Field Testimonial 2026 Reading time: 22 min

How I Saved My Attic Framing from Carpenter Ants Without Paying $2,200 for a Pest Pro

"It was a November evening when Kevin heard something in the wall behind his bedroom closet. A dry, intermittent scratching. He assumed mice. Three days later, he found sawdust on the skylight sill. Six months later, the attic framing is treated, the gutter is fixed, and he spent $130 — not $2,200. This isn't a lucky break. It's a method."

Table of Contents

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The sawdust by the skylight

Kevin isn’t a carpenter or a pest control technician. A retired US Navy officer, he lives with his wife in a 1978 wood-frame colonial in Portsmouth, NH — pine and spruce framing, a skylight resealed three years ago, a well-maintained home with no pest problems in over two decades.

It started in November. An irregular, dry scratching behind the bedroom closet wall. Not every night. Not continuous. His wife said it was wind in the gutter. Possible. He didn’t think much of it.

Three days later, there was sawdust on the interior sill of the skylight. A small pile. Clean. Light wood fibers mixed with a few dark fragments. He swept it away. The next morning, it was back. This time, he photographed it before cleaning, and returned 48 hours later to check. The sawdust was there again, in exactly the same spot.

Note from Dr. Marie Sarin

That’s exactly the right instinct: photograph, sweep, check back 24–48 hours later. Sawdust that reappears confirms active excavation. Sawdust that doesn’t come back may be old — remnant of a past infestation or old construction work. That single observation changes everything about what comes next, and whether you treat now or keep monitoring.

Kevin’s sawdust matched the classic carpenter ant signature point for point: coarse, dry, mixed with insect body parts and wood fragments — nothing digested, nothing muddy. No mud tubes, no papery wood texture. Termites were ruled out at this stage. Our carpenter ant identification guide covers the differences in detail if you have any doubt about what you’re looking at.

The inspection: UV flashlight, mallet, screwdriver

Friday evening, Kevin went into the attic with two lights: his standard flashlight and a 395nm UV flashlight his neighbor uses for photography work. He went up at 10 pm. Carpenter ants are almost exclusively nocturnal — a daytime inspection of a calm, quiet attic tells you very little.

The UV light didn’t reveal anything dramatic. But in the darkness of the attic, it made certain sections of the rafters stand out — areas where ants had repeatedly traveled showed friction traces and moisture signatures that bright white light washed out. He identified two suspect zones he’d missed during his afternoon walk-through.

The first entry point was obvious: a side rafter to the left of the skylight frame, about 7 mm wide, facing the gutter. Fresh sawdust had accumulated just below it. The second was more subtle: a hairline crack in the corner paneling, with a few ants still moving at 10:30 pm.

He tested the wood with a rubber mallet. Hollow sound over roughly 24 inches on the first rafter. He pushed a flathead screwdriver in without forcing — it sank about 5/16 of an inch without meaningful resistance. Not catastrophic. But actively excavating. He measured: 24 inches on the first section, 14 inches on the second. Neither was load-bearing.

What Kevin used for the inspection

  • Standard flashlight (gallery spotting)
  • UV flashlight 395nm (nocturnal attic inspection)
  • Rubber mallet (hollow-sound wood test)
  • Flathead screwdriver (structural resistance test)
  • Tape measure (mapping affected area)
  • Phone camera (before/after documentation)

What Dr. Sarin adds to this list

  • Wood moisture meter — measure moisture content (target: below 19%)
  • Painter’s tape — mark frass zones as reference indicators for follow-up checks
  • Notes or voice memos — document each inspection with date, location, observations
  • Nocturnal inspection required: between 9 pm and midnight
See wood moisture meters on Amazon →

The UV flashlight: useful, not magic

Some forums claim UV light makes carpenter ants glow or reveals infestations instantly. It doesn’t work that way. UV at 395nm is most useful for inspecting dark attic spaces — it brings out moisture traces and frass deposits on wood that white light flattens. Kevin found it genuinely helpful for spotting the second entry point. It’s a practical complement to a standard flashlight, not a replacement. A rubber mallet and screwdriver will always be more diagnostic than any light.

See UV flashlights on Amazon →

The quotes: $1,800 and $2,400

Kevin did things in the right order. He called two NPMA-certified pest management companies with strong Google reviews in the Seacoast NH area. First quote: $1,800 for an attic treatment — gel, dust, and wood surface application, one-year warranty. Second quote: $2,400, two-year warranty, written report, “adjacent zones treated as a precaution.”

Both technicians saw what Kevin had seen. Both confirmed an active, localized infestation on non-structural wood. One mentioned a “preventive treatment of healthy adjacent framing.” The other suggested “monitoring deeper sections if necessary.” In both cases, Kevin understood that the zone actually requiring treatment was exactly what he’d already mapped: about 38 inches of rafter total.

