Termites Cockroaches Ants Spiders Centipedes Silverfish Moths
Warning: Centipedes & Millipedes Signal Moisture Problems

Seminole Centipede & Millipede Control
Moisture & Entry Point Treatment

Centipede and millipede activity in Seminole properties is almost always a symptom of underlying moisture and insect conditions — not just a surface pest problem. Our licensed specialists treat the current population and address the environmental factors driving it.

Certified Specialists Moisture Conditions Assessed Structural Entry Points Sealed Perimeter Treatment
Common Signs of Centipede or Millipede Infestation
  • Fast-moving, many-legged arthropods seen in bathrooms or on basement floors
  • Slow-moving coiled millipedes in basement areas
  • Large numbers of millipedes accumulating near the foundation or entry points
  • Activity near moisture sources — drains, sump pumps
  • Persistent dampness in basement, crawlspace, or attached garage
  • Activity following heavy rainfall
(844) 817-0020 Get Your Free Quote

Seminole Centipede & Millipede Infestation — Reading the Underlying Cause

House centipedes and millipedes are moisture-dependent arthropods that are rarely present in significant numbers unless the conditions supporting them are well established. In Seminole homes, their presence typically indicates excess moisture in basements or crawlspaces, accumulation of organic debris outdoors, or an underlying insect population (house centipedes prey on other insects).

Millipedes, which feed on decaying organic matter, often invade in large numbers after heavy rainfall — migrating from outdoor mulch and leaf litter into foundations and through gaps in the building envelope. Centipedes follow the insects they feed on.

How to Tell Centipedes and Millipedes Apart

Centipedes are fast-moving predators with one pair of legs per body segment. The house centipede can deliver a mild bite if handled. Millipedes are slow-moving detritivores with two pairs of legs per segment. They do not bite but produce defensive secretions that cause skin irritation in some people.

Our Integrated Treatment Approach for Seminole Properties

Lasting centipede and millipede control in Seminole requires two parallel actions: chemical treatment to reduce the current population, and environmental modification to remove the moisture and harborage conditions that will sustain a new one. Perimeter treatment alone produces short-term results. Addressing root conditions produces lasting ones.

Treatment Options for Seminole Properties

Treatment targets the current population and the moisture conditions driving it.

Perimeter & Foundation Treatment

Perimeter treatment creates a residual contact zone at the foundation that intercepts migrating millipedes and centipedes before they reach entry points. Applied to foundation walls, soil adjacent to the structure, and mulch beds — the areas where populations accumulate between outdoor harborage and indoor access.

Basement & Crawlspace Treatment

Interior treatment focuses on the harborage and transition zones: basement floor perimeters, crawlspace wall junctions, utility areas, and the lower-level spaces where both species concentrate after entering through foundation gaps.

Moisture Assessment

Technician assesses moisture conditions in the basement, crawlspace, and around the foundation — identifying leaks, condensation issues, and drainage problems.

Entry Point Sealing

Foundation cracks, gaps around utility penetrations, door threshold gaps, and window well edges are identified, documented, and sealed — physically blocking the routes centipedes and millipedes use to reach interior spaces.

Outdoor Harborage Reduction

Advice on removal of mulch, leaf litter, wood piles, and organic debris adjacent to the foundation.

Prey Insect Control (Centipedes)

Centipedes enter Seminole properties because prey insects are present. Where our assessment identifies a significant underlying insect population sustaining centipede activity, we treat the prey species as an integrated part of the control programme.

When Millipede Invasions Peak in Seminole

In Seminole, millipede invasions peak in two predictable windows: autumn, as soil temperatures drop and moisture increases, and after sustained heavy rainfall at any time of year. The combination of saturated outdoor soil and available foundation access drives rapid mass migration toward drier interior conditions.

Schedule Centipede & Millipede Control in Seminole

Call our specialists in Seminole to arrange a property assessment. We will identify the conditions sustaining the infestation and recommend a treatment and prevention plan with transparent pricing.

Call (844) 817-0020 — Get a Quote

Seminole Centipede Problem? We Can Help.

Licensed professionals. Moisture assessment. No call-out charge.

(844) 817-0020 Request Your Quote Now