US Trends

how to get rid of carpenter ants

Carpenter ants are destructive but you can usually eliminate them with a mix of locating the nest, targeted baits/dusts, and fixing moisture/wood issues so they don’t come back.

Quick Scoop

1. Confirm they’re really carpenter ants

Before going to war, make sure you have the right enemy.

  • Large ants (often 6–12 mm), usually black or dark brown.
  • Fine sawdust-like material (called “frass”) pushed out of holes in wood.
  • Smooth, clean tunnels in wood (unlike termites, which pack their tunnels with mud).
  • Often active at night, especially in kitchens, bathrooms, or near damp wood.

If you’re unsure or see major structural damage, call a licensed pest professional for an inspection.

2. Find the nest (or at least the trails)

You get rid of carpenter ants by killing the colony , not just the workers you see.

  • Follow ant trails at night with a flashlight; look along baseboards, around sinks, and near windows/doors.
  • Look for frass and tiny holes in wood near: window frames, door frames, decks, porches, crawlspaces, and around plumbing.
  • Outside, check stumps, landscape timbers, rotting fence posts, and firewood piles.

You may find a “satellite nest” in your house (in damp wood) and a main nest outside in a tree or stump.

3. DIY kill methods (step‑by‑step)

Step A – Use baits so they carry poison home

Baits are one of the most effective ways to wipe out the colony because workers feed the queen and brood.

  • Use carpenter‑ant or general ant baits (granular or gel) labeled for indoor use.
  • Place baits: along trails, near sinks, behind appliances, around baseboards, and where you see regular traffic.
  • If they ignore one bait, switch between sweet (sugar/honey-based) and protein/grease baits; their preferences change with the season.
  • Do not spray over or near baits, or you’ll repel ants and stop them from feeding.

A common home mix people discuss in forums:

“Mix 1 tablespoon borax with 2–3 tablespoons sugar, dissolve in very hot water, and drip small puddles along trails so ants carry it back.”

If you try this: keep it completely away from kids and pets, and only use where no one else can contact it.

Step B – Dusts and powders into voids

Dusts work well when you know where ants are nesting inside walls, hollow doors, or structural voids.

  • Boric acid powder or labeled insecticidal dusts can be puffed into wall voids, behind baseboards, and inside cavities where you see frass.
  • Some guides recommend drilling small holes into wall cavities near activity, then applying dust so it spreads inside the void.
  • Diatomaceous earth can be applied to cracks, crevices, and trails; it kills by dehydrating ants but must stay dry, and you should avoid breathing the dust.

Always follow the product label, use a dust mask and gloves, and avoid electrical boxes unless a professional has instructed you.

Step C – Targeted sprays and foams (with care)

Sprays and foams are for nests and entry points, not for random surface spraying indoors.

  • Non‑repellent foams or sprays (sold for carpenter ants) can be injected into cracks, crevices, and wall voids so ants walk through them and spread the active ingredient to the colony.
  • Outside, apply a labeled non‑repellent perimeter spray 1–3 feet up the foundation and 1–3 feet out on the soil, plus around doors, windows, and where pipes/wires enter the house.
  • Avoid strong repellent sprays until you’re sure the colony is under control, because they can drive ants deeper into walls or to new nesting spots.

If you are not comfortable with chemicals or have kids/pets, this is a good stage to consider a pro instead.

4. Natural / low‑toxicity options

If you’d rather minimize synthetic pesticides, you still have tools, though they may be slower.

  • Boric acid: low‑toxicity to humans when used correctly, but still keep away from children and pets; use in enclosed areas or as part of baits.
  • Diatomaceous earth (labeled for insect control): dust into cracks, along baseboards, and around suspected nest areas; reapply if it gets wet.
  • Physical removal: vacuum visible ants and frass, then discard the bag outdoors; cut out and replace heavily damaged wood when feasible.

Essential oils (like peppermint) can help repel ants from specific spots, but they do not usually eliminate a carpenter ant colony by themselves.

5. Fix what attracted them (prevention)

Carpenter ants love damp, decaying wood and easy access to food and moisture.

  • Dry out the structure
    • Fix roof, siding, and plumbing leaks promptly.
* Improve ventilation in crawl spaces, basements, and attics; use dehumidifiers in chronically damp areas.
  • Remove attractive wood
    • Replace rotted trim, deck boards, and sill plates; treat vulnerable wood with preservatives if recommended.
* Move firewood, lumber, and mulch piles away from the house and elevate them off the ground.
* Remove old tree stumps and heavily decayed landscape timbers near the foundation.
  • Cut off “ant highways”
    • Trim tree limbs, shrubs, and vines that touch your roof, eaves, or siding; ants often use these as bridges.
  • Seal entry points
    • Caulk gaps around windows, doors, siding joints, and where utility lines enter.
* Install or repair weatherstripping and door sweeps.
  • Food and crumbs
    • Store pantry items in sealed containers and clean up spills quickly.
* Clean under appliances and don’t leave pet food out overnight.

6. When to call a pro

DIY is often enough for light to moderate infestations, but professional treatment is safer and more reliable if:

  • You see large numbers of ants for more than a couple of weeks despite baiting and dusting.
  • You suspect structural damage (sagging floors, soft window sills, hollow‑sounding beams).
  • The nest location is unknown but activity is heavy in multiple areas.
  • You’re not comfortable using insecticides or drilling into walls.

Pros can use specialized non‑repellent products, wall‑void foams, and detailed inspections that homeowners usually can’t match.

Simple “game plan” summary

  1. Confirm it’s carpenter ants and track their main trails.
  1. Put out appropriate baits along those trails and avoid spraying over them.
  1. Dust or foam likely nest voids and problem areas if you can safely access them.
  1. Fix moisture problems, replace rotten wood, trim back vegetation, and seal gaps so they don’t come back.
  1. Call a pro if activity continues or you see signs of serious damage.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.