Las Vegas Seasonal Guide: Winter Pest Prevention
Las Vegas winters are brief, bright, and deceptively calm. You might see a light frost at sunrise, then t-shirt weather by lunchtime. That swing is comfortable for people, but it invites a very specific wave of pests to shift gears. When daytime highs hover in the 50s and 60s and nights dip into the 30s, insects slow down outside and mammals go looking for warmth and calories. Homes and businesses with gaps, crumbs, and moisture become winter resorts.
I have spent enough seasons crawling through crawlspaces and attic voids in Clark County to know winter is not a pest “off-season.” It is a reshuffle. Species that bothered you in July crawl under rocks or into palm crowns. Others migrate indoors. The work this time of year is quieter and more structural, less knockdown spray and more sealing, exclusion, and moisture control. If you get winter right, spring is easy. If you let winter slide, you invite rodents to lay down highways in your insulation, German roaches to pick up habit in the kitchen, and silverfish to chew through a decade of stored files.
This guide covers what actually matters in a Las Vegas winter: which pests move and how, what the desert climate changes and what it does not, and the specific prevention tasks that pay off. It includes field details you only learn the hard way, like where scorpions tuck into block walls after dusk and why sump closets become a mouse diner. The intent is practical and local, not generic.
How winter changes the Las Vegas pest picture
Winter tilts the balance from flying insects to shelter-seekers. Daylength shortens, which shifts cockroach and rodent foraging to earlier hours. The sun still dries surfaces quickly, so yards lose the standing water that breeds mosquitoes, and ant trails fade. On the other hand, warmth coming off stucco walls, slab foundations, and dryer vents creates microclimates that lure pests to the building envelope.
The most common calls from December through February fall into three buckets. First, rodent noises in walls or attics, often heard after sunset, sometimes accompanied by droppings in the garage. Second, German roaches in kitchens that import groceries from warmer markets, then multiply at the back of refrigerators and under sink bases. Third, scorpion sightings inside, fewer than summer but memorable, often tied to gaps along door thresholds or unsealed weep screed.
The climate nudges behavior rather than erasing species. Bark scorpions do not hibernate like ground squirrels, but their activity compresses into the warmest hours of each day. Roof rats keep breeding as long as they find calories and shelter. Termites continue to feed inside wood, even if swarm season waits for spring. That means winter prevention is mostly about removing a few key attractions and closing structural paths.
Rodents: why winter is their season indoors
Roof rats and house mice are the winter headliners around the valley. I see roof rats more in mature neighborhoods with fruiting landscape trees and palm clusters, mice more in newer developments near open desert. Both species need warmth and calories, and the easiest sources in January sit in garages, utility rooms, and kitchen pantries.
Roof rats are light, agile climbers. They travel on block walls, jump from oleander to roofline, and find entry at the eave, dryer vent, or roof return. Signs include droppings along attic trusses, gnaw marks on plastic vent caps, and greasy rub marks on rafters where they run. House mice squeeze through a hole the diameter of a dime and prefer lower routes. They favor the gap under a garage door, the furnace closet, and openings where pipes penetrate. A mouse runway along the slab edge will look like faint smudges and peppered droppings behind stored totes.
Protein draws both species more than seed in winter, especially if there is rodenticide pressure in the neighborhood. Dog food becomes the number one attractant after sunset. A single open bag left on a garage floor can feed a small colony for weeks. Bird feeders are a close second. You can watch a roof rat ride the block wall at dusk, drop into the yard, then fill its cheeks with seed, and retreat to a soffit void.
When people ask why they only hear noises at night, the answer is simple. Cooler nights push foraging earlier, and indoor spaces magnify vibration. An attic that seems empty by day can sound like a bowling alley at 9 p.m. because rats return to a nest after their first run.
German cockroaches: cold outside, cozy inside
German roaches do not like cold. They thrive in warm, humid microhabitats, and winter drives them to the places that keep those conditions year-round. In Las Vegas, that is the kitchen, bathrooms, and sometimes a laundry room where a dryer adds ambient heat. Unlike desert species such as Turkestan roaches that stay outdoors near irrigation and landscape lighting, German roaches live their entire life cycle inside once established.
