your counter represent a small fraction of the total population hidden in the walls.

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How to get rid of them.

Consumer sprays and foggers do not work against German cockroaches. The species lives in cavities that surface treatments cannot reach, and foggers push them deeper into the walls rather than eliminating them. Professional gel bait applied directly into harborage locations is the standard. Workers eat the bait, carry it back to the colony, and the active ingredient passes through the population. Growth regulators prevent juvenile roaches from maturing to reproductive adults. Effective treatment takes two to four weeks with follow-up visits to address newly hatched nymphs.

Smokybrown cockroach

Slightly smaller than the American cockroach, uniformly dark brown to mahogany in color, and a stronger flier. Smokybrown cockroaches are attracted to light and frequently enter homes through open windows, unscreened doors, and garage lighting during warm evenings.
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Where they live.

Tree canopy, gutters, soffits, and any elevated exterior cavity. More arboreal than the American cockroach. Common in Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, and Lantana neighborhoods with mature oak and palm canopy.

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How to get rid of them.

Similar to the American cockroach: exterior perimeter treatment, gutter maintenance, sealing soffit gaps, and reducing exterior lighting that attracts them to the structure. Indoor sightings of smokybrown cockroaches are flight-entry events, not evidence of an interior colony.

Asian cockroach

This is the species that causes the most confusion in South Florida because it looks almost identical to a German cockroach but behaves completely differently.

Asian cockroaches are small, light brown with the same two parallel stripes as the German cockroach. The critical difference is behavior. Asian cockroaches live outdoors in leaf litter and ground cover, are strong fliers attracted to light, and enter homes through open doors and windows. German cockroaches live indoors, do not fly, and avoid light.
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Where they live.

Outdoors in landscape beds, leaf litter, and ground cover. Found across Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast in neighborhoods with dense tropical landscaping.

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How to get rid of them.

Reduce landscape ground cover and leaf litter near the structure. Treat exterior harborage areas with granular bait. Minimize interior lighting visible from outside during evening hours, and keep doors and windows closed or screened after dark. Interior treatment is not necessary because Asian cockroaches do not colonize indoors.

Why consumer products fail against most cockroach problems in Florida

Three dynamics explain why the products homeowners buy at the hardware store almost never solve a cockroach problem in South Florida.
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Species mismatch.

Most consumer roach products are designed for surface contact with individual insects. That approach is somewhat effective against outdoor species that occasionally wander in but completely ineffective against German cockroach colonies living inside wall voids and appliance cavities where the product never reaches.

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Climate pressure.

South Florida's year-round warmth and humidity support continuous breeding cycles for every cockroach species. A treatment that produces a temporary knockdown in a northern climate produces a temporary knockdown in Florida too, but the population recovers faster because there is no winter dormancy to reset the breeding cycle.

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Reinfestation from exterior sources.

Even successful indoor treatment is temporary without addressing the exterior conditions that supply new insects. Palmetto bugs from untreated mulch beds, smokybrown cockroaches from the tree canopy, and Asian cockroaches from landscape ground cover all re-enter the home continuously unless the exterior perimeter is managed.

When to call a professional

A single large cockroach inside the home, particularly near a door, drain, or garage entry, is normal South Florida living and does not require professional treatment.

Multiple sightings of small, light brown cockroaches with parallel stripes in the kitchen or bathroom indicate a likely German cockroach infestation that requires professional bait-based treatment. Waiting makes it worse because the colony doubles in population every few weeks.

Persistent outdoor cockroach sightings despite good sanitation and sealed entry points suggest the exterior harborage or perimeter treatment needs professional attention.
At Wise House Pest Control, we identify the species before recommending treatment, because the species determines the approach. A homeowner calling about “roaches” could have a palmetto bug problem that needs exterior perimeter work or a German cockroach infestation that needs interior bait treatment. Starting with the wrong approach wastes time and money. If cockroaches are a recurring problem in your Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Lantana, Port St. Lucie, Stuart, or Palm City home, this is the right week to schedule an inspection.

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

It depends on the species. A palmetto bug can be removed individually. A German cockroach infestation requires professional bait-based treatment that takes two to four weeks to work through the colony.
Consumer sprays kill visible insects but do not reach the colonies living inside wall voids and appliance cavities. German cockroach populations recover within weeks because the breeding population is untouched. Professional bait-based treatment targets the colony directly.
Both are small and light brown with parallel stripes, but German cockroaches live indoors, avoid light, and do not fly. Asian cockroaches live outdoors, are attracted to light, and fly readily. Behavior and location tell them apart more reliably than appearance.
Palmetto bug is the regional Florida name for the American cockroach. It is a large outdoor species that occasionally enters homes but does not establish indoor colonies the way German cockroaches do.
No. Foggers do not penetrate the wall voids and appliance cavities where German cockroaches actually live. They push the population deeper into hiding and can contaminate food preparation surfaces.