Ant control is among the most common pest issues we treat in Jackson Heights. High residential density and turnover make bed bug vigilance especially important here.
Ant control in Jackson Heights: what to know
Jackson Heights is famous for its dense pre-war co-op and garden-apartment buildings — handsome but full of the shared walls, courtyards and aging plumbing that let cockroaches and mice move between units.
The intensely busy Roosevelt Avenue and 37th Avenue commercial corridors, packed with restaurants and markets, sustain some of the strongest rodent and roach pressure in Queens.
High residential density and turnover make bed bug vigilance especially important here.
How much does carpenter ant & ant control cost in Jackson Heights?
$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
Signs you need ant control
- Coarse, fibrous frass near a deck, garage wall, or crawl-space vent
- Large black ants (12–25mm) foraging indoors, especially at night
- Rustling sounds inside a garage wall or under the floor near the crawl space
- Winged swarmers appearing indoors in late winter or spring
- Soft or discoloured wood on a deck ledger board, garage sill, or crawl-space joist
How we treat ant control in Jackson Heights
Queens Village's housing stock — mostly post-war brick construction from the 1940s through 1960s, detached and semi-detached with attached garages, wood decks, and crawl spaces — gives carpenter ants (Camponotus pennsylvanicus) exactly the moisture-damaged wood they need to excavate a colony. Unlike a pre-war Brooklyn brownstone, the vulnerable wood here is more often a deck ledger board, a garage sill, or crawl-space framing than a parapet wall.
The colony you can see in the kitchen is rarely the one doing the damage. Most infestations here involve a parent colony in a damp void — a leaking gutter behind a garage wall, a deck post set in wet soil, a crawl-space sill plate with poor drainage — and a satellite colony closer to the kitchen. Treating only the kitchen foragers is why DIY sprays fail season after season.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Jackson Heights and the surrounding Queens area — including Roosevelt Avenue, 37th Avenue, the historic garden-apartment district — across ZIP codes 11372.