Fast, reliable pest control from Hernando County’s most trusted family-owned team—with most quotes given over the phone.
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Knocking webs down from your eaves or lanai only works until tomorrow. If you’re in a waterfront neighborhood like Flor-A-Mar or Gulf Harbors, or living near the Cotee River corridor, you already know — the webs come back faster than you can clear them. That’s not a cleaning problem. That’s a spider population problem, and it needs a different approach.
Professional spider control in New Port Richey targets the places spiders actually live and hunt — eaves, soffits, foundation lines, outdoor furniture, dock structures, and the gaps around aging door and window frames that older homes along Grand Boulevard and South New Port Richey tend to have. When those harborage zones are treated and de-webbed properly, the cycle breaks.
The other thing worth knowing: Florida doesn’t give you a cold winter to reset the clock. Spider activity in Pasco County runs twelve months a year. A single treatment makes a real difference, but a maintained perimeter barrier is what keeps your home clear season after season — and that’s exactly what we build for you.
We’re a family-owned, owner-operated business serving residential and commercial clients across Hernando County and neighboring Pasco County — including New Port Richey and the surrounding coastal communities. When you call, you reach the owner directly. Not a dispatcher. Not a rotating technician who’s never been to your neighborhood. The person who answers is the person who shows up.
That matters more in New Port Richey than most places. Whether you’re in a 1940s bungalow near Sims Park, a canal-front home in Flor-A-Mar, or a manufactured home community near the Cotee River, the conditions here are specific — and the service you get should reflect that. We hold an active FDACS pest control license, have maintained a perfect 5.0 Google rating across more than 109 verified reviews, and have been BBB Accredited since 2022.
Most quotes are handled over the phone. No in-home sales visit. No pressure. Just a straight answer on what you’re dealing with and what it costs to fix it.
It starts with a phone call. You describe what you’re seeing — where the webs are, what the spiders look like, how long it’s been going on — and we walk you through what’s likely happening and what treatment makes sense. Most quotes are given right there on the call. No appointment needed just to get a number.
When our technician arrives, the first step is a full exterior assessment. In New Port Richey, that means paying close attention to the areas that generate the most spider activity locally: eave lines and soffits on older homes, screen enclosures and dock structures in waterfront neighborhoods, foundation perimeters near dense landscaping, and any entry points around aging window and door frames. Homes adjacent to the Jay B. Starkey Wilderness Park corridor or near the James E. Grey Preserve often have heavier pressure from wolf spiders and orb weavers moving in from the surrounding vegetation — that gets factored into the treatment plan.
From there, the service includes physical de-webbing of accessible areas, targeted treatment of active harborage zones, and a perimeter barrier application around the foundation and entry points. You’ll be told exactly what was treated, what to expect in the days following, and when a follow-up or quarterly maintenance visit makes sense for your specific situation. No guesswork, no vague timelines.
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Spider control in New Port Richey isn’t one-size-fits-all. A waterfront home in Gulf Harbors with a boat dock and a screened lanai has different pressure points than a downtown bungalow on Grand Boulevard or a manufactured home in a 55-plus community near the Cotee River. We treat each property based on what’s actually there — not a checklist built for somewhere else.
Every service includes spider de-webbing from eaves, soffits, entry points, and outdoor structures, along with an outdoor spider barrier treatment applied to the foundation perimeter, window and door frames, and other common entry zones. Venomous spider removal — including black widows and brown widows, both of which are present in Pasco County — is handled with targeted treatment and direct removal where accessible. Wolf spider extermination is addressed through both perimeter treatment and harborage reduction, particularly for homes near the preserve corridors where pressure from the surrounding landscape is ongoing.
For homes with persistent activity, quarterly prevention visits maintain the barrier as treatments break down over time and new spiders migrate in from the surrounding environment. We’ll tell you honestly whether a single visit is enough for your situation or whether a maintenance plan is what actually solves it long-term. New homeowners and military families also qualify for discounts — something worth asking about on your first call.
Both species are present in Pasco County, and New Port Richey’s outdoor conditions give them plenty of places to hide. Black widows are typically found in dark, undisturbed spots — under outdoor furniture, inside sprinkler valve boxes, in garage corners, and along the undersides of dock structures in waterfront neighborhoods like Flor-A-Mar and Gulf Harbors. Brown widows have become increasingly common throughout coastal Florida and tend to show up in similar locations, often on the underside of plastic outdoor furniture, in eave corners, and around screen enclosures.
