Termite treatment quotes vary by thousands of dollars for the same home, but the differences rarely come from labor or chemical cost. The largest variables are hidden in warranty terms, monitoring commitments, and whether the company will re-treat active infestations without charging again. A $1,200 liquid treatment with a one-year warranty and no monitoring may cost far more over five years than a $2,800 baiting system with annual inspections and unlimited re-treatment included. Without a structured comparison, most homeowners select based on the lowest initial number, then discover exclusions when termites reappear.
You can safely compare quotes by asking the same six questions to every company: what specific treatment method and products they will use, what square footage or linear footage the price covers, how long the warranty lasts and whether it transfers to a buyer, how often they will inspect after treatment, what conditions void coverage, and whether re-treatment for new activity costs extra. These questions do not require pest-control expertise—they clarify what you are purchasing. A company that cannot answer all six in writing is offering an incomplete bid.
This checklist does not tell you which treatment method to choose or whether a quote is fair for your region. Those decisions require a licensed inspection, knowledge of your local termite species, soil conditions, and home construction. The checklist ensures that every quote you receive defines the same variables, so you can compare coverage and long-term cost instead of guessing what each company included. Use the Treatment Cost Estimator to see typical ranges for your treatment type and home size before requesting bids—it helps you recognize quotes that fall outside normal bounds and need explanation.
What Changes the Numbers on a Termite Quote
Termite treatment quotes vary by thousands of dollars for the same property, and the difference isn’t always quality or honesty. Five structural and biological variables control most of the range: species present, treatment method required, access difficulty, property size and foundation type, and whether the work includes a warranty or repair obligation.
Subterranean termites—the most common group in the continental United States—typically require liquid termiticide barriers around the foundation perimeter or baiting systems installed in the soil. Eastern subterranean termites in a 1,500-square-foot slab home with good exterior access might cost $1,200 to $2,500 for a complete liquid treatment, while the same home with Formosan termites in coastal Louisiana or Hawaii often runs $3,000 to $6,000 because Formosan colonies are larger, more aggressive, and may require above-ground foam applications inside wall voids. Drywood termites—common in California, Florida, and the Gulf Coast—live entirely inside wood and demand spot treatments, whole-structure fumigation, or heat, with fumigation typically starting around $1,200 for small homes and reaching $4,000 or more for larger properties.
Foundation type changes both access and chemical volume. Slab foundations require drilling through concrete to reach the soil beneath, adding labor and patching costs. Homes with crawlspaces or basements allow easier soil access but may need interior trenching if the space is tight or cluttered. Pier-and-beam homes in Texas or older Southern states sometimes require treatment under every pier and along interior support beams, increasing material and time. A company quoting $1,800 for a raised foundation and $2,400 for a slab on the same street is reflecting drill time, not markup.
Active infestation evidence—live termites, fresh frass piles, mud tubes with workers inside, or soft wood—usually requires faster treatment and may trigger warranty exclusions or repair riders. A quote that includes wood replacement, moisture correction, or fungus treatment will be higher than one covering only the chemical barrier. Some companies separate the pest-control work from the carpentry; others bundle it. If the quote includes a annual renewal warranty with free re-treatments, expect to pay 15% to 40% more upfront than a one-time application with no callback coverage.
Local termite pressure and real-estate transaction timelines also shift pricing. Homes in high-pressure zones—coastal South Carolina, Southern California, the Gulf states, Hawaii—see more competitive quoting because volume is higher, but treatment complexity and re-infestation risk are also greater. If you’re buying or selling and need a clearance letter within a week, some companies add rush fees or limit the scope to pass inspection rather than deliver long-term control. Understanding these variables before you compare three quotes prevents confusion when one company’s number is half another’s for work that isn’t actually equivalent.
What to Prepare Before Requesting Quotes
Most homeowners request quotes without documenting what they’ve already seen or gathering the records inspectors will ask about. That creates confusion during walkthroughs and makes it harder to compare proposals later. A few simple preparation steps—none requiring pesticide use or remote diagnosis—help you ask better questions and recognize which companies are actually looking at your property versus recycling standard pricing.