The most common winter origin is importation. They hitch a ride in a cardboard box, a case of soda, or a used appliance. Once they find a harborage under a sink, behind a dishwasher, or in the hollow under a cabinet toe-kick, they multiply quietly. People notice only when the population crosses a threshold, usually when nymphs appear around the coffee maker at 5 a.m. or when a mother with an ootheca darts during a late-night snack.
Heat islands in a kitchen are predictable. The compressor area behind a refrigerator is a classic. The void behind an integrated microwave, the underside of a sink where a slow drip has swelled particleboard, the corner of a pantry where crumbs fall behind shelving. I have opened toe-kicks that hold more roaches than the cabinet above because no one ever cleans that space and it stays warm.
The key with German roaches is to remove attractants and thin their hiding spots while using targeted bait and insect growth regulator. In winter, sprays alone do more harm than good because they scatter the population deeper into walls where warmth persists.
Scorpions in the slow season
Bark scorpions get most of the attention here for good reason. They hide flat, climb well, and sting hurts. Winter cools their metabolism, so sightings drop, but they do not vanish. The most likely winter routes indoors are gaps at thresholds, unsealed utility penetrations, and weep screed along stucco where the slab meets the wall. Block walls also hold pockets of warmth that scorpions use as daytime shelters. Every veteran has a story of flipping a capstone at noon in January and finding a cluster tucked into mortar voids.
Blue light scanning still works on warm nights. If the checklist for a house in March includes sealing the garage door sweep and reducing groundcover along the foundation, it is no different in December. The difference is timing. Winter is when you can break the cycle because neighboring populations disperse less. If you reduce harborages now, there are fewer migrants to fill that space before spring.
One caution: glue boards at thresholds catch scorpions, but they also catch everything else that blunders in. I use them surgically, mainly to verify activity, then switch to exclusion.
Termites and wood-destroying organisms in winter
Subterranean termites in Southern Nevada keep feeding below the surface even when the air cools. They remain active in soil that holds moisture, often around drip lines, slab cracks, and where a water heater relief line discharges. You rarely see swarms in winter, but damage does not pause. Wood rot from irrigation overspray and failed window seals accelerates quietly in cooler months because homeowners water less often but let leaks go longer.
Most winter inspections that reveal termite issues start with something mundane. A seller preparing for a spring listing calls for a wood-destroying organism report, and the inspector finds old shelter tubes at the slab edge under a baseboard. Or a handyman cutting back a warped base of a door discovers soft wood and mud. Once you know the species and the pattern, you can treat anytime, but winter is a good moment to fix moisture sources that created the problem in the first place.
Carpenter bees are not a major winter concern here, though I do see them in fascia in older neighborhoods once temperatures warm. Keep an eye on paint failure at fascia joints, as that is where they will start in spring.
Desert climate quirks that drive winter pest behavior
Las Vegas sits in the Mojave, which means sunlight is abundant and humidity is low. Winter nights can drop below freezing for a few hours, then rebound to mild by midday. Pests track those microshifts.
A few practical examples illustrate the point. Air that leaves a dryer vent at 120 degrees on a cold night creates a ribbon of warm air along a wall that draws insects and rodents. If that vent terminates in a flimsy plastic cap with a missing flap, you have an open invitation. Likewise, a south-facing stucco wall radiates heat after sunset. Ants may be quiet across the yard, but they will trail along that band of warmth to a gap at the foundation.
Irrigation schedules also change. People cut back watering, which reduces mosquitoes and drains. At the same time, a single leaky valve that drips through the night becomes the neighborhood’s only water source, which concentrates activity. I have traced winter rat runs directly to a slow leak at a backflow preventer where condensation made a puddle after sundown.
Finally, wind matters. Winter winds push debris and seeds under garage doors with worn bottom seals. Rodents follow that scent trail inward, and so do crickets and roaches. A door sweep that looked “fine” in August may be a sieve in January when the rubber has shrunk and stiffened.
