Ant control in Crown Heights: what to know
Crown Heights mixes large pre-war apartment buildings along Eastern Parkway with brownstone side streets — the apartment stock drives heavy mouse and German-cockroach pressure through shared systems.
Dense commercial strips and high residential turnover sustain rodent pressure and make bed bugs a recurring concern in the rental buildings.
Older brownstones bring ant and 'water bug' issues from shared plumbing and damp basements.
How much does carpenter ant & ant control cost in Crown Heights?
$60–$500
National average: $150–$250 per visit (Angi). Typical single treatment: $80–$500 (small infestation). Bob Vila national range: $60–$215. Follow-up/retreatment visits: $40–$120.
US national figure — NYC typically runs higher.
Market range — not our quote
This is a market range synthesised from published cost guides — not a quote from this provider. The actual price depends on an in-person or photo-based inspection.
US national — NYC typically higher; no NYC-specific ant cost guide located, unlike bed bugs/rats/roaches.
What drives the price
- Infestation location (attic/basement/exterior walls cost more than kitchen/living space due to access difficulty)
- Severity
- Treatment method
- One-off vs follow-up retreatment
Signs you need ant control
- Coarse, fibrous frass near original masonry, a basement void, or garden-level walls
- Large black ants (12–25mm) foraging indoors, especially at night
- Rustling sounds inside a party wall or beneath original floor joists
- Winged swarmers appearing indoors in late winter or spring
- Soft or discoloured wood on original joists, sill plates, or basement framing
How we treat ant control in Crown Heights
Park Slope's brownstone and limestone row houses are largely late-19th to early-20th-century construction, with original timber floor joists and, on many blocks, masonry that's original or only partially renovated. That combination — old wood, old brick, mortar gaps that were never resealed — gives carpenter ants exactly the moisture-damaged material they need to excavate a colony.
The ants foraging across a kitchen counter are rarely the whole story. In row houses this old, the parent colony is more often in a damp basement or garden-level void, a deteriorated sill plate, or a section of original floor joist that's held moisture behind unrenovated masonry for years. Treating only what's visible upstairs is why a DIY approach tends to fail season after season.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Crown Heights and the surrounding Brooklyn area — including Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn Museum, Franklin Avenue — across ZIP codes 11213, 11225, 11238.