Start by photographing any visible evidence. Take clear, close-up images of mud tubes on foundation walls, damaged wood in crawl spaces or basements, discarded wings near windowsills, or frass piles below exit holes. Note the location, date, and approximate size of each sign. You’re not diagnosing the species or extent—that’s the inspector’s job—but these photos let you describe what you’ve seen consistently across multiple quotes and confirm whether the inspector examined the same areas you’re concerned about.
Collect your property records next. Pull any previous termite inspection reports, treatment invoices, or builder warranties that mention termite protection. If you have a termite bond or renewable contract, locate the most recent renewal notice and note the coverage limits, exclusions, and whether re-treatment or damage repair is included. Many contracts exclude certain termite species, above-ground infestations, or secondary damage, and knowing those gaps before the walkthrough helps you ask whether a new treatment addresses them.
Write down your questions in advance. Focus on what varies between companies: treatment method and active ingredient, warranty term and transferability, whether the price includes follow-up monitoring or just the initial application, and what triggers re-treatment at no additional cost. Ask how they handle inaccessible areas—crawlspaces with low clearance, finished basements, or slab foundations—and whether the quote assumes full perimeter access or adjusts if obstacles are found. These details change cost and long-term value more than the base per-linear-foot rate.
Prepare a simple property sketch showing the foundation perimeter, attached structures like decks or porches, known moisture problems, and any areas you can’t access yourself. You don’t need formal measurements—a rough diagram with approximate dimensions is enough to help inspectors plan their approach and explain why certain areas cost more to treat. If you’ve used our Termite Risk Score tool, print the results; they provide a useful starting point for discussing whether your property’s construction, soil type, or climate suggests higher monitoring frequency or specific treatment types.
Finally, set a realistic timeline. If you’re comparing quotes for active signs of infestation, schedule inspections within the same week so conditions don’t change between visits. If you’re shopping for preventive treatment or pre-purchase protection, allow two to three weeks to gather multiple bids, verify licenses with your state agriculture or pest-control regulatory board, and review each company’s complaint history. Rushed decisions often mean accepting the first quote without understanding what’s included—or excluded.
When Licensed Judgment Changes the Quote
Most termite quotes look similar on paper—price per linear foot, warranty years, chemical brand—but the professional decisions behind those numbers determine whether treatment actually works. A licensed inspector decides where to drill, how deep the rod goes, whether foam injection reaches hidden galleries, and when a second access point prevents a gap in the treated zone. Those judgment calls don’t appear as line items, but they control whether subterranean termites reinfest through an untreated seam six months later.
Ask each company how their technician handles obstacles during application. Concrete porches, HVAC slabs, and attached garages create treatment interruptions that require different approaches depending on soil type, termite pressure, and structural access. A crew that defaults to surface spray when they hit a utility line leaves a gap; a crew trained to use foam injection or drill through the obstruction maintains the continuous barrier that liquid termiticide labels require. The quote should specify how the company addresses these common barriers, not just list them as potential add-ons.
Warranty language reveals how much risk the company accepts for their own work. A warranty that excludes retreatment if you landscape near the foundation or add mulch within two years transfers structural risk back to you. A warranty that covers annual inspections and spot retreatment without pre-conditions signals confidence in the original application. Before signing, ask what actions void coverage, whether the warranty transfers if you sell, and how quickly the company responds to callback requests. These terms matter more than the warranty length.
For high-stakes properties—historic homes, commercial buildings, or structures with previous treatment failures—route the quote through a second licensed opinion before committing. TermiteHQ contributor Travis Gates, who has reviewed treatment plans across the Southeast, notes that the cheapest bid often skips the supplemental drilling required when original construction used rubble fill or when previous treatments created chemical-resistant soil layers. A consulting inspection costs $150–$300 but catches plan gaps that would cost thousands to fix after a failed treatment cycle.
Use the Treatment Cost Estimator to compare your quotes against regional averages, then focus on the application details that don’t fit into pricing calculators: crew training documentation, how the company handles callback volume, and whether the inspector who wrote the quote will supervise the treatment crew. These operational details separate contractors who compete on price from those who compete on application consistency.


