Getting the animals out is half the job. What they left behind — droppings, urine-soaked insulation, nesting material, scent trails — keeps contaminating your air and invites the next infestation. We remove it, sanitize it, and close the book.
Contamination doesn't leave when the rodents do. An active rat or mouse population leaves droppings and urine throughout insulation, on vapor barriers, and along every runway they used. Rodent waste can carry pathogens, and in an attic or crawlspace it sits directly in the airflow paths of your home.
Scent trails are an invitation. Rodents mark their routes with pheromones as they travel. To the next rat that passes your foundation, those trails read as "this building works." Removing the contamination removes the advertisement — it's a real part of keeping the problem solved after exclusion.
Insulation takes the worst of it. Soiled, matted, tunneled insulation doesn't insulate — it holds odor and contamination against your ceiling or subfloor. Where it's compromised, it needs to come out.
Droppings and nesting material removed. Affected areas HEPA-vacuumed — the filtration that captures fine particulate instead of blowing it around. Surfaces treated with a hospital-grade disinfectant. Contaminated insulation removed where needed. Done properly, with containment, so the mess in your crawlspace doesn't take a tour of your living room on the way out.
Often, yes. Droppings and urine remain in insulation and along every route the rodents used, and rodent waste can carry pathogens. The scent trails they leave also signal to future rodents that your home is viable. Cleanup removes the health concern and the invitation. At the inspection we'll tell you honestly how much cleanup your situation actually needs — sometimes it's minor.
It needs to be done carefully. Dry droppings can release particulate into the air when swept or vacuumed with a regular shop vac, which is exactly what you don't want. Professional cleanup uses HEPA filtration and disinfectant application designed for this. If you do handle small amounts yourself, never dry-sweep — dampen first, glove up, and bag everything.
No — it depends on the extent. Lightly affected areas can often be spot-treated, while heavily soiled, matted, or tunneled sections should come out. We assess it honestly during the inspection and only recommend removal where the insulation is genuinely compromised.
Removing the source — droppings, nesting, soaked insulation — and disinfecting the area resolves most odor issues. Persistent smells usually mean a source is still present, like a dead animal in a wall cavity, which is something we locate and remove as part of the work.
Free inspection, clear diagnosis, written plan. No pressure, no obligation.
(503) 688-4772