Blog Post

Read this before your next vacation: bed bugs in South Florida

Summer travel just started. The bags are packed, the hotel is booked, the kids are counting down. Nobody is thinking about bed bugs right now, and that is exactly the problem.

Bed bugs do not come from dirty homes. They come from travel. A single night in an infested hotel room, vacation rental, or cruise cabin is enough to bring them back to your Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, or Port St. Lucie home in a suitcase. Once they are inside, they are one of the hardest pests to eliminate without professional treatment.

This is the guide you read before the trip, not after you find bites on the kids.

At a glance

At a glance

Bed bugs are hitchhiking insects that spread through luggage, clothing, and personal items during travel. They do not fly, do not jump, and do not come from your yard. Every infestation starts with a human carrying them in from somewhere else.

South Florida’s position as a tourism and cruise hub makes Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast particularly vulnerable. Families returning from vacations, cruise passengers coming home through Port Everglades and Port of Miami, and seasonal residents traveling between homes all create introduction pathways.

Bed bug infestations are not a reflection of cleanliness. Five-star resorts get them. Luxury cruise ships get them. Brand-new vacation rentals get them. The common factor is high human turnover in sleeping spaces, not hygiene. Professional treatment is the only reliable approach for established infestations. Consumer products and DIY methods do not eliminate bed bugs. Early detection through proper travel habits is the best defense.

How to check a hotel room in five minutes

This is the single most valuable skill for any South Florida family that travels. Five minutes of inspection before you unpack can prevent months of dealing with an infestation at home.
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Do not put luggage on the bed or carpet when you enter the room.

Place suitcases in the bathroom (on the tile floor or in the bathtub) until you have checked the sleeping area. Bed bugs hide near sleeping surfaces and can transfer to luggage left on an infested bed within minutes.

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Pull back the sheets and inspect the mattress seams.

Bed bugs hide in the piping along the edges of the mattress and in the seams where the fabric is folded. Look for live bugs (small, flat, reddish-brown, about the size of an apple seed), dark fecal spots (small black or dark brown dots that look like ink marks from a felt-tip pen), and shed skins (translucent, light brown casings).

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Check the headboard.

If the headboard is mounted to the wall, look behind it if possible. If it is attached to the bed frame, examine the joints and crevices where the headboard meets the frame. Bed bugs cluster in the seams and joints closest to where a person sleeps.

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Inspect the nightstand and alarm clock.

Pull open the nightstand drawer and check the interior edges. Look behind the alarm clock or phone charging station. These are secondary harborage sites that bed bugs use when the mattress population overflows.

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Check the luggage rack.

Ironically, the luggage rack provided to keep your bags off the floor is a common bed bug transfer point. Examine the straps and joints before placing your suitcase on it.

If you find any evidence, do not stay in the room. Request a different room that is not adjacent to or directly above or below the infested room, since bed bugs travel through wall voids between connected spaces.

What bed bug bites actually look like

Bed bug bites are one of the most misidentified insect bites in South Florida because they mimic mosquito bites, flea bites, and several skin conditions.

Bites typically appear as small, red, raised welts in clusters or lines on exposed skin. The “breakfast, lunch, and dinner” pattern, three bites in a row or a short line, is characteristic of bed bugs and uncommon with mosquitoes. Arms, shoulders, neck, and face are the most common bite locations because these are the areas exposed above the sheets during sleep.

Not everyone reacts to bed bug bites. EPA notes that some people show no visible reaction to bed bug bites, which means an infestation can be present for weeks or months before bites alert the homeowner. One family member may have visible welts while another sleeping in the same bed shows nothing.
Bites alone do not confirm bed bugs. Physical evidence (live bugs, fecal spots, shed skins, eggs) is necessary for confirmation.

How bed bugs travel home with you

The transfer mechanism is almost always luggage or clothing.

Bed bugs crawl into suitcases left on or near an infested bed. They hide in the seams, pockets, and folds of the luggage where they are nearly invisible. When the suitcase arrives home and is placed on the bedroom floor or opened on the bed, the bugs exit and begin establishing harborage near the nearest sleeping surface.

Clothing packed in an infested room can also carry eggs and live bugs. Folded laundry, shoes left on the hotel floor, and backpacks placed on hotel furniture are all transfer vehicles.

The timeline from introduction to noticeable infestation is typically four to six weeks. A single pregnant female introduced into your home can produce enough offspring to create a visible infestation within that window. By the time most homeowners notice bites or find physical evidence, the population has been growing for weeks.

