How to Inspect, Prevent and Respond to RatsFollow the five steps below to manage rats on your property. {Reproduced with permission from the New York City Health Department }
Step One: Look for Evidence
Anyone can inspect for rats. Walk around your property and look for evidence of rat activity. Fill out an inspection form to document inspection findings. You can give this to your landlord or pest management professional for follow-up.
Rats come out at night, so walk around outside with a flashlight after dark. This will help you see where rats are going, so you can check for burrows when it gets light.
Step Two: Clean UpCleaning up and getting rid of clutter is an easy and effective way to prevent rats.
Wash Away Droppings and Track Marks
Rats communicate and attract each other through their urine and droppings.
Step Three: Starve ThemRats only need one ounce of food each day. Don’t make your garbage their food.
Manage Your Garbage
Step Four: Shut Them OutRats chew holes into buildings, and can squeeze through cracks and holes as small as 1.25 cm (1/2 inch). To keep rats out for good, seal all holes and cracks in foundations, walls, floors, underneath doors and around windows. Most repairs can be done by maintenance staff, superintendents, handy persons or pest control professionals. Materials are inexpensive and available at most hardware stores.
Seal Cracks and Small Holes
Step Five: Wipe Them OutRodent BaitingRodent bait is a common way of controlling rats but applying these poisons is a job for professionals. If you use a pesticide to control your pest problem, read the label to make sure you are choosing the right product for the right pest. Follow all label directions and warnings carefully. Always look for a Pest Control Products (PCP) number on the label so you know the product has been approved by Health Canada https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/pest-control-tips/rats-mice.html
Make sure your pest control company follows these guidelines:
Choosing and Working with a Pest Control CompanyHow to Find the Right CompanyAsk Around and Interview Companies
Step One: Look for Evidence
Anyone can inspect for rats. Walk around your property and look for evidence of rat activity. Fill out an inspection form to document inspection findings. You can give this to your landlord or pest management professional for follow-up.
Rats come out at night, so walk around outside with a flashlight after dark. This will help you see where rats are going, so you can check for burrows when it gets light.
- Look for places where rats live. Most rats live in nests or burrows. Burrows are holes in dirt or concrete from 2.54 to 10.16 cm (one to four inches) wide, with smooth edges. Burrows can be found under bushes and plants. They will often have an entrance and exit hole.
- Look for droppings. Droppings are often found close to garbage. If they're moist and dark, it's a sign that rats are in the area.
- Look for holes and gnaw marks on wood and plastic garbage cans.
- Check walls and grass for signs of runways. Rats run along the same path many times a day, leaving dark greasy track marks along walls and worn down paths in grass.
Step Two: Clean UpCleaning up and getting rid of clutter is an easy and effective way to prevent rats.
Wash Away Droppings and Track Marks
Rats communicate and attract each other through their urine and droppings.
- Sweep up droppings, and clean up dark greasy track marks. Wash down the area with water and a mild bleach solution (one part bleach, 10 parts water).
- Talk to your neighbors and work together to clean up, so rats don’t move from one place to another.
- Remove (and recycle) piles of newspapers, paper bags, cardboard and bottles.
- Clear out your basement and yard.
- Store items away from walls and off the ground.
- Keep tall grass, bushes, shrubs and mulch away from building foundations.
- Pull out ivy around burrows.
- Keep ground bare six inches from buildings, and trim under shrubs.
- Make space between plants, and avoid dense planting.
- Keep gardens free of weeds and trash.
Step Three: Starve ThemRats only need one ounce of food each day. Don’t make your garbage their food.
Manage Your Garbage
- Bring garbage cans and bags to the curb as close to pickup time as possible. Leaving them out overnight invites rats.
- Make sure you have enough garbage cans to hold trash between pickups.
- Use hard plastic or metal cans with tight fitting lids.
- Insist that tenants put garbage inside cans
- Keep all food in tightly sealed containers.
- Don’t put food out for stray cats, pigeons or squirrels.
Step Four: Shut Them OutRats chew holes into buildings, and can squeeze through cracks and holes as small as 1.25 cm (1/2 inch). To keep rats out for good, seal all holes and cracks in foundations, walls, floors, underneath doors and around windows. Most repairs can be done by maintenance staff, superintendents, handy persons or pest control professionals. Materials are inexpensive and available at most hardware stores.
Seal Cracks and Small Holes
- Seal cracks and small holes with caulk. Or use roofing cement – it’s durable and easily applied with a caulking gun.
- Close gaps under doors with rodent-resistant metal door sweeps.
- Close window gaps with metal flashing
- Put screens on vents, especially on lower floors.
- Use mortar or ready-mix cement to fill gaps and holes in cement and stone foundations. Cover large holes with metal lath or screening, then seal with mortar or cement.
- Cover floor drains and vents with heavy-duty metal screening, secured with masonry nails or cement.
- Install sheet metal kick plates on the lower exterior of doors where rats have been gnawing or entering the building. Install metal thresholds underneath.
- Use door sweeps to keep gaps under doors smaller than a quarter inch.
- Consider installing heavy gauge sheet metal between foundations and the ground.
- Seal pipes leading into walls with escutcheon plates (“pipe collars”). Check pipes regularly for leaks.
- Close burrows in soil by filling with soil and tamping down with a shovel, or by stepping on them.
- Close burrows in cracked or broken sidewalks with metal filler and cement.
Step Five: Wipe Them OutRodent BaitingRodent bait is a common way of controlling rats but applying these poisons is a job for professionals. If you use a pesticide to control your pest problem, read the label to make sure you are choosing the right product for the right pest. Follow all label directions and warnings carefully. Always look for a Pest Control Products (PCP) number on the label so you know the product has been approved by Health Canada https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/pest-control-tips/rats-mice.html
Make sure your pest control company follows these guidelines:
- Always read and follow the manufacturer’s label, and use the smallest effective amount of bait.
- Use disposable gloves when handling bait, and wash your hands afterwards.
- Use secured bait chunks (called bait “blocks”) inside tamper resistant bait stations. Secure or anchor bait stations to the ground or fence with cement, caulk or wire.
- Place bait stations on the same path as rats normally travel – often along building walls and fence lines. Since rats always travel on the same path, they’re more likely to eat from stations along it.
- Store and place bait stations where children and pets can’t get to them.
- Replace bait after it’s been eaten. Leave bait stations and bait in place for at least two weeks after all rat activity has stopped. Monitor on a monthly basis.
Choosing and Working with a Pest Control CompanyHow to Find the Right CompanyAsk Around and Interview Companies
- Ask your neighbors and friends for referrals.
- Look in the phone book and online for “integrated pest management” services. These companies are more likely to inspect, monitor and make recommendations and repairs.
- Interview companies. Ask for references, including previous customers.
- Inspect your property before giving you a price quote.
- Give you a written inspection report, and an action plan.
- Base quotes on inspection findings, not flat fees. The cheapest services are rarely the best.
- Make referrals for structural repair, if required.
- Visit often until the job is done.
- Put bait in tamper-resistant containers.
- Employ qualified, well-trained exterminators.
- Educate you on how to prevent rats.
- Work with you until rats are gone.
- Walk around with the pest control professional during each visit, and keep track of work.
- Agree on a service plan and cost.
- Follow-up on referrals and recommendations.