Rodent control in Lower East Side: what to know
The Lower East Side's surviving tenement buildings — some of the oldest occupied residential stock in the country — along Orchard, Rivington and Eldridge Streets have thin walls, shared staircases and original plumbing from the early 1900s that let cockroaches and mice move freely between the densely packed units.
The busy nightlife and restaurant cluster around Delancey Street, Ludlow Street and the Essex Street Market generates strong food-waste pressure, feeding rodent populations that regularly enter surrounding walk-up apartments through basement utility areas.
High residential turnover and a large student and young-renter demographic mean bed bug introductions are frequent; fly pressure is elevated around the neighbourhood's many restaurant back-of-house operations.
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 noises in walls or ceilings, especially at night
- A persistent musky, ammonia-like odour
- Greasy rub marks along baseboards and runways
How we treat rodent control in Lower East Side
New York City has one of the densest rodent populations in the world. Aging infrastructure, restaurant-heavy blocks and continuous construction give rats and mice food, shelter and highways between buildings. Killing the rodents you can see is only half the job — without sealing how they get in, the next wave moves in within weeks.
Our rodent programme is built around exclusion: we inspect the building envelope for gaps around pipes, vents, foundation cracks, door sweeps and utility penetrations — rats can squeeze through a hole the size of a quarter, mice through a dime. We seal those entry points, then knock down the active population with a combination of trapping and tamper-resistant baiting placed away from people and pets.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Lower East Side and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Delancey Street, Essex Street Market, Orchard Street, Williamsburg Bridge, Rivington Street — across ZIP codes 10002.