Skip to content
Mon–Fri & Sun: 8am–6pm · Closed Saturday
ES
Bed Bug Exterminators Queens Licensed NYC Exterminators

Carpenter Ant & Ant Control in Flushing

Last updated: 27/06/2026

Flushing's mix of older multi-family buildings and newer developments gives ants — most often odorous house ants and pavement ants foraging from outside, with carpenter ants in moisture-damaged wood — several distinct entry routes, so we identify the species and the harbourage before treating rather than just spraying what's visible.

Carpenter antsPavement antsOdorous house antsPharaoh antsParent + satellite nest locationMoisture source identification

Get Your Free Quote

Or call now: (347) 754-3889

Licensed
& insured NY exterminators
4.9★
332 Google reviews
All 5 Boroughs
Neighbourhood-level NYC coverage
Guaranteed
We return until it's resolved
NY DEC License 15739

Ant problems in Flushing usually trace to one of two patterns tied to the neighbourhood's housing mix: foraging ants moving in from outside through foundation or window gaps in older multi-family buildings, or a moisture-damaged void — a leaking pipe, a damp basement wall — that's sustaining a colony indoors. Newer developments here tend to see more of the first pattern; older buildings more of the second.

We confirm which is happening before recommending treatment, because baiting a foraging trail from outside is a different job from finding and treating a moisture-fed colony hidden in a wall void.

Are those large black ants in my NYC apartment carpenter ants — and are they dangerous?

University of Minnesota Extension explains that carpenter ants do not eat wood — they remove it to create galleries and tunnels for nesting, pushing the chewed-out sawdust outside. Their parent nests are found in moist or decayed wood from water leaks, condensation or poor air circulation, so an indoor carpenter-ant problem usually signals a hidden moisture issue that needs fixing too. (University of Minnesota Extension — Carpenter Ants)

University of Minnesota Extension describes how carpenter ant colonies operate as a parent nest plus one or more satellite nests: the parent nest needs moist wood, while satellite nests can hold workers, older larvae and pupae in drier wood closer to a food source indoors. This is why treating only the visible indoor foragers fails — the parent colony survives and re-seeds the satellites unless it is located and treated. (University of Minnesota Extension — Carpenter Ants)

University of California IPM explains why baiting beats spraying for ants: foraging workers carry small portions of bait back to the nest, where it is passed mouth-to-mouth to other workers, larvae and queens, killing the whole colony. Spraying around the foundation only kills the foragers you see, leaving the colony and its queens intact — so it will not provide permanent control. (UC Statewide IPM Program — Ants)

Penn State Extension notes that the swarming winged reproductives of carpenter ants are commonly mistaken for termite swarmers, but the two are easy to separate: ants have a constricted, pinched waist, elbowed (bent) antennae and front wings longer than the hind wings, whereas termites have a broad waist, straight beaded antennae and four wings of roughly equal length. (Penn State Extension — Carpenter Ants)

Utah State University Extension notes that odorous house ants — a common NYC look-alike for budding indoor colonies — get their name from the rotten, coconut-like smell they give off when crushed, a quick field test that separates them from pavement ants. About 3 mm long and brown-to-black, they readily nest indoors and reproduce by budding. (Utah State University Extension — Odorous House Ant)

Carpenter ants vs. termites — the two-minute identification check

Carpenter antEastern subterranean termite
WaistPinched (petiole between thorax and abdomen visible)Broad and uniform — no pinch
AntennaeElbowed (bent at a clear angle)Straight, beaded
Swarmer wingsForewings noticeably larger than hindwingsAll four wings roughly equal length
Frass / debrisCoarse, fibrous — looks like shredded wood mixed with insect partsFine soil/mud packed into galleries and mud tubes
Wood damageSmooth galleries along the grain; clean inside (does not eat wood)Galleries packed with soil and mud; never clean (eats wood)
Moisture requirementParent nest in already-softened, moist or decayed woodNeeds soil contact and high moisture; builds mud tubes

How much does carpenter ant & ant control cost in NYC?

$60–$500

National average: $150–$250 per visit (Angi). Typical single treatment: $80–$500 (small infestation). Bob Vila national range: $60–$215. Follow-up/retreatment visits: $40–$120.

US national figure — NYC typically runs higher.

Market range — not our quote

This is a market range synthesised from published cost guides — not a quote from this provider. The actual price depends on an in-person or photo-based inspection.

US national — NYC typically higher; no NYC-specific ant cost guide located, unlike bed bugs/rats/roaches.

What drives the price

  • Infestation location (attic/basement/exterior walls cost more than kitchen/living space due to access difficulty)
  • Severity
  • Treatment method
  • One-off vs follow-up retreatment
Get an exact quote

Signs you have a ant control problem

  • Ant trails along baseboards, window sills, or kitchen counters
  • Ants concentrated near a sink, damp wall, or basement area in older buildings
  • Winged ants indoors, which can signal an established colony rather than just foragers
  • Small piles of frass-like debris near a wall void or damp area

Why Flushing sees this

Flushing's mix of older multi-family buildings and newer developments creates two distinct ant patterns — outdoor foraging through building gaps, and moisture-fed indoor colonies in older stock — that we distinguish before treating.

Simple, transparent process

Our Carpenter Ant & Ant Control Process

  1. 1

    Species identification

    We confirm which ant species is present and whether the source is outdoor foraging or an indoor moisture-fed colony.

  2. 2

    Entry-point inspection

    Foundation gaps, window sills, and utility penetrations get checked in the building type present — older multi-family or newer construction.

  3. 3

    Targeted baiting

    Non-repellent bait carried back to the colony, placed at confirmed trails rather than sprayed broadly.

  4. 4

    Moisture check

    Where a damp void is sustaining a colony, we flag the moisture source, since the colony returns without a fix.

  5. 5

    Follow-up

    A return visit confirms trail activity has stopped.

Carpenter Ant & Ant Control — FAQs

How much does ant control cost in NYC?

Market rates for ant control in NYC typically run $60–$500, based on published cost guides (not this provider's quote). National average: $150–$250 per visit (Angi). Typical single treatment: $80–$500 (small infestation). Bob Vila national range: $60–$215. Follow-up/retreatment visits: $40–$120. Actual price depends on an in-person or photo-based inspection.

Are the ants in my apartment coming from outside or living inside?

It depends on the building. In Flushing's newer developments, ants are more often foraging in from outside through a gap or window sill. In the older multi-family buildings that make up much of the neighbourhood, a damp wall void or basement area is more likely sustaining an indoor colony — we check which applies before treating.

Will spraying the trail I see get rid of them?

Spraying a visible trail usually just scatters foragers rather than reaching the colony. We bait the trail instead, so foragers carry the product back to the nest.

Need ant control in Flushing?

Licensed, insured, local NYC exterminators. Call to schedule.

Call Now Free Quote