He didn’t question the legitimacy of those prices. A licensed PMP carries liability, uses commercial-volume products, and backs their work with a written warranty — that has real value. But he decided that learning to do this himself wasn’t irrational. The zone was small. The damage was clear. The products existed.

”When the second tech offered to treat ‘the adjacent healthy wood as a precaution,’ I asked what that added to the quote. He said $200 more. That’s when I started looking at what I could actually do myself.”

Kevin, Portsmouth, NH

OptionCostWarrantyWhat’s included
Company A (Seacoast NH)$1,8001 yearGel + dust + wood surface application
Company B (Seacoast NH)$2,4002 yearsGel + dust + wood + adjacent zones + written report
Kevin’s DIY (actual cost)$130Personal monitoring — 6 monthsGel + dust + wood treatment + gutter repair ($75 labor — not included by either pro quote)

The decision to treat himself

That Saturday evening, Kevin spent two hours reading our carpenter ant guide. He worked through the section on whether a DIY approach was reasonable for his situation. Four conditions: localized area, non-structural wood, accessible galleries, identifiable moisture source. His situation checked all four. He re-read the structural risk section to be certain.

What convinced him wasn’t the savings. It was understanding exactly what the professionals were going to do — and finding that the products were available. Advion Ant Gel, Delta Dust, and a borate wood treatment are all sold directly to homeowners. No EPA applicator license is required for personal-use treatment on your own property.

He did check one specific point: whether there were any legal complications. Carpenter ants in New Hampshire carry no mandatory reporting or treatment obligations. Had Kevin been dealing with termites, the calculus would have been different — many states have pest disclosure requirements for real estate transactions, and some require licensed professionals for termite treatment. But carpenter ants? No restriction on DIY treatment on your own property in NH.

When DIY is not advisable

  • Load-bearing member affected — ridge beam, main girder, floor joist, structural post
  • Affected area exceeds 5 feet or spans multiple separate structural members
  • Wood crumbles or splinters under minimal screwdriver pressure (advanced damage)
  • You can’t confidently rule out termites — signs are ambiguous or mud tubes are present
  • Indoor swarmers have emerged for multiple consecutive springs

If your home is in a high-termite-pressure state (Florida, California, Texas, Gulf Coast), consider having a licensed inspector rule out termites before treating any wood pest yourself.

The exact kit: 3 core products, ~$130

Kevin ordered Sunday morning and received his shipment Tuesday. He didn’t over-buy. Three active products, proper PPE, and nothing else. He resisted the urge to add “something extra as a precaution” — the classic mistake that muddies signals and makes it impossible to know what’s actually working.

🧪

Advion Ant Gel

Syngenta — Indoxacarb 0.05%

Applied on foraging trails around the two identified entry points and along the exterior skylight frame. Micro-drops of 2–3 mm placed at gallery edges and active travel paths. Slow-acting by design: gives workers time to carry the toxicant back to the queen before dying.

~$38
View on Amazon
💧

1-Quart Hand Trigger Sprayer

For precision insecticide application

Used to inject a diluted deltamethrin solution directly into accessible gallery openings. The narrow nozzle delivers a controlled, fine stream well-suited to ¼–½ inch openings. Kevin supplemented this with a bulb duster for the deeper attic rafter galleries where the sprayer couldn’t reach effectively.

~$10
View on Amazon
🔦

UV Flashlight — 395nm

Nocturnal attic inspection

Used for the initial inspection and Day 14 follow-up check. Helped Kevin identify the second entry point in the corner paneling that his standard flashlight had missed. Less critical than gel or dust — but genuinely useful for dark attic spaces and nocturnal checks where moisture-stained wood tells a clearer story under UV.

~$14
View on Amazon

Delta Dust — Deltamethrin 0.05%

Blown into galleries with a bulb duster. Contact-kill action on workers present inside the wood. Registered for indoor use.

~$25Amazon

Borate Wood Treatment (Tim-bor / Bora-Care)

Brushed onto repaired and adjacent sound framing once activity drops. Penetrates wood fiber — insecticidal and fungicidal protection against reinfestation.

~$22Amazon

PPE: Nitrile Gloves + N95 Mask

Required for handling Delta Dust. Deltamethrin dust should never be applied without respiratory protection — no exceptions, even for a short application.

~$18Amazon

Kevin’s total kit: ~$127

Advion ($38) + Trigger sprayer ($10) + UV flashlight ($14) + Delta Dust ($25) + Borate treatment ($22) + PPE ($18)

Savings: $1,673 vs. the lower quote; $2,273 vs. the higher quote. Gutter repair ($75 in labor) not included in either pro estimate — a cost Kevin would have had to pay separately regardless.

