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Cricket & Earwigs Control Guaranteed

Treatment Melbourne

Good Guys Pest Control provides guaranteed cricket and earwig control across Melbourne. We treat garden borders, perimeter walls, sub-floors, and entry points to eliminate infestations and stop them returning. Call 0478 661 110 to book.

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Trusted By Melbourne Families

Trusted By Melbourne Families

5.0 Star Rating
D
Daniel T.
Melbourne

"Highly recommend. They sprayed inside and out for spiders and ants. Super professional, explained everything, and ensured it was safe for our dog before leaving."

S
Sarah Jenkins
St Kilda

"Had a massive roach problem in our rental. The technician used gels in the kitchen and sprayed the perimeter. It's been 4 months and we haven't seen a single bug since."

M
Mark R.
Richmond

"Great price and awesome service. They even checked a loose tile on the roof while dusting the cavity. That Handyman aspect is a huge bonus."

Cricket & Earwig Eradication
Pest control technician treating garden and perimeter
Specialists in Cricket & Earwig Control

Two Pests That Thrive In Melbourne Gardens — And Push Inside Your Home

Crickets and earwigs are both outdoor pests by nature — but Melbourne’s climate drives large numbers of both species indoors, particularly during hot, dry summers and after heavy autumn rain. High cricket populations bring a relentless chirping that disrupts sleep, while earwigs appearing in bathrooms, kitchens, and bedrooms in large numbers cause genuine alarm.

Beyond the nuisance, both pests can cause real damage — crickets chew through fabric, carpet, and stored food, while earwigs feed on seedlings, flowers, and vegetable gardens, causing the characteristic ragged-leaf damage that ruins months of planting effort. Critically, large cricket and earwig populations around your home attract spiders — particularly Redbacks and Huntsman — that prey on them. Reducing cricket and earwig numbers is one of the most effective ways to reduce overall spider activity around a Melbourne property.

At Good Guys Pest Control, we treat the garden harbourage zones, building perimeter, sub-floor, and entry points that allow both pests to build up around and inside your home — delivering lasting results backed by our guarantee.

Our 3-Step Cricket & Earwig Eradication Process

1. Property Inspection

We inspect the full property — garden beds, mulch areas, decking, retaining walls, sub-floor, garage, and the building perimeter. We identify the species present, locate the primary harbourage and breeding zones, assess the population level, and identify every confirmed entry point into the building structure. Because both pests are strictly nocturnal, we focus on daytime hiding sites — beneath pots, under decking, in mulch, and along damp wall junctions — rather than the insects themselves.

2. Targeted Perimeter & Garden Treatment

We apply a residual insecticide spray to the building perimeter, garden borders, sub-floor vents, decking surrounds, and all identified harbourage zones. A granular bait product is applied to garden beds, lawn edges, and mulched areas where crickets and earwigs breed in large numbers — both pests feed on the bait and die before they can migrate inside. Internal treatment is applied to skirting boards, sub-floor access points, and any rooms where significant indoor activity has been confirmed.

3. Handyman Exclusion & Habitat Modification

Unlike standard pest controllers, we are also licensed handymen. We physically seal the gaps under doors, broken sub-floor vents, cracks around window frames, and weatherstripping gaps that crickets and earwigs are actively using to get inside. We also advise on immediate habitat modifications — reducing garden mulch depth against the building, improving drainage, and clearing debris from the foundation zone — that remove the conditions that sustain high populations season after season.

Cricket & Earwig Species We Treat

Cricket & Earwig Species We Treat

Understanding the specific species and their behaviour determines exactly where we treat and what products we use for the most effective and lasting result.

Black field cricket on lawn and paving

Black Field Cricket

The most common cricket species encountered in Melbourne homes and gardens. Large, shiny black, and up to 30mm long. Black field crickets are primarily outdoor insects that live in lawns, garden beds, and dry soil, but push indoors in large numbers during hot, dry summer conditions in search of moisture and cooler shelter.

The males produce their signature loud chirping by rubbing their wings together — a sound that is tolerable from a garden but intensely disruptive when crickets have established inside wall voids, sub-floors, or garages. They are also attracted to external lights at night, which draws them to building entrances and increases indoor migration.

