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Interstate Pest Management reports 2026 pest pressure is already exceeding typical spring patterns across PNW — and provides DIY tips and words of caution
SALEM, Ore. - ColoradoDesk -- What was initially forecast as a busy pest season has materialized into something more: an early, intensified surge across the Willamette Valley, with homeowners already encountering levels of ant and rodent activity typically seen weeks later in the spring.
A mild winter across Oregon allowed pest populations to survive the season largely intact — a trend the National Pest Management Association flagged in its 2026 Bug Barometer. Field conditions now confirm those projections are playing out ahead of schedule, with February and March service demand across the region reflecting what professionals normally see in late April.
The Statesman Journal reported in March that Oregon could see elevated ant activity this year due to favorable winter conditions. That prediction has arrived early.
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"This isn't a typical ramp-up — we're already in what feels like mid-season pressure," said TJ Jackson, Director of Operations at Interstate Pest Management, which has operated in the Pacific Northwest since 1963. "The mild winter didn't slow populations down, and now we're seeing that compound."
Odorous house ants — commonly called "sugar ants" — have been among the most visible early movers, appearing indoors in kitchens and bathrooms well before homeowners expect them.
What Residents Should Know Before They Act
Pest control professionals urge caution before reaching for store-bought solutions. Spray repellents and "kills on contact" products — among the most common first responses — can trigger a survival behavior in odorous house ant colonies called budding, in which a threatened colony splits into multiple smaller colonies and spreads further through a home.
"When you spray the ants you can see, you may be making the problem significantly worse," Jackson noted. "Species identification matters. The right approach for odorous house ants is completely different from what works on carpenter ants or moisture ants."
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Professionals recommend starting with prevention:
Local Resources
Interstate Pest Management, a fourth-generation, family-owned company and QualityPro-certified provider, serves the Willamette Valley from its Salem office at 2110 State St., Suite 102. Free estimates are available at interstatepest.com/locations/salem or by calling (503) 461-0259.
A mild winter across Oregon allowed pest populations to survive the season largely intact — a trend the National Pest Management Association flagged in its 2026 Bug Barometer. Field conditions now confirm those projections are playing out ahead of schedule, with February and March service demand across the region reflecting what professionals normally see in late April.
The Statesman Journal reported in March that Oregon could see elevated ant activity this year due to favorable winter conditions. That prediction has arrived early.
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"This isn't a typical ramp-up — we're already in what feels like mid-season pressure," said TJ Jackson, Director of Operations at Interstate Pest Management, which has operated in the Pacific Northwest since 1963. "The mild winter didn't slow populations down, and now we're seeing that compound."
Odorous house ants — commonly called "sugar ants" — have been among the most visible early movers, appearing indoors in kitchens and bathrooms well before homeowners expect them.
What Residents Should Know Before They Act
Pest control professionals urge caution before reaching for store-bought solutions. Spray repellents and "kills on contact" products — among the most common first responses — can trigger a survival behavior in odorous house ant colonies called budding, in which a threatened colony splits into multiple smaller colonies and spreads further through a home.
"When you spray the ants you can see, you may be making the problem significantly worse," Jackson noted. "Species identification matters. The right approach for odorous house ants is completely different from what works on carpenter ants or moisture ants."
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Professionals recommend starting with prevention:
- Keep food sealed and surfaces clean, especially anything sweet
- Eliminate moisture sources — leaky pipes, standing water, damp crawl spaces
- Seal gaps around windows, doors, and utility penetrations
- Trim vegetation back from the home's exterior
Local Resources
Interstate Pest Management, a fourth-generation, family-owned company and QualityPro-certified provider, serves the Willamette Valley from its Salem office at 2110 State St., Suite 102. Free estimates are available at interstatepest.com/locations/salem or by calling (503) 461-0259.
Source: Interstate Pest Management
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