Day-by-day protocol

Kevin received his order Tuesday evening and started immediately. Not impatience — logic: every night of delay was more excavation. Starting treatment the same evening he received the products meant his Day 3 and Day 7 checks would give him clean data.

D0

Tuesday evening — Setup and photo reference

PPE on before entering the attic. Swept all visible sawdust. Applied painter’s tape strips below both active zones — these serve as frass indicators for all subsequent checks. Photographed each zone with timestamps.

D0

Tuesday 9:30 pm — Advion gel application

Eight gel points — micro-drops of 2–3 mm: four around the visible gallery openings on the main rafter, two on foraging trails along the exterior skylight frame, two near the corner paneling crack. Kevin resisted applying it “everywhere as a precaution.” Fewer, well-placed drops outperform a carpet of bait the ants don’t encounter.

D1

Wednesday evening — Delta Dust into galleries

N95 and gloves on before entering. Bulb duster used to blow Delta Dust into both accessible gallery openings. Trigger sprayer used to apply diluted deltamethrin around the perimeter of the gallery mouths. He noted that several ants had already consumed a portion of the gel placed the night before — a positive sign. He did not reload yet.

D3

Friday — First check

Painter’s tape shows debris on both zones — activity still present, but reduced. He reloads the two gel points with the most consumption. Notes that the scratching sound at night seems less frequent. Doesn’t draw conclusions yet.

D7

Week 1 — Targeted check

Painter’s tape below the main rafter opening: no fresh sawdust. The second zone (corner paneling) still shows residual activity. Kevin reloads gel on that zone only. Nighttime scratching has been absent for three days.

D14

Week 2 — Complete quiet

Both zones are silent. No sawdust on the tape strips. No sound at night. Kevin places one final micro-drop of gel as a precautionary measure, then contacts his roofing contractor to schedule the gutter repair. The real fix starts here.

M1

Month 1 — Wood treatment and gutter repair

Gutter repaired ($75 in contractor labor — new gutter joint and reattachment). Kevin brushes Tim-bor onto the affected and adjacent sound framing with a chip brush. He lets it dry 48 hours before closing up the attic hatch. Wood moisture meter reading: 14%, down from over 23% on initial inspection.

What Kevin deliberately did NOT do — and why

  • No broadcast spray — would have repelled ants without reaching the colony, and disrupted the bait’s transfer mechanism
  • No gallery sealing before Day 14 — premature sealing traps dead ants but blocks workers from carrying gel toxicant to the queen
  • No preventive treatment of healthy, distant framing
  • No detergent cleaning of treated zones during the first two weeks — would have degraded the gel bait

Calculator: my estimated DIY budget

Your situation may differ from Kevin’s. Four questions to estimate whether a DIY approach makes sense for your specific case — and what budget to expect.

💵 Estimate your DIY vs. professional budget

4 questions to see if your situation is similar to Alan's — and how much you could save.

1/4 — What is the visible extent of the infestation?

Results at Day 14, Month 3, and Month 6

Day 14

Zero activity

No fresh sawdust on either tape strip. No nighttime sounds. Gel consumed at 6 of 8 application points — indicating strong forager uptake.

Month 3

Confirmed

Nocturnal UV check: no new frass, no ant activity. Treated framing is dry and stable. Gutter repair has been in place for 6 weeks.

Month 6

Resolved

No return. Wood moisture meter: steady at 14%. The treated zone is no longer an attractive nesting site for any new colony.

What Kevin took away from this experience wasn’t just the savings. It was understanding the mechanism. The next time he sees sawdust in his attic, he’ll know exactly what to look for, what to measure, and what to do. “It’s like replacing a radiator hose on your car. The first time it’s intimidating. Second time, it’s two hours of work.”

Dr. Sarin’s takeaways

Analysis — Dr. Marie Sarin, entomologist

Kevin emailed me photos in December. I looked at the frass: coarse, clean, with the characteristic fragments of Camponotus excavation — no soil, no mud, no papery texture. The affected zone was small. The wood wasn’t structural. The moisture source was identifiable. His situation met every criterion for a reasonable DIY approach.

What I found most sound in his method was that he didn’t over-treat. Many homeowners — panicked about carpenter ants in the framing — apply everything at once, saturate zones as a precaution, and re-treat weekly because “it doesn’t seem to be working fast enough.” Kevin waited, observed, and reloaded only where justified.

The other point I always come back to: the gutter. Without that repair, the wood would have stayed at 23% moisture. Two or three years later, a new colony would have recolonized exactly the same spot. Treating the ants without treating the moisture source is winning a battle and losing the campaign.