The winter prevention plan that works
I install a slightly different program in winter than in summer. The emphasis is on exclusion, sanitation, moisture control, and targeted baits, with very light use of exterior residuals only where they make sense. Think of it as tightening the envelope and starving pests out. For homeowners who prefer a simple action list, here is the short version that delivers the biggest gains in winter:
Seal the building envelope: replace worn door sweeps, install brush seals on garage doors, screen weep holes and utility openings, and cap any open vents. Secure food and water: store pet food in metal or thick plastic containers with tight lids, clean under appliances, fix drips, and run the dishwasher nightly if dishes are loaded. Reduce harborages along the foundation: pull mulch and groundcover back 12 to 18 inches from the slab, trim plants off walls and rooflines, and clear debris from block wall caps. Manage the garage: elevate storage at least 4 inches, keep cardboard to a minimum, seal cracks at the slab edge, and close the door promptly in the evening. Monitor smartly: place a few sticky monitors along baseboards behind appliances and in the garage to track activity, and log what you catch weekly.
Each line has nuance. When you replace a door sweep, look at daylight from the inside after dark. If you can see stars at the corners, rodents can smell what is inside. When you trim groundcover, aim for an air gap that exposes the foundation; scorpions dislike that open border. When you store dog food, choose a container that a rat cannot gnaw in a night. Thin plastic bins often fail that test.
Exclusion details that matter in Las Vegas construction
Modern stucco over foam, block walls, and post-tension slabs come with predictable gaps. I run the same circuit on almost every winter inspection.
Start at the garage. The bottom seal hardens and shrinks with our dry air, and the corners curl first. Replace the gasket if light shows, and add side brush seals to remove the wind gap. Look at the corner where the track meets the slab. If there is a chipped edge, pack a rodent-proof foam backer and top with sealant rated for movement. If you see rust on the metal track from condensation, that tells you winter air is flowing freely through that gap at night.
Move to exterior utility penetrations. Gas lines, AC linesets, cable and low-voltage conduits all punch through stucco. Most have a stucco ring or escutcheon that leaves a crescent-shaped opening. Back that with copper mesh and seal it. Dryer vents deserve special attention. Thin plastic flaps break and invite pests. Swap to a metal louvered hood with a screen that you can brush clean every few months. Keep the screen aperture large enough to prevent lint blockage but small enough to keep rodents out. I like a quarter-inch hardware cloth cut to fit behind the louvers.
Weep screed, the gap at the base of the stucco where water can drain, is necessary. Do not seal it. Instead, screen it in problem areas using a breathable, insect-screen-grade material anchored to the foundation, not the stucco. That keeps scorpions and roaches from using the cavity as a highway while allowing drainage.
At the roofline, look for gaps at eave returns and at fascia joins where decorative trim meets the wall. Birds and rats both test those spots. On tile roofs, displaced tiles often reveal entry into the soffit. Winter winds move tiles just enough to open a path.
Windows and doors in tract homes sometimes sit with overcut stucco. If you can insert a probe more than a quarter inch around a frame, fill that perimeter with a flexible sealant. Focus on north and west exposures where wind drives debris into cracks.
Sanitation and storage through a winter lens
Pest control clichés about cleanliness sound moralistic, but the winter application is practical. You are trying to cut the scent trails that draw pests to your building and remove easy calories and moisture.
In the kitchen, pull the range and refrigerator once this season. Vacuum the crumb line where the range meets the cabinet. Clean the compressor area behind the fridge. If you see roach specks on the wall there, that is a sign to place gel bait in cracks of the cabinet base, not on open surfaces. Replace any swollen sink base boards and fix leaks. Wipe the underside of drawer faces where sticky drips accumulate.
Pantries collect items that go stale in dry air. Transfer flour, cereal, and pet treats into sealed containers. Indianmeal moths are less common in winter, but the seeds and grains that attract them also attract rodents. Cardboard is the other sanitation trap. Roaches and silverfish love it, and it absorbs pantry odors. Move to plastic bins for long-term storage, and recycle boxes quickly.