Our Solution: Granular bait applied to lawn and garden areas combined with residual perimeter spray along the building base and around external lighting positions. Internal harbourage zones treated with residual spray. External lights are flagged for relocation advice where they are directly contributing to indoor migration.

House Cricket

Smaller and yellowish-brown with three dark bands on the head, house crickets are an introduced species that can establish permanent indoor populations in warm, sheltered areas of Melbourne homes. Unlike black field crickets that are primarily outdoor visitors, house crickets breed and complete their lifecycle indoors — in roof voids, wall cavities, sub-floors, and behind appliances.

They are omnivorous and will chew through fabric, carpet fibres, stored food packaging, and even synthetic materials when populations build up. Their chirping indoors at night is the most reliable sign of an established house cricket infestation.

Our Solution: Residual spray applied to all internal harbourage zones — sub-floor, roof void, wall junctions, and behind appliances — combined with targeted perimeter treatment to prevent continued entry from outdoors. Entry points are physically sealed as part of the same visit.

House cricket indoors near skirting and appliances
European earwig in garden mulch and pots

European Earwig

The most common earwig species in Melbourne — Forficula auricularia. Reddish-brown to black, 10–15mm long, with the distinctive forceps (pincers) on the tail that give the species its alarming appearance. Despite their look, a pinch is only mild and brief, but they cause real garden damage.

European Earwigs feed nocturnally on seedlings, flower petals, and vegetable plants, leaving irregular ragged holes in leaves commonly misidentified as slug or caterpillar damage. By day they shelter in groups in tight dark spaces — under pots, inside rolled hose, beneath bark mulch, inside decking gaps, and under damp cardboard or newspaper. They migrate indoors during extended hot, dry weather and after heavy rain, appearing in bathrooms, laundries, and kitchens in sometimes alarming numbers.

Our Solution: Granular bait applied to garden beds, mulch areas, and lawn borders combined with residual perimeter spray along the building base. Treatment of known daytime shelter zones under decking, garden structures, and pot bases. Internal treatment where indoor activity is confirmed.

Brown Earwig (Native)

The native Brown Earwig — Labidura truncata — is larger than the European Earwig and is actually considered beneficial in the garden, as it preys on aphids, caterpillars, and other pest insects. It is generally not a pest species and is treated with care.

However, when native earwig populations build up to very high levels near buildings — particularly in properties adjacent to bushland or large established gardens — they can push indoors in large numbers during weather extremes.

Our Solution: Where possible, we focus on exclusion and habitat modification rather than broad treatment for native brown earwigs, preserving their beneficial garden role while sealing the entry points that allow them to push inside during weather events.

Bush garden edges near homes where native earwigs live

Note: The old myth that earwigs crawl into human ears while sleeping is completely unfounded. Earwigs are harmless to humans and pets — they do not seek out people, do not bite as a matter of habit, and a pinch from a handled earwig causes only momentary, minor discomfort. Their harm is to plants and garden produce, not to people.

What’s Included – Cricket & Earwig Treatment

What’s Included In Our Cricket & Earwig Treatment?

We leave nothing to chance. A standard Good Guys Cricket & Earwig Treatment covers every zone where both pests harbour, breed, and enter your property.

Inside home cricket and earwig treatment

Inside The Home

Internal Perimeter Spray

Residual spray applied to all internal skirting boards, door frames, and floor-level wall junctions where crickets and earwigs travel after entering the building. Particular attention to laundries, bathrooms, and garages where internal activity is most commonly reported.

Sub-floor Treatment

Residual spray applied to the sub-floor of elevated homes where both crickets and earwigs harbour in damp, dark conditions before migrating up through gaps in the flooring into living areas.

Roof Void Treatment

For properties with confirmed house cricket activity in the roof void or ceiling cavity, residual spray and dust is applied to eliminate the internal breeding population responsible for the persistent indoor chirping.

Entry Point Sealing

As licensed handymen, we physically seal the gaps under doors, broken sub-floor vent covers, cracks around pipe penetrations, and damaged weatherstripping that both species are using to move between garden and interior.

Outside home cricket and earwig treatment

Outside The Home

Perimeter Barrier Spray

Heavy residual spray applied along the full building perimeter — external walls, foundation base, and pathways — to intercept crickets and earwigs migrating from the garden toward entry points in the building structure.

