Blog Post

Fire ants in South Florida: why June is when they take over your yard

Walk across your lawn barefoot right now, in the first week of June, and count how many fire ant mounds you cross before you get stung. In Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Lantana, Port St. Lucie, and Stuart, the answer this month is almost always “more than last month.”

Rainy season just started. The afternoon storms that arrived this week are doing exactly what they do every year: saturating the soil, flooding existing fire ant tunnels, and pushing colonies upward into the fresh mounds that seem to appear overnight across every yard, sidewalk crack, playground, and pool deck edge in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast.

If your yard feels like it was invaded this week, it was not invaded. The colonies were already there. June just made them visible.

What You Need To Know

Red imported fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) are an invasive species established across all of South Florida. Every residential property in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast has fire ant colonies in the soil whether mounds are visible or not.
Mound activity surges in late spring and early summer when rainy season saturates the soil and forces colonies to build upward. June is consistently the month with the sharpest increase in visible mound activity across the region.
UF/IFAS documents the red imported fire ant as one of the most significant invasive pest species in Florida, with established populations in every county and year-round colony activity in South Florida’s climate.
Fire ants sting aggressively when their mound is disturbed, and the venom produces painful pustules that can cause severe allergic reactions in sensitive individuals. Children, pets, and elderly residents are at the highest risk.
Individual mound treatment provides temporary relief. Long-term control requires a broadcast bait program applied across the entire yard on a regular schedule.

What red imported fire ants actually are

Red imported fire ants arrived in the United States through the port of Mobile, Alabama, in the 1930s. By the 1970s, they had spread across every county in Florida. The species is now so thoroughly established in South Florida that eradication is not possible.

Management is the only realistic goal.


A single fire ant colony contains 100,000 to 500,000 workers and one or more queens. Colonies with multiple queens, called polygyne colonies, are common in South Florida and can reach even higher populations. The workers are small, ranging from about 1.5 to 5 millimeters in length, with a characteristic reddish-brown color.


The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services classifies the red imported fire ant as a regulated pest species with quarantine implications for nursery stock and soil movement.
The mounds you see on the surface are the visible tip of a tunnel network that extends two to four feet deep into the soil. Destroying the mound without treating the colony simply causes the ants to rebuild nearby, often within days.

Why June is the worst month for fire ants


Fire ant colonies are active year-round in South Florida. Mound visibility, however, follows a seasonal pattern tied directly to rainfall and soil moisture.
During the dry season (roughly November through April), fire ant colonies operate below the surface. Tunnels are deep, mounds are small or absent, and most homeowners assume the fire ants are gone. They are not gone. They are below grade.

When the rainy season arrives in late May and June, the dynamics reverse. Saturated soil floods the deeper tunnel systems, forcing the colony upward. Workers build fresh mound structures above the water table to protect the queen and brood. This construction happens fast, often overnight after a heavy afternoon storm, which is why homeowners in Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Lantana, Port St. Lucie, and Stuart wake up in early June to yards that seem to have been taken over.

The timing also coincides with peak reproductive activity. June through August is the primary mating flight season for fire ants in South Florida. Winged reproductives leave the colony, mate in the air, and the newly mated queens land and start new colonies in the soil. A single mating flight event can seed dozens of new colonies across a neighborhood.

Why fire ant stings are a real health concern

Fire ants are not just a nuisance. Their stings are medically significant, particularly for children, pets, and people with allergies.
When a fire ant mound is disturbed, the colony response is immediate and coordinated. Hundreds of workers swarm onto the intruder within seconds, and they sting simultaneously. Each sting injects a venom called solenopsin that produces an immediate burning sensation followed by a raised white pustule that develops over 24 hours.


Most healthy adults experience localized pain, itching, and pustule formation that resolves within a week. For sensitive individuals, the reaction can be far more severe. CDC documents fire ant stings as a cause of anaphylaxis in sensitized individuals, with multiple stings posing the greatest risk. Children who step on a mound barefoot or sit on one in a playground can receive dozens of stings before they can move away.

Pets are equally vulnerable. Dogs that disturb a mound while sniffing or digging receive stings to the face, paws, and belly. Small dogs and puppies are at particular risk because of their size relative to the number of stings.

Why kicking the mound does not work

The most common homeowner response to a fire ant mound is to knock it down, pour boiling water on it, or douse it with consumer spray. None of these approaches eliminate the colony. Destroying the mound surface forces the colony to relocate, but the queen and brood are deep in the tunnel system and survive nearly every surface-level attack. Within days, the colony rebuilds a new mound nearby, sometimes within a few feet of the original.

Boiling water kills the workers it contacts but rarely reaches the queen chamber. Consumer granules and sprays applied directly to individual mounds kill visible workers without affecting the colony’s reproductive capacity. The mound appears dead for a few days, then the colony resurfaces.

The underlying problem is that individual mound treatment addresses one colony at a time while the yard contains dozens. Treating mound by mound is an endless cycle that never reduces the overall population.

What actually works for fire ants in South Florida

Effective fire ant control uses a two-step approach that targets the entire yard population rather than individual mounds.
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Step one: broadcast bait application.

A professional-grade granular fire ant bait is applied across the entire lawn, not just on visible mounds. Worker ants forage across the yard, pick up the bait granules, and carry them back to the colony. The active ingredient is shared with the queen and brood through normal feeding behavior, which eliminates the colony from the inside.

Broadcast bait works because it reaches every colony in the yard simultaneously, including the ones that have not yet built visible mounds. This is the fundamental advantage over individual mound treatment.
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Step two: individual mound treatment for active mounds.

After the broadcast bait is applied, any remaining active mounds receive direct treatment with a contact product that kills the workers immediately. This two-step combination provides both the long-term colony elimination from the bait and the immediate relief from the direct treatment.

June is the ideal month to start a fire ant program in South Florida. The colonies are visible, the mounds are active, and the foraging workers are aggressively collecting food to support the queen and brood during peak reproductive season. Bait acceptance is highest when foraging activity is at its peak.

Reapplication through the rainy season maintains pressure on the population as new colonies establish from mating flights. A single June application provides significant reduction, but ongoing treatment on a regular schedule produces the best long-term results.

At Wise House Pest Control, we treat fire ant infestations across Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast using the two-step broadcast bait and individual mound approach that UF/IFAS recommends. The yards that stay manageable through the summer are the ones that started treatment in June rather than waiting until the mounds were everywhere in August. If your yard has more mounds this week than it did last month, the rainy season surge has started. This is the right week to schedule.

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

Rainy season saturates the soil and floods deeper tunnel systems. Colonies push upward and build fresh mound structures above the water table to protect the queen and brood. Construction happens fast, often overnight after a heavy storm.
No. Boiling water kills workers it contacts but rarely reaches the queen chamber deep in the tunnel system. The colony typically rebuilds a new mound nearby within days.
A typical residential yard in Palm Beach County or the Treasure Coast can contain dozens of active colonies, many of which have not yet built visible mounds. Broadcast bait treatment reaches all of them simultaneously.
Yes. Children who step on a mound barefoot can receive dozens of stings before moving away. Pets that disturb mounds receive stings to the face, paws, and belly. CDC documents fire ant stings as a cause of anaphylaxis in sensitized individuals.
June is ideal because colonies are visible, foraging activity is at its peak, and bait acceptance is highest. Ongoing treatment through rainy season maintains pressure as new colonies establish from mating flights.