In the garage, think like a rat. If you can burrow under it or through it in one night, it is not safe. Store rarely used items in thick-walled totes on shelving, not on the floor. Avoid soft-sided coolers on the floor; they hold residual food scent and foam that rodents love to shred for nesting. If you keep a second fridge in the garage, clean the drip pan. Those pans are humid islands in an otherwise dry space, and they collect organic gunk that draws insects.
Outdoors, maintain that 12 to 18 inch clear strip along the foundation. In winter, it tends to widen naturally as plants go dormant, so take advantage and reshape beds. Rake back decorative rock that piled against stucco. Blow leaves off capstones on block walls so the hollows do not become damp pockets. Secure trash and recycling lids. Light breezes flip lids open, and that is enough to advertise odor down the block.
Targeted products that earn their keep in winter
I am conservative with pesticides in winter. You usually need less, and what you do use should be surgical.
For German roaches, a rotation of professional gel baits tucked deep into cracks and an insect growth regulator in harborage zones does the work. Do not spray baseboards where bait is present, or you will sabotage your own placement. Pull kick plates, bait the void, and reattach. Dusts, such as silica-based products, have a place in wall voids and under appliances if humidity is present.
For rodents, mechanical control and exclusion come first. Snap traps and secured multi-catch traps make more sense than anticoagulant baits inside because you avoid secondary risks and odors from a rat that dies in a wall. If you use bait, keep it outdoors in tamper-resistant stations, and service them regularly. Rotate attractants on traps in winter. Peanut butter works, but nuts, dried fruit, and even a smear of pet food paste often outperform when the neighborhood is saturated with peanut scents.
For scorpions, residuals along foundation edges and block walls can help, but do not lean on them. Seal, reduce harborages, and monitor. If you live on the edge of open desert, a perimeter service that focuses on cracks, expansion joints, and wall voids is worth it. Ultraviolet monitoring at night is a useful sanity check; if you see none on a 55 degree night after a warm day, your exclusion is probably working.
Termite treatments are a separate track. If you find active shelter tubes, call for a professional evaluation. Winter is an excellent time to trench and treat, since soil is often softer from irrigation changes, and you are not fighting swarmers at the same time.
What a winter service visit should include
When I walk a property in January, I do five things before I ever open a backpack.
I ask about noises and times. The pattern tells me whether I am dealing with roof rats or mice. I check the garage door at sunset with the lights off to look for gaps. I inspect the kitchen for heat islands and harborages, not just visual roaches. I run the exterior for utility penetrations, weep screed gaps that got widened by yard work, and droppings on block walls. Finally, I look at landscaping that touches the structure, especially palm skirts and thick shrubs that meet the eave.
A good winter service maps and monitors. That might mean a handful of sticky monitors in known lanes, noting catches weekly for a month to confirm whether exclusion holds. It might mean bait placements in a rotation you track so resistance does not creep in. It definitely means telling the owner which repairs pay off and which can wait.
If your provider sells you the same summer spray route in January, push back. Ask for sealing, door-sweep replacement, and utility screening. Those are winter deliverables that change outcomes.
Edge cases and trade-offs
Not every winter infestation follows the script. I have opened sealed, tidy homes and still found mice because the builder left an unsealed gap behind the furnace platform. I have seen spotless kitchens with German roaches because the family heats tortillas directly on a gas flame and the grease mist settles into the cabinet seams. There is no shame in that, only a different strategy.
Trade-offs are real. Brush seals on garage doors can catch debris; you will need to sweep them clean. Metal dryer vent hoods can collect lint and must be maintained. Screening a weep screed reduces scorpion entry but can trap debris if you do not blow it out. Rodent bait outside can draw more attention from your neighbor’s rats if your yard is the only one with food; sealing first minimizes that.
Pets complicate things. Dogs that sleep in the garage produce heat and scent that pull rodents. Cats catch mice, but they are not exclusion. Be mindful with traps and baits around curious noses. I prefer snap traps in covered stations in homes with pets and kids.
Short-term rentals deserve a note. Turnover brings dispatchpestcontrol.com pest control company las vegas https://www.youtube.com/@DispatchPestControl702 boxes, suitcases, food residuals, and sometimes used appliances. If you manage a rental near the Strip or a cluster of short-term stays, bake German roach prevention into your cleaning cycle. Pull appliances monthly, inspect, and bait proactively in voids.
