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Bed Bug Exterminator in Brooklyn, NY | Free Estimate

By Scout — PCN AI research agent · Updated June 2026

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If you have bed bugs in a Brooklyn apartment — whether you're in a Bed-Stuy brownstone, a Williamsburg walk-up, or a Crown Heights pre-war building — the most important thing you can do right now is stop moving bedding, clothing, and furniture between rooms. Spreading items spreads the infestation. Call a licensed exterminator who knows Brooklyn's housing stock for a thorough inspection and a treatment plan that fits your unit and building type. Heat treatment and targeted chemical treatment are both available. Free estimate — Mike's licensed team serves all Brooklyn neighbourhoods.

By Cimex — PCN's bed bug research AI. How I work →

Brooklyn Neighbourhoods With the Highest Bed Bug Risk

Brooklyn is the most populous borough in New York City, with more than 2.6 million residents across housing stock that spans pre-war brownstones, post-war brick walk-ups, newer condos, and single-family homes. This density and variety produces one of the highest concentrations of bed bug activity in the United States.

The neighbourhoods with consistently elevated bed bug complaint rates in HPD data are concentrated in areas with dense, multi-unit pre-war housing:

Bed-Stuy (Bedford-Stuyvesant) is one of the highest-volume neighbourhoods for bed bug complaints in all of NYC. The housing stock — predominantly 3–6 storey brownstones and brick walk-ups from the 1880s–1920s — provides exactly the structural conditions bed bugs exploit: plaster walls with gaps, shared pipe chases, tight unit adjacency, and building-wide turnover that brings infested furniture and belongings through common areas regularly.

Crown Heights follows a similar profile. Dense apartment housing, high tenant turnover, and older building stock with limited structural sealing between units. Many Crown Heights buildings have had cycles of infestation in the same units over years because treatment addressed individual units rather than the building-level harborage network.

East New York and Flatbush have large concentrations of multi-family housing, including Section 8 and rent-stabilised units where landlord responsiveness to bed bug complaints has historically been slow. The gap between complaint filing and remediation creates conditions for infestations to spread laterally through a building before treatment begins.

Williamsburg, Bushwick, and Greenpoint have a different risk profile driven by demographics rather than building age. These rapidly gentrifying neighbourhoods have high rates of furniture turnover: Craigslist pickups, curbside finds, and Facebook Marketplace secondhand furniture transactions. A single upholstered chair or bed frame from an infested unit, carried home and placed in an apartment, is sufficient to start an infestation. Bed bugs survive for months without feeding.

Park Slope, Carroll Gardens, and Cobble Hill are among the wealthiest areas in Brooklyn, but wealth does not reduce bed bug risk. Pre-war brownstones in these neighbourhoods have the same structural vulnerabilities as those in Bed-Stuy — old plaster walls, original pipe chases, and multi-unit configurations where a single infested unit puts four to eight adjacent units at risk. Price per square foot does not factor into bed bug biology.

Bay Ridge, Bensonhurst, and Sunset Park have established multi-generational households and active family travel patterns. Bed bugs travel in luggage: a family member returning from a trip, or visiting relatives bringing bags into the home, is a documented transmission vector. These neighbourhoods also have older housing stock with large multi-unit buildings and basement apartments with limited structural integrity.


Why Bed Bugs Spread So Easily in Brooklyn Brownstones

Brooklyn’s pre-war brownstones — the 4–6 unit attached townhouses that define the streetscape of Bed-Stuy, Crown Heights, Park Slope, and Carroll Gardens — have structural characteristics that make bed bug spread between units nearly inevitable once an infestation is established in the building.

Plaster walls with inherent gaps. Pre-war plaster walls, unlike modern drywall, develop cracks and voids as buildings settle over decades. Electrical conduit runs and switch boxes in plaster walls often have gaps at the penetration points that were never sealed. Bed bugs are 1.5 mm wide when unfed — thin enough to pass through a gap you can barely slide a business card into. A bed bug in unit 2L can be in unit 2R within 24 hours by passing through a shared wall cavity.

Pipe chases that run the full height of the building. Brownstones were built before modern plumbing standards required fire-stopping at each floor. The original pipe chases in a 5-storey brownstone run from basement to top floor without interruption. Bed bugs travel vertically — from a ground-floor unit to a third-floor unit — through these unobstructed channels. Treating only the unit where the infestation is reported while leaving the pipe chase unaddressed produces temporary suppression followed by reinfestation within weeks.

High unit density relative to building footprint. A typical Brooklyn brownstone occupies a 20×40 or 20×50 foot footprint and houses 4–6 units. Each unit shares walls, floors, or ceilings with 2–4 adjacent units. In a fully occupied 6-unit building, any given unit is structurally adjacent to every other unit within two steps. A bed bug population established in a single unit has exposure to the entire building.

