AGS is not evenly distributed across the country. CDC’s geographic analysis identifies the highest prevalence in a contiguous belt across the South, Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic, with the top states including Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware.
Florida is not listed among the highest-prevalence states in the CDC data. That does not mean the risk is zero here. The Lone Star tick is established across the broader Southeast, and CDC’s 2026 Lone Star tick distribution map includes established populations through 2025. Cases have been reported in Florida, though at lower rates than the core hotspot states.
April 2026 reporting from WUSF confirmed that alpha-gal awareness and reporting requirements are expanding, with Massachusetts joining states mandating reports and preliminary research showing a dramatic rise in positive alpha-gal antibody tests nationally from 2013 through 2024.
The honest framing for South Florida homeowners is this: alpha-gal syndrome is most concentrated in states north and west of Florida, but the tick species that causes it is present here, encounters happen here, and the consequences of a single bite are serious enough that prevention is worth taking seriously.
The alpha-gal conversation is happening against a backdrop of elevated tick activity nationally. As of April 2026, CDC data shows emergency room visits for tick bites are higher than normal across most U.S. regions, with weekly ER visit rates the highest for that time of year since 2017 in all regions except the South Central United States.
CDC also estimates approximately 31 million tick bites occur annually in the United States, with about 476,000 Lyme disease patients treated each year. The 2026 data suggests this year’s tick season is tracking above the recent baseline.
For South Florida, the practical implication is that tick awareness matters more this season than usual, even in a state where tick-borne disease rates are lower than the national hotspots.
UF/IFAS documents the Lone Star tick as established throughout Florida, with populations concentrated in wooded, brushy, and transitional habitat areas. Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast support active populations, particularly in western communities near preserve land and the wooded corridors along the Loxahatchee River, Hungryland Slough, and the Savannas Preserve.
Lone Star ticks are aggressive feeders that actively move toward hosts in response to carbon dioxide, body heat, and movement. All three life stages bite humans. The adult female is identifiable by a distinctive white dot on her back.
Peak activity in South Florida runs March through September, with the highest encounter rates in May and June.
Lyme disease is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, transmitted by the black-legged tick. The Florida Department of Health tracks a small number of confirmed Lyme cases annually, many associated with travel to endemic northeastern states rather than local transmission.
The risk in South Florida is lower than the Northeast but not zero. Black-legged ticks are present at low densities, and infection rates within the tick population are lower. Tick prevention on your property reduces exposure to both Lyme and alpha-gal risk simultaneously, which is why the prevention steps matter even in a state where Lyme is uncommon.
Mow regularly, keep grass short, and create a three-foot gravel or mulch barrier between the lawn edge and any wooded or brushy zone.
Ticks thrive in moist, shaded conditions under accumulated debris near tree lines.
Dogs pick up ticks from tall grass and bring them onto the property. Regular tick checks and veterinary tick prevention reduce the transfer.
Yard and perimeter treatment targeting transitional zones where ticks concentrate reduces the population through peak activity season. Most effective when combined with habitat modification.
At Wise House Pest Control, we provide tick treatment across Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast, targeting the transitional zones where Lone Star ticks and black-legged ticks concentrate on residential properties. The Wellington homeowner’s situation is a reminder that tick prevention is not about comfort. It is about health consequences that can be permanent.
If your property borders wooded or preserved areas, or if your family and pets spend time on trails and in natural areas, this is the right season to schedule tick treatment.
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
CDC — alpha-gal syndrome overview, estimated 450,000 affected Americans, and increasing diagnosis rates
CDC MMWR — geographic distribution of alpha-gal syndrome across the South, Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic
CDC — 2026 data showing ER visits for tick bites higher than normal across most U.S. regions
UF/IFAS EDIS publication — Lone Star tick distribution and biology in Florida
Florida Department of Health — Lyme disease tracking and case data
WUSF — April 2026 reporting on expanding alpha-gal awareness and rising antibody test positivity rates nationally