Blog Post

Asian Subterranean Termites Are Swarming Palm Beach County After Dark This Spring. Here Is What Every Homeowner Needs to Watch For Tonight.

You noticed them on the way out to grab the paper. A small drift of translucent wings on the welcome mat, caught in the corner where the screen meets the frame. Not one or two. A handful. Maybe more than a handful.You almost swept them up without thinking. Most Palm Beach County homeowners do.What you found on your doorstep is the only evidence an Asian subterranean termite swarm leaves behind. The swarm itself happened around 9pm while you were watching TV. Thousands of winged reproductives left a mature colony somewhere within a few hundred feet of your home, flew toward the nearest lights, shed their wings, and either died overnight or paired off and went underground to start new colonies.

 

This is not the termite your parents dealt with. Asian subterranean termites are invasive, aggressive, and now established across Palm Beach County in ways UF/IFAS researchers did not predict a decade ago. The damage timeline is years faster than native species. And they are specifically adapted to find homes lit at night, which describes almost every property in Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Lake Worth, and Wellington.

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

The important part

Asian subterranean termites swarm after dark, between roughly 8pm and 11pm in spring, and are strongly attracted to exterior lights. Colonies can contain millions of individuals, several times larger than native Eastern subterranean colonies. Structural damage occurs in three to five years rather than the longer timeline most homeowners expect from native species. Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast are both confirmed active zones, with the species continuing to spread. The only visible evidence most homeowners ever get is a scattering of translucent wings near a porch or pool light.

What Is Different About Asian Subterranean Termites

The Eastern subterranean termite has been here for as long as Florida has been Florida. South Florida homeowners have lived alongside it for generations, and pest professionals have a well-developed playbook for handling it.
The Asian subterranean termite, scientific name Coptotermes gestroi, is a different story. It is invasive. It was first detected in Florida in the early 1990s. UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center now documents Asian subterranean termite establishment across most of South Florida, with active populations confirmed in Palm Beach County, St. Lucie County, and the surrounding region.
Three things make it more dangerous than the native species you may already know about.

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February through May

Seeing termite swarmers around lights or windows is one of the earliest warning signs and should lead to a professional inspection quickly.

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June through September

Rainy season drives mosquito populations. Afternoon storms create constant breeding conditions, making outdoor evenings the hardest time of year without protection.

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Year-round

Cockroaches, ants (especially ghost ants), fleas, ticks, and rodents stay active every month in Lantana’s climate.

Knowing this cycle is what allows families to stay proactive instead of reacting once problems are already out of control.

Mosquitoes: The Biggest Disruption to Outdoor Living in Lantana

In Lantana, mosquito season is long and intense, especially near water, canals, and dense vegetation. From late spring through fall, your backyard, patio, and pool area are under constant pressure. Mosquitoes breed fast. After rain, standing water can produce new mosquitoes in as little as 48 hours. The most effective approach combines:

For Lantana families, starting treatment before rainy season begins makes a major difference. Waiting until mosquitoes are already heavy is much harder to control.

Fire Ants: A Serious Risk for Kids and Pets

Fire ants are one of the most overlooked dangers in Palm Beach County yards.

A mound can appear quickly, even in a lawn that looked fine days earlier. If a child or pet steps on it, dozens of stings can happen within seconds.

Spring is when colonies expand fastest, and mound activity becomes more visible.

The most reliable control method is:

Spot-treating individual mounds is not enough long-term. It misses the colonies you cannot see yet. For families, a simple habit helps too: Check the lawn before kids or pets are outside, especially in the morning.

Fleas and Ticks: The Indoor Risk

Fleas and ticks don’t stay outside. They get brought inside on pets, clothing, and even after basic yard activity.

How They Spread

Fleas and ticks are not just outdoor pests in Lantana – they become indoor problems quickly.

They attach to pets, clothing, or even children playing outside and get brought into the home.

Once inside, they reproduce fast.

 

Palm Beach County’s environment, warm, humid, and full of wildlife, keeps flea and tick pressure high year-round.

Protection requires a combination of:

Protecting Your Lantana Home While Enjoying Outdoor Life

The goal is not to avoid being outside. It is to make outdoor living safe and comfortable. Here is what works for Lantana families:
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Annual termite inspections

South Florida has some of the highest termite activity in the country, and annual termite inspections catch problems early before damage spreads.

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Start mosquito control before summer

April and May are the ideal time to begin treatment so protection is in place before populations explode.

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Treat fire ants at the lawn level

Do not wait for visible mounds to multiply. Treat the entire yard during peak season.

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Maintain a perimeter pest control plan

Keeping pests from entering the home starts outside, at the foundation and entry points.

Lantana Is Built for Outdoor Family Life

From nearby beaches to parks and community spaces, Lantana offers a lifestyle centered around being outside. The key to enjoying it is not eliminating pests completely — that is unrealistic in South Florida. It is controlling them to the point where they are no longer part of your daily experience. With the right approach, your yard stays usable. Your evenings stay comfortable. And your home stays protected.

For local parks, outdoor spaces, and family activities in the area, many families use resources like Palm Beach County Parks and Recreation.

At Wise House Pest Control

At Wise House Pest Control, we help Lantana families take back their outdoor spaces and protect their homes year-round. From mosquito control programs to termite inspections and full perimeter protection, our treatments are designed for how pests actually behave in Palm Beach County. If you are tired of dealing with mosquitoes, ants, or recurring pest problems, we can build a plan specific to your home and property.
Contact us today for a free inspection and a protection plan built for your family and your home.

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

Fire ants are one of the biggest immediate safety risks because they can sting multiple times within seconds. Mosquitoes are also a major concern because they make outdoor living miserable and can pose health risks. Fleas and ticks can affect both pets and indoor living once they are brought inside.
Spring is the ideal time to start. Getting treatment in place before the heaviest rainy-season mosquito pressure builds is much more effective than reacting later.
The most effective long-term approach is professional lawn treatment that combines broadcast bait with targeted mound treatment. Waiting to treat only visible mounds usually is not enough.
Yes. Palm Beach County has strong termite pressure, and annual inspections help catch activity before it becomes serious structural damage.
A combination of annual termite inspections, mosquito treatment during the warmer months, fire ant lawn protection, and a general perimeter pest control plan covers the main threats most families deal with in Lantana.
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