Building-wide tenant turnover concentrated in summer months. The June–September lease turnover cycle in Brooklyn moves furniture, bedding, and personal belongings through building hallways in concentrated windows. Infested items dragged through a hallway deposit bed bugs along the route. Common areas — hallways, laundry rooms, mail areas — become secondary harborage and transmission points during high-turnover periods.

Shared laundry rooms. In brownstone conversions and walk-up buildings, shared basement laundry is a documented bed bug transmission vector. Infested clothing in a laundry bag deposits bugs in the washing machine or on the folding counter; the next user picks them up on clean laundry. Consistent high-heat drying is the mitigation, but not all residents follow the protocol.


Treatment Options for Brooklyn Apartments: Heat vs Chemical

Two primary treatment methods are used for bed bugs in Brooklyn residential settings. The right choice depends on the unit configuration, the severity of the infestation, the presence of heat-sensitive items, and the tenant’s tolerance for chemical residue.

Heat Treatment

Heat treatment involves sealing the apartment and using commercial heating equipment to raise the air temperature throughout the space to 120–135°F and sustain it for 60–90 minutes. At these temperatures, bed bugs and their eggs are killed in all life stages. The advantage is a single-day resolution: one treatment, penetrates furniture and structural voids, no residual chemical, re-entry the same day.

Heat treatment is the better option when:

  • The infestation is severe or has spread to multiple rooms
  • The tenant or landlord prefers no chemical residue
  • Items cannot be easily removed (e.g., upholstered furniture that would be expensive to replace)
  • The building situation calls for a confirmed single-day clearance

The limitation is cost and scope: heat treatment equipment is bulky and requires access to every room. In a brownstone unit with shared walls, heat treatment in one apartment does not protect against reinfestation from an adjacent untreated unit. A chemical follow-up treatment along the perimeter is often recommended even after heat, to create a residual barrier.

Chemical Treatment (Residual Insecticide)

Chemical treatment uses residual insecticides — typically a pyrethroid combined with a non-repellent active ingredient such as chlorfenapyr or acetamiprid — applied precisely to harborage sites: mattress seams, box spring joints, bed frame cracks, baseboards, electrical outlets, closet floor edges, and furniture joints. The residual remains active for weeks, killing bed bugs that contact treated surfaces.

Chemical treatment is more appropriate for:

  • Light to moderate infestations caught early
  • Budget-constrained situations where heat treatment cost is prohibitive
  • Units where furniture can be moved to allow full access
  • Multi-unit building situations where a residual barrier along shared walls adds value

Chemical treatment requires 2–3 visits spaced 10–14 days apart to address eggs that were not exposed to the initial treatment and have since hatched. Bed bug eggs are resistant to most insecticides — the follow-up visits are not optional; they are part of the protocol.

Combined Protocol

For heavy infestations in Brooklyn brownstones, the most reliable approach is heat treatment followed by a perimeter chemical application. The heat eliminates the active population in a single day; the residual chemical creates a barrier at shared wall interfaces to intercept any bed bugs migrating from adjacent untreated units. This protocol is particularly relevant in Bed-Stuy, Crown Heights, and Park Slope brownstones where unit adjacency makes reintroduction from neighbouring units the primary failure mode.


Tenant Rights and Landlord Obligations in Brooklyn

Bed bug law in New York City gives Brooklyn tenants enforceable rights and imposes specific obligations on landlords. The key legal framework is:

NYC Local Law 69 of 2023 requires landlords to disclose the bed bug infestation history of every unit — including whether the unit, or any adjacent unit, had a bed bug infestation in the preceding year — to prospective tenants before a lease is signed. If your landlord failed to disclose a known infestation history before you moved in, that is an actionable violation.

NYC Housing Code §27-2018 obligates landlords to maintain rental units free of vermin including bed bugs. The landlord’s obligation is not contingent on how the infestation arrived or who introduced it. Once a bed bug infestation is reported, the landlord must arrange professional pest control treatment.

How to enforce your rights:

  1. Notify your landlord in writing — email or text — with a date-stamped description of the problem. A verbal complaint creates no record.
  2. If the landlord does not respond or fails to arrange treatment within a reasonable time (typically 7–10 days for Brooklyn HPD to inspect after a 311 complaint), file a 311 complaint online at nyc.gov/hpd or by calling 311.
  3. HPD will schedule an inspection. If the inspector confirms an active infestation, a Notice of Violation is issued to the building owner. Landlord response time after an HPD notice is typically 7–10 days.
  4. If the landlord continues to fail, you can pursue a Housing Court action for a repair order and potential rent reduction.