The important distinction is that brown widows are generally less aggressive than black widows, but their venom is still medically significant — especially for older residents or young children. If you’re finding spiders with a round abdomen, irregular webs close to the ground or under structures, and egg sacs that look like a spiky tan ball, that’s worth a professional look. We can identify the species correctly, assess the actual risk level, and apply treatment where it’s needed — not just where the spider happened to be sitting when you found it.
Because the webs are a symptom, not the problem. Spiders build where they find food — and if your eaves, porch lights, or lanai are consistently attracting insects, spiders will keep returning to those spots regardless of how often you knock the webs down. In New Port Richey, the combination of Gulf Coast humidity, outdoor lighting, dense landscaping, and the moisture generated by the Cotee River corridor and the city’s canal systems creates a nearly constant insect supply that keeps spiders well-fed and well-settled around your home.
Professional spider de-webbing removes the physical webs and egg sacs from eaves, soffits, corners, and outdoor structures — but the barrier treatment is what disrupts the cycle. By treating the areas where spiders enter and hunt, you reduce the population at the source rather than just cleaning up after it. For older homes with aging exterior trim and established landscaping, this is especially true — there are more entry points and more harborage zones than in newer construction, and they need to be addressed directly.
The most frequent calls we handle in this area involve wolf spiders, orb weavers, brown widows, and black widows. Wolf spiders are large, fast, and ground-hunting — they don’t build webs, which is why they tend to startle people when they appear in garages, on patios, or occasionally inside the home. Homes near the Jay B. Starkey Wilderness Park corridor and the James E. Grey Preserve in South New Port Richey see higher wolf spider pressure because of the vegetation and wildlife activity moving between the preserve and residential areas.
Orb weavers are the large, circular web builders you typically see on eaves, in garden areas, and across screen enclosures — they’re not dangerous, but their webs are persistent and frustrating. Brown widows have increased significantly across coastal Pasco County over the past decade and are now more commonly encountered than black widows in many residential settings. The brown recluse, despite being frequently feared in Florida, does not have an established population in New Port Richey or Pasco County — if you’re seeing a small brown spider, it’s far more likely to be a domestic house spider or a similar harmless species than a recluse.
For most residential properties in New Port Richey, a professional spider control treatment runs somewhere between $100 and $500, with the average single-visit treatment landing around $250 to $350 depending on the size of the home, the extent of the infestation, and the specific services included. Larger waterfront properties in Flor-A-Mar or Gulf Harbors — where dock structures, screen enclosures, and expansive eave lines require more time and product — will typically fall toward the higher end of that range.
We handle most quotes directly over the phone, so you don’t have to schedule an in-home visit just to get a number. That matters in a market like New Port Richey where price transparency is important and where a lot of residents — particularly those on fixed incomes — want to know what they’re committing to before anyone sets foot on their property. If quarterly prevention makes sense for your home, that cost gets factored into the conversation honestly, not added on at the end of a visit.
For most exterior-focused treatments — which is the primary approach for spider control in New Port Richey — you don’t need to vacate the home. The treatment is applied to the outside perimeter, eaves, foundation line, and entry points, so interior disruption is minimal. If interior treatment is needed in specific areas like a garage, crawl space, or utility room, our technician will walk you through any re-entry time requirements and what precautions apply for pets and children before the service begins.
We’ll give you clear, honest guidance on this before the day of service — not after the product is already applied. Product selection takes into account the specific conditions of your home, including whether you have pets, young children, or family members with sensitivities. For New Port Richey’s large retiree population, many of whom have small dogs or indoor cats, this is a routine part of the conversation and not something you should have to ask twice to get a straight answer on.
Yes — we offer discounts for new homeowners and military families, both of which are relevant segments in New Port Richey right now. The city’s downtown revitalization has brought a wave of new buyers into older homes along Grand Boulevard and throughout the historic core, and a lot of those homeowners are discovering spider activity — particularly in aging eaves, crawl spaces, and established landscaping — shortly after moving in. The new homeowner discount is a straightforward way to start that service relationship on fair terms.
The military discount reflects the veteran and active-duty population across Pasco County. If you or someone in your household has served, it’s worth mentioning when you call. Neither discount requires paperwork or a lengthy qualification process — just a conversation with the owner on your first call. The goal is to make professional spider control accessible to the people who need it most in this community, and to build a service relationship based on trust from the start rather than a high-pressure first transaction.
Other Services we provide in New Port Richey