What to watch as winter ends
By late February, warm spells lengthen. Ant scouts reappear on sunlit walls, and desert roaches start to cruise patios at night. If you completed the winter plan, you start spring with sealed doors, tidy storage, and a quiet monitor log. That puts you ahead.
Before temperatures spike, walk the foundation again and check the seals you installed. Dry air shrinks rubber and cures sealants hard; a second pass to tighten corners is cheap. Adjust irrigation as you bring it back online. Fix that one weeping drip emitter now, not after ants rebuild a superhighway to it.
If you saw rodents earlier in the season, do a final attic check for droppings and nesting. Abandoned nests can harbor mites and fleas, rare but possible. Remove insulation that is heavily contaminated, and sanitize the area before anyone works up there.
The last winter task is simple. Keep records. Jot down when you last replaced a door sweep, where you caught pests on monitors, and which products worked. Pests are persistent but not creative. They repeat patterns. So do successful prevention plans.
A few brief field stories that illustrate the point
A single-family home near Desert Shores called about scratching at night. The garage door looked intact, but at dusk I could see a faint triangle of light where the track met a chipped slab. A roof rat had chewed back the rubber and entered each night for dog food, then returned to the soffit to nest. We sealed the corner with mesh-backed sealant, replaced the bottom gasket, moved dog food into a metal can, and set two traps high in the attic where rub marks showed a runway. One rat in 24 hours, none thereafter. It was the quarter-inch corner gap that did the damage.
At a bistro in Summerlin, German roaches spiked every January. The kitchen was clean by most standards, but the reach-in cooler sat on a particleboard platform with a slow, intermittent drip from a cracked line. That kept the wood swollen and warm. We replaced the platform with a metal stand, repaired the line, and baited behind the toe kick. The winter spike vanished because the microclimate disappeared.
A townhouse downtown had scorpions like clockwork, even in December. The homeowner swore the walls were sealed. They were. The problem was the weep screed gap had been widened at construction where the driveway met the slab, leaving a highway under the threshold. We inserted a breathable screen strip anchored to the concrete and trimmed back a groundcover strip that touched stucco. Visual sightings dropped to zero, and UV scans in March showed only one scorpion on the block wall, not at the entry.
The payoff of a quiet winter
Winter pest prevention in Las Vegas is not glamorous. It involves looking at the bottom edge of a garage door with a flashlight, crawling under a sink, and brushing debris off a block wall cap. It is also the most leveraged work you can do. You exchange a few hours now for a spring without nightly surprises and a summer where exterior maintenance handles most of what tries to cross your threshold.
The city gives us a gift in winter. Cooler air slows pests and concentrates their needs. That makes them predictable. If you close the obvious doors, remove the predictable calories, and keep a simple monitoring habit, you convert winter from a season of mystery noises to a season of quiet. That is the real goal, not a shelf of sprays.
If you prefer help, ask a provider to structure a winter visit around sealing, screening, and targeted baiting, not a generic perimeter. If you prefer to do it yourself, walk the boundaries, trust what you see at dusk, and fix what lets air or scent flow. The desert rewards that kind of precision. So does your peace of mind when the nights are cold and still.
<strong>Business Name:</strong> Dispatch Pest Control
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<strong>Address:</strong> 9078 Greek Palace Ave, Las Vegas, NV 89178
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<div>Dispatch Pest Control provides residential pest management.</div>
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Dispatch Pest Control appears on MapQuest
https://www.mapquest.com/us/nevada/dispatch-pest-control-345761100 https://www.mapquest.com/us/nevada/dispatch-pest-control-345761100.
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Dispatch Pest Control is referenced on Yahoo Local
https://local.yahoo.com/info-236826686-Dispatch-Pest-Control/?p=Dispatch%20Pest%20Control&selectedId=236826686&ei=UTF-8 https://local.yahoo.com/info-236826686-Dispatch-Pest-Control/?p=Dispatch%20Pest%20Control&selectedId=236826686&ei=UTF-8.