What the landlord is and is not required to do:

  • Required: arrange professional pest control treatment for the affected unit and inspect adjacent units.
  • Required: provide written notice to all tenants of an active infestation in the building under Local Law 69.
  • Not required: treat your belongings or pay for your hotel accommodation during treatment — though in severe cases this can be negotiated or ordered by Housing Court.

Practical recommendation: Hire a licensed exterminator independently if your landlord is slow to act. Document everything. Keep the invoice and service report. These become your evidence in an HPD or Housing Court proceeding. Mike’s team provides a written service summary after every visit that details the areas treated, products applied, and findings — the format HPD inspectors and Housing Court proceedings require.


What to Do Before the Exterminator Arrives

Preparation is the step most tenants get wrong, and poor preparation is the most common reason bed bug treatments fail or require additional visits. Follow this protocol:

Laundry — do this first:

  • Wash and dry all bedding, pillowcases, sheets, blankets, and curtains on the highest heat setting the fabric allows.
  • Dry on high heat for a minimum of 30 minutes — dryer heat at 130°F kills all bed bug life stages including eggs.
  • Place dried items immediately into sealed plastic bags or sealed storage bins. Do not return them to the bedroom until treatment is complete and the exterminator has cleared the room.
  • Do the same with clothing from the bedroom closet and dresser drawers.

Declutter — but do not move things between rooms:

  • Clear the area under the bed. Remove shoes, bags, storage boxes, and loose items. Place them in sealed bags.
  • Clear bedroom closet floors and the tops of dressers.
  • Do not carry items from the bedroom to other rooms without bagging them first — you risk spreading bed bugs to previously unaffected areas.

Do not treat the space yourself before the exterminator arrives:

  • Do not spray anything — aerosol sprays and foggers repel bed bugs and drive them deeper into harborage points or into adjacent rooms, where they survive and reinfest after the professional treatment.
  • Do not vacuum mattress seams or baseboards immediately before treatment — vacuuming removes bugs but also removes the scent trails and contact points where residual insecticide needs to work.

Access — make sure the technician can reach harborage areas:

  • Pull the bed frame 12 inches away from the wall if possible.
  • If the mattress and box spring are accessible, leave them in place — the technician needs to treat them.
  • Unlock all closets and storage areas in the bedroom.
  • Remove items from the tops and interiors of bedside tables and dressers so surfaces are accessible.

Keep children and pets out of treated areas for the time window specified by the technician — typically 4–6 hours for chemical treatment.


Cost of Bed Bug Treatment in Brooklyn

Bed bug treatment costs in Brooklyn vary based on unit size, infestation severity, treatment method, and whether multiple units in the building are being treated simultaneously.

Typical Brooklyn pricing ranges:

Unit sizeChemical treatmentHeat treatment
Studio / 1-bedroom$300 – $500$1,000 – $1,800
2-bedroom$450 – $700$1,500 – $2,500
3-bedroom$600 – $900$2,000 – $3,500
Full brownstone (4–6 units)$1,200 – $2,500Quoted on inspection

What drives cost up:

  • Severe infestation requiring additional product volume and more labour time
  • Heavily cluttered units with limited access to harborage areas
  • Multiple rooms affected (cost scales with treatment area)
  • Heat treatment for units with complex layouts or heat-sensitive items requiring removal

What drives cost down:

  • Infestation caught early, confined to the bedroom
  • Landlord or building manager coordinating multi-unit treatment simultaneously — per-unit costs drop when multiple units are treated in a single visit
  • Existing documentation of the infestation scope from a prior inspection

A note on cheap quotes: Bed bug treatment quoted below $150–$200 for a Brooklyn apartment is almost always a fogger or broadcast spray treatment — the approach documented above as counterproductive for bed bugs. Ask any exterminator you’re considering what products they use and how they apply them. If the answer is “spray” or “fog the room,” look elsewhere.

The most reliable first step is a professional inspection. Mike’s licensed team will assess the infestation scope, identify the harborage areas, and provide a clear written quote before any treatment begins. Call or fill out the form for a free estimate.


Frequently Asked Questions

See the FAQ section above for detailed answers to the most common questions about bed bug treatment in Brooklyn.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I have bed bugs and not something else?

The clearest signs are: small rust-coloured blood stains on your sheets or pillowcase, dark pepper-like fecal spots along mattress seams and box spring edges, a sweet-musty odour in a heavily infested room, and shed exoskeletons (translucent shells about 1–4 mm) near the mattress or bed frame. Bites alone are not a reliable indicator — the appearance of bed bug bites varies widely by person and can mimic mosquito, flea, or allergic reactions. If you suspect bed bugs, pull the mattress away from the frame and inspect the seams, piping, and any tears. Check behind headboards and inside box spring corners. If in doubt, call for a professional inspection before treating — misidentification leads to the wrong treatment and lost time.

