Three quarterly plans, published to the dollar
Visit timing follows the piney woods pest calendar month by month, rather than a flat 90-day countdown.
Quarterly pest control works in East Texas because the pressure never fully shuts off. Nacogdoches averages around 51 inches of rain a year and rarely sees a hard, sustained freeze, so ants, roaches, and spiders that would die back in a colder climate just slow down and wait out a mild January. A once-a-year treatment leaves three seasons without any treatment at all. A true quarterly plan, timed to spring termite swarms, summer mosquito pressure, and fall rodent movement indoors, keeps the perimeter treated through all four.
Pick a plan
Initial visit $129, includes first treatment.
- Exterior perimeter treatment every visit
- Ants, roaches, spiders, silverfish, crickets, occasional invaders
- Interior spot treatment on request
- Free callback if pests return before your next visit
Initial visit $149, includes first treatment.
- Everything in Field Notes
- Termite monitoring station install and check each visit
- Mosquito perimeter treatment, March through October
- Wasp and hornet nest knockdown, exterior
Initial visit $179, includes first treatment.
- Everything in Almanac
- Rodent entry-point inspection and minor sealing
- Attic and crawlspace check, twice a year
- Unlimited free callbacks between scheduled visits
What a quarterly visit actually covers
- We walk the perimeter first. Foundation lines, weep holes, gutters, and any standing-water spots get checked before a single treatment goes down.
- Exterior barrier treatment. A liquid perimeter application around the foundation, entry points, and eaves handles ants, roaches, and spiders where they enter.
- Termite station check (Almanac and Full Canopy). Monitoring stations around the foundation get inspected and reset each visit.
- Interior touch-up if needed. Baseboards, under sinks, and utility rooms get spot-treated if you're seeing activity indoors.
- Web and nest removal. Eaves, soffits, and porch corners get cleared of webs and any new wasp nests.
- Notes left at the door. What was treated, what we found, and what to watch for before the next visit.
What makes a quarterly plan harder to run right
Standing water within 20 feet of the foundation (a clogged gutter, a low spot that never drains) reloads mosquito and ant pressure between visits no matter how good the last treatment was. Heavy mulch beds pushed up against siding hold moisture against wood trim and give carpenter ants an easy path indoors. Houses in the older overlay districts with original wood siding and single-pane windows have more gaps for occasional invaders than newer slab construction. We flag these on the first visit instead of pretending a single spray fixes a structural moisture problem.
A visit runs 20 to 40 minutes depending on lot size and whether an interior treatment is needed. Plans run quarter to quarter with no multi-year contract. Cancel before your next scheduled visit and you won't be billed again.
Where the plan stops: quarterly plans cover general pest pressure and termite monitoring, not full termite treatment. If a station shows activity, we quote the liquid or bait treatment separately. See the termite page for those prices.
Quarterly plan questions
Can I switch plans later?
Yes. Move up to Almanac or Full Canopy at any scheduled visit, and the new price starts the following quarter. Nothing prorates mid-quarter.
What if I see pests between visits?
Call and we schedule a free callback on all three plans for pests covered by your plan. We don't make you wait for the next quarter.
Do you treat indoors every visit?
The exterior perimeter gets treated every visit. Interior treatment happens on request or if we spot activity during the exterior walk.
Is mosquito treatment included in Field Notes?
No. Mosquito perimeter treatment is part of Almanac and Full Canopy. Field Notes customers can add the seasonal mosquito program separately; see the mosquito program page.
Start a quarterly plan
Tell us your address and which plan you're leaning toward.