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Wisconsin Exterminators

Service

Rodent Control

Trapping, exclusion, and sealing for mice and rats, built to end the problem rather than knock it back for a few weeks.

Rodent control gets mice and rats out of a structure and closes the gaps that let them in. It is one of the highest-demand pest services in Wisconsin, because the state's long, hard winters drive mice into heated buildings every year. From October through the cold months, rodent calls are the steadiest work most Wisconsin operators see.

Real rodent work is more than setting a few traps. Mice breed year-round once they are inside a warm house, so trapping without sealing the entry points just clears the current animals and leaves the door open for the next ones. A proper Wisconsin rodent program pairs trapping with exclusion: finding and sealing the gaps, since a mouse needs only a pencil-width opening and a rat needs about the width of a quarter.

What rodent control covers

  • House mice, the most common indoor rodent in Wisconsin homes
  • Norway rats, an established problem in Milwaukee and older urban neighborhoods
  • Inspection to find entry points and the conditions feeding the activity
  • Trapping programs, set and monitored rather than left in place
  • Exclusion: sealing gaps with steel, hardware cloth, and proper sealant, not just caulk
  • Advice on the food, clutter, and harborage that draw rodents in

What to expect

  1. 1

    Inspection

    The technician finds the entry points, runways, droppings, and nesting spots, and pins down how rodents are getting in.

  2. 2

    Trapping

    Snap traps and stations go in at the active runways. The operator monitors and resets them rather than leaving them and walking away.

  3. 3

    Exclusion

    Entry points get sealed with steel wool, hardware cloth, and proper sealant. This is the step that actually ends the cycle, especially on Wisconsin's older homes with worn sill plates.

  4. 4

    Follow-up

    A return visit confirms the activity has stopped and catches any gap that was missed the first time.

What it costs in Wisconsin

An initial rodent inspection and trap-setting visit in Wisconsin runs about $145 to $170, with the statewide average near $154 and Milwaukee around $162. That covers the first visit and an initial round of trapping.

A full exclusion and trapping program, which includes sealing the entry points, commonly runs $400 to $900 for a standard home. Heavy infestations that need structural exclusion, attic cleanup, or insulation replacement run higher. The cost is driven mostly by how many entry points need sealing and how much access and repair the building requires.

See the full cost breakdown

Request a rodent control quote

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Rodent Control: common questions

Why not just use poison bait?
Bait alone has real downsides indoors: a poisoned rodent can die inside a wall and create an odor problem, and bait does nothing to close the gaps the next rodent uses. Good rodent control leans on trapping and exclusion. Bait, where it is used at all, is a supporting tool, not the whole plan.
How long does it take to get rid of mice?
A typical mouse job in a Wisconsin home is brought under control over a few weeks: an initial visit, monitoring, and a follow-up. Severe infestations or homes with many entry points take longer.
Will sealing the house actually keep them out?
Exclusion is the part that lasts. A mouse fits through a gap the width of a pencil, so the technician seals pipe penetrations, gaps under doors, vents, and foundation cracks. Without that step, trapping only clears the current rodents and the problem returns next winter.
Why do I have mice every fall?
Wisconsin's winters push mice toward heated structures every year. In rural-edge areas the fall harvest sends field mice into nearby homes. If it happens every year, the house has open entry points that need sealing, which is the part trapping alone never fixes.

Need rodent control?

Get connected with a licensed Wisconsin operator and a free quote.