Termite control in Washington Heights: what to know
Washington Heights is built around large pre-war apartment buildings on steep hills — interconnected basements and shared service areas give rodents and roaches easy routes between buildings.
High residential density and a busy commercial spine along Broadway and St. Nicholas Avenue sustain steady pest pressure, particularly mice and German cockroaches in older kitchens.
The proximity to Fort Tryon Park and the wooded northern edge of Manhattan adds seasonal pressure from outdoor pests pushing indoors as the weather cools.
Signs you need termite control
- Mud tubes running along foundations, walls, or crawl-space surfaces
- Wood that sounds hollow when tapped or crumbles easily
- Discarded wings near windowsills after a swarm
- Buckling paint or what looks like water damage on wood
How we treat termite control in Washington Heights
Subterranean termites cause more structural damage than fires and storms combined, and they work silently — by the time you see damage, a colony has often been active for years. In the New York area, termites threaten the wood framing, joists and sills of houses and the lower floors of older buildings.
We provide both proactive inspection — including the Wood-Destroying Insect (WDI) reports lenders require for home purchases — and active treatment using liquid soil barriers and in-ground baiting systems that intercept and eliminate the colony.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Washington Heights and the surrounding Manhattan area — including The Cloisters, Fort Tryon Park, George Washington Bridge, Audubon Avenue — across ZIP codes 10032, 10033, 10040.