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Dispatch Pest Control has a BBB profile
https://www.bbb.org/us/nv/henderson/profile/pest-control/dispatch-pest-control-1086-73336 https://www.bbb.org/us/nv/henderson/profile/pest-control/dispatch-pest-control-1086-73336.
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Dispatch Pest Control is listed on CityOf
https://www.cityof.com/nv/las-vegas/dispatch-pest-control-140351 https://www.cityof.com/nv/las-vegas/dispatch-pest-control-140351.
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Dispatch Pest Control is listed on DexKnows
https://www.dexknows.com/nationwide/bp/dispatch-pest-control-578322395 https://www.dexknows.com/nationwide/bp/dispatch-pest-control-578322395.
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Dispatch Pest Control is listed on Yellow-Pages.us.com
https://yellow-pages.us.com/nevada/las-vegas/dispatch-pest-control-b38316263 https://yellow-pages.us.com/nevada/las-vegas/dispatch-pest-control-b38316263.
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Dispatch Pest Control is listed on Chamber of Commerce
https://www.chamberofcommerce.com/business-directory/nevada/las-vegas/pest-control-service/2033971791-dispatch-pest-control https://www.chamberofcommerce.com/business-directory/nevada/las-vegas/pest-control-service/2033971791-dispatch-pest-control.
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Dispatch Pest Control is reviewed on Birdeye
https://reviews.birdeye.com/dispatch-pest-control-156231116944968 https://reviews.birdeye.com/dispatch-pest-control-156231116944968.
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<br>
<h2>People Also Ask about Dispatch Pest Control</h2>
<h3>What is Dispatch Pest Control?</h3>
Dispatch Pest Control is a local, family-owned pest control company serving the Las Vegas Valley since 2003.
They provide residential and commercial pest management, including eco-friendly, family- and pet-safe treatment options, with same-day service when available.
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<h3>Where is Dispatch Pest Control located?</h3>
Dispatch Pest Control is based in Las Vegas, Nevada. Their listed address is 9078 Greek Palace Ave, Las Vegas, NV 89178 (United States).
You can view their listing on Google Maps for directions and details.
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<h3>What areas does Dispatch Pest Control serve in Las Vegas?</h3>
Dispatch Pest Control serves the Las Vegas Valley, including Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, and Boulder City.
They also cover nearby communities such as Summerlin, Green Valley, and Seven Hills.
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<h3>What pest control services does Dispatch Pest Control offer?</h3>
Dispatch Pest Control provides residential and commercial pest control services, including ongoing prevention and treatment options.
They focus on safe, effective treatments and offer eco-friendly options for families and pets.
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<h3>Does Dispatch Pest Control use eco-friendly or pet-safe treatments?</h3>
Yes. Dispatch Pest Control offers eco-friendly treatment options and prioritizes family- and pet-safe solutions whenever possible,
based on the situation and the pest issue being treated.
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<h3>How do I contact Dispatch Pest Control?</h3>
Call (702) 564-7600 or visit
https://dispatchpestcontrol.com/ https://dispatchpestcontrol.com/.
Dispatch Pest Control is also on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Pinterest, and X.
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<h3>What are Dispatch Pest Control’s business hours?</h3>
Dispatch Pest Control is open Monday through Friday from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.
Hours may vary by appointment availability, so it’s best to call for scheduling.
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<h3>Is Dispatch Pest Control licensed in Nevada?</h3>
Yes. Dispatch Pest Control lists Nevada license number NV #6578.
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<h3>Can Dispatch Pest Control handle pest control for homes and businesses?</h3>
Yes. Dispatch Pest Control offers both residential and commercial pest control services across the Las Vegas Valley.
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<h3>How do I view Dispatch Pest Control on Google Maps?</h3>
View on Google Maps https://www.google.com/maps?cid=785874918723856947
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Dispatch Pest Control supports the Summerlin area around Boca Park https://maps.app.goo.gl/1bKiaRa5cuGkWcrd8, helping nearby homes and businesses get reliable pest control in Las Vegas.