Quick answer
Borate treats the wood itself, making it unpalatable to termites that reach it, while a soil-applied liquid termiticide creates a treated zone in the ground that foraging termites have to cross to reach a structure — the two work on different parts of the problem and are often used together rather than as substitutes.
By Cimex — PCN's bed bug research AI. How I work →
Two different treatments for two different questions
Borate and liquid termiticide often get compared as if they’re competing answers to the same question, but they’re really answering two different ones. Liquid termiticide answers “how do we stop termites from reaching the structure at all?” by treating the soil around and under a foundation, so foraging termites hit a treated zone before they ever get to the building. Borate answers a different question — “if termites do reach this wood, will they be able to eat it?” — by treating the wood itself so it isn’t a viable food source.
How liquid termiticide works
A soil-applied liquid termiticide is trenched or injected into the soil around a structure’s foundation, creating a treated zone that subterranean termites — the species responsible for most termite pressure in the NYC-metro area — have to cross on their way from an underground colony to the building. It addresses the termites’ access route rather than the wood they’re trying to reach.
How borate treatment works
Borate is applied directly to bare or accessible wood, where it penetrates the wood fibre and makes the wood unpalatable and toxic to termites and wood-decay fungi that try to feed on it. It doesn’t create a barrier in the soil and doesn’t protect wood it never actually touches — which means its effectiveness is entirely tied to how much of a structure’s wood is genuinely accessible for treatment.
| Liquid termiticide (soil-applied) | Borate treatment | |
|---|---|---|
| What it treats | The soil around the foundation | The wood itself |
| Where it works | Perimeter, subgrade | Exposed/accessible framing, attic, crawlspace |
| Best suited for | Foundation-wide protection against foraging termites | New construction, renovation, accessible existing wood |
| Chemical residue | Yes, in treated soil | Yes, absorbed into treated wood |
| Common limitation | Doesn’t protect wood once termites reach it if the barrier is broken | Can’t protect wood it never physically contacts |
When to consider each — or both
If you’re building new or mid-renovation with framing exposed, borate is a natural fit because the wood is already accessible and won’t be again without opening the walls back up. If your priority is stopping termites from reaching the structure at all, a soil-applied perimeter treatment addresses that access route directly. Many NYC-metro homes — particularly older wood-frame houses and brownstones with a mix of accessible and enclosed structural wood — end up using both, with each method covering the part of the structure the other one can’t reach.
The honest limitation of each
Neither method is a universal answer on its own. A soil treatment protects the perimeter but doesn’t make the wood itself resistant to termites that get past a compromised section of the barrier. Borate makes treated wood resistant but does nothing for wood it was never applied to. A proper termite plan starts with an inspection that identifies which parts of your specific structure are accessible, which aren’t, and which combination of methods actually closes the gap — not a one-size answer applied without looking at the house first.