👷

Mike T. — NPMA QualityPro-certified PMP (22 years experience, state-licensed)

“What Kevin did is exactly what I’d do myself if this were my own home. Small area, accessible non-structural framing, moisture source already identified. A licensed professional brings liability coverage, a written warranty, and documented accountability — those have real value. But the products are the same. The method is the same. What you’re paying for professionally is the guarantee that everything was done correctly, and someone accountable if it wasn’t. For a zone like this one, I understand the choice completely.”

🛒 My DIY carpenter ant kit

Check the products you already own. Remaining budget: $127

Check the products already in your garage. The remaining budget recalculates automatically.

Full kit total: $127, saving $1,673 to $2,273 vs. the professional quotes Alan received.

Price comparison: DIY vs professional

Professional pricing varies by region, site accessibility, and the true extent of the infestation. The ranges below are based on quotes submitted by clearhomepests.com readers since 2024 across the continental US.

SituationEstimated DIY costObserved pro quote rangeRecommendation
Area under 2 ft, non-structural, accessible (Kevin’s case)$80–$140$1,600–$2,400DIY viable
Area 2–5 ft, non-structural, moderate access$160–$300$1,900–$3,200DIY possible + structural opinion advised
Multiple zones, difficult access, structural status uncertain$300–$550$2,400–$4,800Pro recommended
Load-bearing member involved or full attic framingNot advisable$3,200–$8,500+Professional required

How to get a useful professional quote

  • Get at least two quotes from NPMA-member or QualityPro-certified companies — licensing standards vary by state
  • Ask for an itemized quote: zones treated, active ingredients with concentrations, warranty terms in writing
  • Be cautious about proposals to treat “adjacent healthy zones as a precaution” without written justification
  • If you’ve already mapped the infestation yourself, share your measurements and photos — it reduces guesswork and prevents the initial estimate from being padded

Continue reading

Frequently Asked Questions

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What does professional carpenter ant treatment typically cost?
Professional carpenter ant treatment in the US typically ranges from $1,200 to $3,500 for localized infestations, and from $3,200 to $8,500+ for full structural treatment or difficult-access attics. These figures reflect quotes shared by clearhomepests.com readers since 2024. Always request at least two itemized quotes from NPMA-member or QualityPro-certified companies, specifying zones treated, active ingredients, and warranty duration.
Can I really treat carpenter ants myself?
Yes, under specific conditions: the affected area is small (under 2–3 feet), non-structural, accessible, and the moisture source is identifiable and fixable. Advion Ant Gel, Delta Dust, and borate wood treatments are all sold to homeowners — no EPA applicator license is required for use on your own property. If a load-bearing member is involved, the area exceeds 4–5 feet, or you can't confidently rule out termites, get a professional assessment first. For cases like Kevin's — localized, non-structural, moisture source clear — a well-executed DIY protocol using professional-grade products delivers excellent results.
Is Advion Ant Gel effective on carpenter ants specifically?
Yes. Advion (indoxacarb, Syngenta) works via a cascading transfer effect: foragers eat the bait and carry the active ingredient back to the colony before dying, reaching workers and queens that never contact the bait directly. For carpenter ant infestations inside wood, gel should not be used alone — combine it with Delta Dust in accessible galleries and a borate wood treatment on repaired surfaces. Gel alone does not reach the colony nesting inside the rafter or beam.
Is a UV flashlight actually useful for finding carpenter ants?
Helpful, but not essential. UV light at 395nm reveals moisture traces and frass deposits on wood surfaces that bright white light can wash out — especially useful in dark attics. Kevin used it to spot a second entry point he'd missed during his daytime walk-through. A good flashlight plus a rubber mallet is the non-negotiable minimum; a UV flashlight is a practical upgrade for nocturnal inspections of unlit crawl spaces and attics.
What equipment works best for treating carpenter ant galleries?
A 1-quart hand trigger sprayer works well for injecting diluted deltamethrin solution into accessible gallery openings of ¼–½ inch. For deeper galleries, a bulb duster (hand duster) is more effective — it propels Delta Dust deep into the cavity without wetting the wood. Kevin used both: trigger sprayer for surface-level galleries, bulb duster for the deeper rafter galleries he couldn't reach directly.
How long should I monitor after a DIY carpenter ant treatment?
Minimum 12 months. Clear all visible sawdust on Day 0 and photograph the areas. Check weekly for the first month — no fresh frass at Day 14 and Day 30 is a strong positive sign. Confirm at months 3 and 6. If the moisture source has been corrected, the risk of reinfestation is low. Without that repair, a new colony can recolonize the same wood within 2–3 years.