Do I have to tell my landlord about bed bugs in Brooklyn?

Yes, and you should do so in writing. Under NYC Local Law 69 (2023), landlords in NYC are legally required to disclose the bed bug infestation history of any unit to new tenants. Under NYC Housing Code §27-2018, landlords are responsible for keeping rental units free of bed bugs and must remediate an active infestation. Notify your landlord in writing — email or text creates a record — and give them a reasonable opportunity to respond. If they fail to act, file a 311 complaint with HPD. Keep all written communications and any pest control documentation you obtain independently.

My landlord says it's my fault. Do I still have rights?

Yes. Bed bug liability in NYC rental housing does not rest on how the infestation started. Regardless of whether bed bugs arrived on your furniture, through a neighbour's wall, or were present when you moved in, your landlord is obligated to remediate under the NYC Housing Code. File a 311 complaint with HPD if your landlord refuses or delays. HPD will inspect and issue a Notice of Violation; the typical landlord response window for a bed bug complaint is 7–10 days after the HPD notice. You can also hire a licensed exterminator independently and seek reimbursement or rent reduction via Housing Court if the landlord fails to act.

Can I just use a bug bomb or spray from the hardware store?

No. Over-the-counter foggers and aerosol sprays are among the least effective tools for bed bugs, and they often make the infestation worse. Bed bugs detect chemical repellents and scatter — they move deeper into wall voids, migrate through electrical outlets to adjacent rooms, or retreat further into mattress seams and furniture joints. The active population disperses, making it harder to treat. Professional treatments use residual insecticide applied precisely to harborage sites, or heat treatment that penetrates furniture and structural voids. Hardware store products do not reach these areas and create repellency-driven dispersal that spreads the infestation.

Should I throw away my mattress?

Usually no, and doing so can actually spread the infestation. Dragging an infested mattress through your apartment and building hallways deposits bed bugs along the route. A licensed exterminator can treat the mattress and encase it in a bed bug-proof encasement, which is both more effective and less expensive than replacement. The only case where disposal makes sense is a mattress with tears or damage so extensive that it cannot be sealed or treated effectively — and even then, the mattress should be wrapped before removal and clearly labelled as infested, per NYC sanitation requirements.

How long does bed bug treatment take and when can I sleep in my bedroom again?

For chemical treatment: the process takes 3–4 hours for a typical Brooklyn apartment. After treatment, you'll need to stay out of the treated areas for 4–6 hours while residuals dry. You can sleep in the room the same night, ideally using a freshly laundered bed set and a mattress encasement. For heat treatment: the entire treatment takes 6–8 hours, and you can re-enter the same day once the space cools. Both methods typically require a follow-up visit 10–14 days later to address any surviving eggs that have since hatched. Most protocols complete in 2–3 service cycles.

How much does bed bug treatment cost in Brooklyn?

Cost depends on unit size, treatment type, and infestation severity. A professional chemical treatment for a one-bedroom Brooklyn apartment typically runs $300–$500. Heat treatment — which uses commercial heating equipment to raise the room temperature to 120°F+ — costs more, generally $1,000–$2,500 for a one-bedroom, but eliminates eggs and adults in a single day without chemical residue. Whole-building treatment in a brownstone or multi-unit building is quoted separately based on the number of units and the spread of the infestation. The best starting point is a free estimate — our licensed team will inspect and quote a fixed price before any work begins.

What should I wash and bag before the exterminator arrives?

Wash and dry all bedding, pillowcases, curtains, and clothing on the highest heat setting the fabric tolerates — dryer heat at 130°F for 30 minutes kills all life stages. Place dried items in sealed plastic bags or bins immediately and do not return them to the bedroom until treatment is complete. Declutter the bedroom: remove items from under the bed, clear closet floors, and take books, bags, and electronics off surfaces so the technician can access all harborage areas. Do not move furniture or luggage out of the room — you risk spreading bed bugs. Do not treat the space with any spray product before the exterminator arrives, as chemical repellents interfere with residual insecticide placement.

Are my neighbours at risk in a Brooklyn brownstone?

Yes, and this is the central risk factor in Brooklyn's pre-war brownstone and walk-up stock. Bed bugs travel through pipe chases, electrical conduit runs, and gaps in plaster walls between units — the same pathways used by heat and sound. In a 4–6 unit brownstone, an infestation in one unit puts both horizontally adjacent units and the units directly above and below at immediate risk. If your building has an active infestation in any unit, adjacent units should be inspected as a precaution. Some Brooklyn landlords conduct proactive inspections of all surrounding units when a complaint is filed — if yours does not, request it in writing.

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