Rodent control in Flushing: what to know
Flushing is one of the densest, busiest neighbourhoods in Queens, with a major commercial and restaurant core around Main Street that drives heavy rodent and cockroach pressure into the surrounding apartment buildings and homes.
The mix of older multi-family buildings, newer developments and one of the city's busiest food-service districts makes rodents, German cockroaches and bed bugs persistent concerns.
Proximity to Flushing Meadows–Corona Park adds seasonal rodent, mosquito and stinging-insect pressure.
How much does rat & mouse control cost in Flushing?
$200–$1,200
One-time baiting: $200–$500. Exclusion (baiting + entry-point sealing): $400–$900. Ongoing monitoring: $100–$200/month. NYC per-treatment overall: $300–$1,200 (avg ~$475). National per-visit average: $345 (range $216–$495).
| One-time baiting | $200–$500 per treatment |
| Exclusion (baiting + sealing) | $400–$900 per treatment |
| Ongoing monitoring | $100–$200 per month |
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.
Angi's $345 average (range $216–$495) is the only tier-1, NYC-geo-targeted figure found and is notably lower than the tier-2 NYC blogs' $300–$1,200 claim. Both are shown — do not collapse into a single misleadingly precise number.
What drives the price
- Baiting-only vs full exclusion (sealing entry points)
- Number of visits needed for heavy infestation (3–5 visits can total $700–$1,500)
- Building type / density
- Ongoing monitoring plan vs one-off
Signs you need rodent control
- Droppings along walls, under sinks, or in cabinets and drawers
- Gnaw marks on food packaging, wiring, or baseboards
- Scratching or scurrying in walls or ceilings, especially at night
- A persistent musky, ammonia-like odour
- Greasy rub marks along baseboards where rodents travel the same route repeatedly
How we treat rodent control in Flushing
Since 2006, our licensed technicians have inspected building envelopes across all five boroughs — foundations, pipe penetrations, door sweeps, utility chases — because that's where a rodent job actually gets decided, long before the first bait station goes down. Skipping that step is the single most common reason a previous provider's treatment didn't hold.
New York's rat is a burrower, not a climber — the Norway rat nests in soil, along foundations, and in tree pits, not attics. Mice, in contrast, travel through shared risers and wall voids in multi-family buildings. Diagnosing which one you have, and how it's moving through the building, is what separates a licensed exterminator's approach from a generic bait-and-hope service call.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Flushing and the surrounding Queens area — including Main Street, Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, Downtown Flushing — across ZIP codes 11354, 11355, 11358.
