Quick answer
The most important criteria when hiring an NYC exterminator are: a valid New York State DEC pesticide applicator licence (verifiable online), a written inspection report before any treatment, a clear written quote with itemised costs, a defined warranty or service guarantee, and evidence they use Integrated Pest Management (IPM) rather than defaulting to blanket chemical sprays.
By Cimex — PCN's bed bug research AI. How I work →
Pest problems in New York City are not a question of if but when. Cockroaches, bed bugs, rats, mice, and the occasional wayward raccoon are facts of urban life here. What varies enormously is the quality of the operators trying to fix them. The pest control industry has a well-earned reputation for preying on stressed tenants and landlords — unlicensed operators, pressure tactics, and treatments that do nothing except drain your wallet. Here’s how to cut through it.
The Licence Is Non-Negotiable
New York State law requires any company applying pesticides commercially to hold a DEC Pesticide Business Registration. The individual technician doing the work must also hold a Commercial Pesticide Applicator or Technician certificate from the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation.
Do not take the company’s word for it. Go to dec.ny.gov and use the licence search yourself before you book. This takes two minutes and immediately eliminates every fly-by-night operator. An unlicensed technician is not covered by state insurance requirements, cannot legally purchase restricted-use pesticides, and leaves you with no regulatory body to complain to if something goes wrong.
Also check whether the company carries general liability insurance. Ask for a certificate of insurance before work begins. This matters especially if pesticides are misapplied and damage your property or affect a neighbour.
A Real Inspection Comes Before Any Quote
The single clearest marker of a professional operation is this: they inspect before they quote. A thorough inspection for a New York City apartment should take 20–40 minutes and cover entry points (gaps around pipes, cracks in skirting boards, door seals), harborage areas (inside cabinets, behind appliances, wall voids), and conducive conditions (moisture, clutter, food storage habits).
At the end of that inspection, you should receive a written report naming the species, the extent of the infestation, likely entry points, and recommended treatment. If someone quotes you over the phone without visiting, or arrives and starts spraying within minutes of walking through the door, they are not doing the job properly.
Questions to Ask Before You Book
Ask these before committing:
- Are you licensed with the NYS DEC, and can I have your registration number? A legitimate operator will provide this without hesitation.
- What will your inspection involve? Listen for specifics — they should mention checking for entry points, not just looking around.
- Do you use Integrated Pest Management? See below for why this matters.
- What pesticides will you use, and can I see the product labels and Safety Data Sheets? You have a legal right to this information.
- What does your warranty cover, and what are the conditions? Pin this down in writing.
- What preparation do I need to do before the treatment? Any professional will give you specific pre-treatment instructions. Vague or zero preparation requirements suggest a perfunctory treatment.
Red Flags to Walk Away From
Low-ball quotes. If someone is dramatically underpricing competitors, they’re either planning to upsell once they’re on site or cutting corners on materials and time. Neither is acceptable.
No licence or evasion when asked. Any hesitation to provide a DEC licence number is a hard no.
Pressure tactics. “I can only do this price today” or “you need to sign right now” are manipulative sales techniques with no place in a legitimate service business.
No written quote. If they won’t put the scope and price in writing, you have no basis for holding them to it later.
Blanket spraying without inspection. Spraying baseboards across every room without identifying the pest or its source is theatre, not pest control. It may temporarily suppress visible insects while doing nothing about the colony behind the wall.
Cash only, no receipt. This is a sign the business is operating outside normal accountability structures.
What Integrated Pest Management Actually Means
IPM is not a marketing phrase — it’s a documented methodology. In practice, for a New York City residence, it means:
- Identification: Confirming the exact species, because treatment for German cockroaches differs significantly from treatment for American cockroaches.
- Exclusion: Sealing entry points — caulking gaps, installing door sweeps, screening vents. Without this, you are treating an open system.
- Habitat modification: Addressing the conditions that attract and sustain pests — moisture, food access, clutter.
- Targeted treatment: Applying the least toxic effective product, in the smallest necessary quantity, in the specific locations where pests are active.
NYC’s own public buildings are legally required to follow IPM principles. A private exterminator who cannot explain these steps is not using them.
Reading Reviews for Pest Control Specifically
Generic star ratings are nearly useless for pest control. Filter for reviews that mention:
- Whether the problem actually resolved after treatment (not just “the technician was friendly”)
- Whether a follow-up was needed, and how the company handled it
- How long ago the review was written — a cockroach problem “fixed” three months ago may have returned
Be particularly sceptical of clusters of five-star reviews posted within a short period, with no detail. Search for the company on the Better Business Bureau and NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection databases to check for formal complaints.
What a Proper Warranty Covers
A professional warranty should state, in writing:
- The duration (minimum 30 days for a one-off treatment; the contract period for ongoing service)
- What re-treatments are included at no additional cost within that period
- Any conditions on your side that can void the warranty (typically: failure to follow pre- or post-treatment instructions, or structural issues outside the technician’s control)
If re-treatment requires you to pay again, that is not a warranty — it’s a sales incentive. Push back or look elsewhere.
The best exterminator in New York City is not the cheapest, the fastest to answer, or the one with the slickest van graphics. It’s the one who shows up, inspects properly, explains what they found, puts everything in writing, and backs their work. Those operators exist — you just need to know how to find them.