How to Get Rid of Sugar Ants in Your Seattle Home
Sugar ants (odorous house ants) are the most common pest complaint in Seattle and King County homes. These tiny dark brown ants invade kitchens and bathrooms in massive numbers, especially from March through October. If you are seeing small ant trails along countertops, windowsills, or near pet food dishes, you are almost certainly dealing with odorous house ants.
Here is a step-by-step guide to eliminating sugar ants from your Seattle home, from DIY methods to knowing when it is time to call a professional exterminator.
Why Sugar Ants Are So Common in Seattle
Seattle's mild, wet climate creates perfect conditions for sugar ants. They nest outdoors in soil, under rocks, and in mulch beds, but enter homes seeking food and water. Heavy rain drives them indoors, which is why Seattle homeowners see the worst infestations in spring and fall.
Key factors that attract sugar ants to Seattle homes include:
- Moisture around kitchen and bathroom sinks
- Food residue on countertops, floors, and pet bowls
- Mulch beds and landscaping close to foundations
- Cracks around windows, doors, and pipe entry points
- Irrigation systems keeping soil consistently moist near the home
Step-by-Step: How to Eliminate Sugar Ants
Step 1: Identify the Ant Species
Before treating, confirm you have sugar ants and not carpenter ants. Sugar ants are tiny (about 1/8 inch), dark brown or black, and give off a rotten coconut smell when crushed. Carpenter ants are much larger (up to 1/2 inch), black, and do not follow tight trail lines.
Step 2: Find the Entry Points
Follow the ant trail backwards from where you see them to find where they enter your home. Common entry points in Seattle homes include:
- Gaps around window frames and door sweeps
- Cracks where pipes enter under sinks
- Foundation cracks at ground level
- Gaps around electrical outlets on exterior walls
Step 3: Clean the Trail
Wipe the ant trail with a vinegar and water solution (50/50 mix). This destroys the pheromone trail that guides other ants. Clean all countertops, sweep floors, and remove any food residue. This alone will not solve the problem but it slows the invasion.
Step 4: Use Ant Bait (Not Spray)
This is the most important step. Do not spray ants with bug killer — this only kills the visible ants and scatters the colony, making the problem worse. Instead, place gel or liquid ant bait near the trails. Worker ants carry the bait back to the colony and feed it to the queen, which eliminates the entire nest.
Place bait stations:
- Along active ant trails
- Under sinks and behind appliances
- Near entry points you identified
- Outside near the foundation where ants are entering
Step 5: Seal Entry Points
Once ant activity decreases, seal the entry points with caulk or weatherstripping. Pay special attention to:
- Window and door frames
- Pipe penetrations under sinks
- Foundation cracks
- Gaps around electrical outlets
Step 6: Reduce Outdoor Attractants
- Pull mulch back 6 inches from your foundation
- Trim bushes and tree branches touching the house
- Reduce irrigation frequency near the foundation
- Move firewood and debris piles away from the home
When to Call a Professional Exterminator
DIY methods work for minor ant problems, but call a professional when:
- Ant trails return within a few days after baiting
- You see ants in multiple rooms simultaneously
- You spot winged ants indoors (this indicates a mature colony nearby)
- The infestation lasts more than 2 weeks despite treatment
- You are unsure if they are sugar ants or carpenter ants
AMPM Exterminators provides professional sugar ant elimination throughout Seattle and King County. We trace the colony to its source and apply targeted treatments that eliminate the queen and prevent re-infestation. Call (206) 571-7580 for a free inspection.
Sugar Ant Prevention Checklist for Seattle Homeowners
| Prevention Step | How Often |
|---|---|
| Wipe counters and sweep floors | Daily |
| Empty kitchen trash and seal bags | Daily |
| Clean under appliances (toaster, microwave) | Weekly |
| Check and seal window/door gaps | Monthly |
| Inspect foundation for cracks | Quarterly |
| Pull mulch back from foundation | Twice a year |
| Professional perimeter treatment | Quarterly (recommended) |