
Hampton Roads · Virginia
Pest Control Companies in Williamsburg, VA
License-checked pros, shown in a neutral order. You do the hiring.
Find pest control companies serving Williamsburg and nearby Virginia Beach and Norfolk. The License Verified mark means we confirmed an active Virginia contractor license on the date shown, nothing more and nothing less.
Termites, ants, mice, and the rest of the uninvited are a fact of life in Virginia, and the humid months bring them on. A pest control company handles treatment and the inspections that keep small problems from becoming structural ones.

The work
What it covers
- Termite inspection and treatment
- Ant, roach, and general pest control
- Rodent control and exclusion
- Mosquito and tick yard treatment
- Wildlife removal and prevention
- Moisture and crawl space treatment
The register
Pest Control Companies in Williamsburg
Ballpark
What it costs in Virginia
| One-time general treatment (ants, roaches, spiders) | $150 to $300 |
| Termite inspection | $75 to $150 |
| Full termite treatment (liquid barrier or bait) | $600 to $2,500 |
| Rodent removal with exclusion sealing | $300 to $1,200 |
| Mosquito and tick yard treatment, per season | $350 to $900 |
| Wildlife removal from an attic (squirrel, raccoon) | $300 to $1,500 |
Williamsburg prices track these statewide ranges. These are rough ranges, not quotes. What you pay swings with the size of the house, how bad it got before you called, and the method the tech uses, since a liquid termite barrier prices out different than a bait system. A damp crawl space adds to it too, and around here the humidity keeps crawl spaces damp, so get two or three written quotes before you sign anything.
Signs you might need to hire a pro
- Mud tubes running up the foundation or across the crawl space, or wood that sounds hollow when you tap it
- Little piles of what looks like sawdust, or tiny discarded wings on a windowsill in spring
- Scratching or scurrying overhead in the attic or inside a wall, usually right after dark
- Droppings under the kitchen sink or in a drawer, or chew marks on a food box
- The yard is unusable at dusk because the mosquitoes are that thick after a wet spell
Before you sign
Licensing in Virginia
Any contracting job of 1,000 dollars or more has to go to a business licensed with the Virginia DPOR Board for Contractors, and under that none is required. The class on that license is a dollar ceiling, not a grade of quality. Class C covers single jobs under about 10,000 dollars, Class B under about 120,000, and Class A has no ceiling, so a small Class C outfit is not worse than a Class A, it just takes smaller work.
The pesticide side of pest work is licensed through Virginia's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, not DPOR, but once a job crosses into repair or moisture work like replacing termite-damaged framing or encapsulating a crawl space, a legitimate pro may hold a Residential or Commercial Building Contractor classification (RBC or CBC) and sometimes a Home Improvement specialty. In Virginia any job of $1,000 or more needs a licensed contractor.
Verify it yourself. Look up any license at the Virginia DPOR lookup and ask for proof of insurance before you hire.
Facts on the table. You do the hiring. -M.H.
Good to know
Common questions about pest control companies in Williamsburg
How much does it cost to get rid of termites?
It depends on how far they spread and the method. A full liquid barrier or bait job on a typical house runs somewhere around $600 to $2,500, and a plain inspection is usually $75 to $150. Get two or three quotes, because the number moves a lot with the size of the house and the type of foundation.
How do I pick a pest company?
Ask whether they carry the Virginia pesticide business license and who the certified applicator on your job actually is. Ask what they are treating for and get the plan and the price in writing. If somebody knocked on your door and wants a signature that same afternoon, slow it down.
Does a pest control company need a license in Virginia?
Yes. The business needs a pesticide business license from the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, and whoever applies the chemical has to be a certified commercial applicator. If the job also involves repair or crawl space work of $1,000 or more, that side needs a DPOR contractor license too.
Do I really need a termite bond?
A termite bond is the yearly agreement where the company keeps inspecting and re-treats if termites come back. In a warm, humid state like Virginia the pressure stays high, so a lot of folks keep one going, especially near the coast and on older homes with crawl spaces. Read what the bond covers, because some only pay to re-treat and not to repair the damage.
Is the stuff they spray safe around kids and pets?
The products a licensed applicator uses are labeled for home use and applied at set rates, and most ask you to keep everyone off a treated surface until it dries. If someone in the house has allergies, or you keep fish or reptiles, tell the tech up front so they can adjust where they treat.