What to do when you get home from a trip

Post-travel habits are the second line of defense after the hotel room check.
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Unpack in the garage or laundry room, not the bedroom.

Keep suitcases out of sleeping areas until the contents have been processed. Open the suitcase on a hard floor where bed bugs are visible, not on carpet or bedding.

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Run all clothing through the dryer on high heat for 30 minutes.

Heat kills bed bugs at all life stages. Running clothes through a hot dryer cycle before putting them away eliminates any bugs or eggs that transferred during travel. Washing alone is not sufficient because bed bugs can survive water immersion. The heat is what kills them.

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Inspect the suitcase before storing it.

Check seams, pockets, and zipper tracks for live bugs or fecal spots. Vacuum the interior of the suitcase and dispose of the vacuum contents in a sealed bag.

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Store luggage away from bedrooms.

The garage, a storage closet, or an exterior storage area keeps the suitcase separated from sleeping areas between trips.

If bed bugs did make the trip home, early detection is critical because the population doubles every few weeks in South Florida’s warm climate.
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Bites appearing in clusters or lines.

Particularly on arms, shoulders, and neck. New bites appearing several mornings in a row are more suggestive of bed bugs than mosquitoes, which typically produce random single bites.

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Small dark spots on sheets or pillowcases.

Bed bug fecal spots look like small dots of dark ink, roughly the size of a period at the end of a sentence. They appear on sheets, pillowcases, and mattress surfaces near where the bugs are hiding.

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Shed skins near the mattress.

As bed bugs grow through five nymph stages, they shed their exoskeleton at each stage. Translucent, light brown casings accumulating along the mattress seam or behind the headboard indicate an active, growing population.

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A sweet, musty odor.

Larger bed bug infestations produce a distinctive sweet, slightly musty smell from the bugs' scent glands. By the time the smell is noticeable, the population is typically significant.

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Live bugs.

Adult bed bugs are visible to the naked eye, roughly the size and shape of an apple seed, flat, oval, and reddish-brown. Check the mattress seams, behind the headboard, and inside the box spring if one is present.

Bed bugs are among the most treatment-resistant pests in residential pest control. Consumer products fail for three specific reasons.

The bugs hide in crevices that consumer sprays do not reach. Mattress seams, headboard joints, electrical outlet interiors, picture frame backs, and the gaps between baseboards and walls are all harborage sites that surface treatments miss.

Bed bugs have developed resistance to many common pyrethroids used in consumer products. UF/IFAS documents pyrethroid resistance in bed bug populations as a significant factor in treatment failure across Florida. Products that worked a decade ago are less effective against current populations.

The egg stage is protected from most contact insecticides. Bed bug eggs are resistant to many of the products that kill adults and nymphs, which means a treatment that kills every visible bug can still fail when the eggs hatch seven to ten days later and the population rebounds.

Professional bed bug treatment uses a combination of approaches: targeted chemical application with products effective against resistant populations, heat treatment that kills all life stages including eggs, and follow-up monitoring to confirm elimination. Multi-visit treatment programs are the standard for a reason.
At Wise House Pest Control, we handle bed bug calls across Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast, and the pattern is consistent. A family returned from vacation, noticed bites a few weeks later, tried consumer products for another few weeks, and called us when the problem did not resolve. By that point, the population has been growing for a month or more and the treatment is harder than it would have been with early intervention.

If you have returned from travel and are seeing bites in clusters, finding dark spots on sheets, or discovering any of the signs described in this guide, schedule an inspection before the population has time to establish.

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

Yes. Bed bugs are found in hotels of every quality level, from budget motels to five-star resorts. The common factor is high human turnover in sleeping spaces, not the cleanliness of the property. Always check the mattress seams and headboard before unpacking regardless of the hotel’s rating.
Bites can appear within hours of being bitten, but some people do not react for days. A noticeable infestation at home typically develops four to six weeks after introduction, which is why many families do not connect the problem to a specific trip.
Washing alone is not reliable because bed bugs can survive water immersion. Running all travel clothing through the dryer on high heat for 30 minutes is the effective step. Heat kills bed bugs at all life stages including eggs.
Consumer products typically fail against bed bugs because the bugs hide in crevices sprays cannot reach, many populations are resistant to common pyrethroids, and eggs are protected from most contact insecticides. Professional multi-visit treatment is the reliable approach.
Yes. Our bed bug treatment program includes professional inspection, targeted treatment with products effective against resistant populations, and follow-up visits to confirm elimination. Inspection is required for pricing because treatment scope varies by infestation size.