Garden Border & Mulch Baiting

Granular bait applied to garden beds, lawn edges, mulch zones, and the soil around retaining walls where earwig and cricket populations breed. Bait is consumed nocturnally by both species and eliminates the outdoor population before it reaches the building.

Decking, Garden Structures & Pot Areas

Treatment under and around decking, garden retaining walls, pot bases, and outdoor furniture — the primary daytime shelter zones for earwigs during the day and cricket harbouring areas in the garden.

Sheds & Outbuildings

Residual spray to garage and shed interiors, garden shed bases, and compost bin surrounds where both crickets and earwigs establish in large numbers in stored organic material and damp conditions.

Why Choose Good Guys

Why Choose Good Guys?

The Handyman Advantage

Crickets and earwigs push inside through gaps that spraying alone will never close. Because we’re licensed handymen, we seal those structural entry points on the day — something no standard pest controller offers.

Guaranteed Satisfaction

We use commercial-grade residual products and targeted granular bait that deliver lasting results. If crickets or earwigs return within the guarantee period, we come back and re-treat at no additional cost.

100% Pet & Child Safe

Once the spray is dry — around 20 minutes — treated areas are completely safe for children and pets. Granular bait is placed in garden zones inaccessible to domestic animals and uses low-concentration formulations.

Licensed & Insured

Victoria Wildlife & Pest Control Licensed. $20M Public Liability Insurance. Professional, qualified technicians on every job.

Good Guys technician providing cricket and earwig treatment
Licensed & Insured

Victoria Wildlife & Pest Control Licensed. $20M Public Liability.

Cricket & Earwig Control FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions

Cricket & Earwig Control FAQ

Earwigs migrate indoors in two main conditions — during extended hot, dry weather when the garden becomes inhospitable, and after heavy rain that saturates their outdoor habitat. Both conditions drive them toward the cooler, moister microclimate inside your home. They are not establishing a permanent indoor colony — they are seeking temporary shelter and will return outdoors when conditions improve. The solution is a combination of perimeter baiting and sealing the entry points they are using to cross from garden to interior.
No. Earwig pincers are used for defence against other insects and in courtship behaviour — not for attacking humans. A cornered or handled earwig may attempt to pinch skin, but the result is a very minor, brief discomfort at most. Earwigs are not venomous, do not sting, and are not known to carry or transmit any disease. Their harm is almost entirely to garden plants and produce, not to people or pets.
If you can hear cricket chirping inside your home at night, house crickets have almost certainly established a breeding population in your roof void, sub-floor, or wall cavities. Black field crickets that push inside from the garden are temporary visitors that typically do not call from inside structures — the persistent indoor chirping is a reliable sign of an established house cricket infestation that requires treatment of the internal harbourage zones, not just the garden.
House crickets will chew through fabric, carpet fibres, leather, and stored food packaging when populations build up indoors. Black field crickets that push inside occasionally cause minor fabric damage. Earwigs indoors primarily feed on organic debris and houseplants rather than furnishings, though they may occasionally chew soft materials when confined. The main damage from earwigs is to outdoor garden plants, seedlings, and vegetables — not to indoor items.
Yes — this is one of the most important reasons to manage cricket and earwig populations around your home. Spiders — including Redbacks and Huntsman — are opportunistic predators that congregate wherever insect food sources are abundant. A property with a high garden cricket or earwig population will consistently attract more spiders to eaves, garden structures, and the building perimeter. Reducing cricket and earwig numbers directly reduces the spider pressure on your property.
Both species are most active from late spring through autumn — roughly October to April. Cricket populations peak in summer when warm, dry conditions accelerate breeding and trigger mass migration toward moisture sources. Earwig populations peak in late summer and early autumn and are particularly active after warm rain. Treatment in late spring before populations peak provides the best protection through the active season.
Consumer garden insecticides provide short-term knockdown of visible insects but leave no meaningful residual activity in garden beds and mulch where both pests breed. They also cannot reach sub-floor and roof void populations. Professional granular bait provides the most effective garden-level control as both crickets and earwigs actively consume it nocturnally — delivering product to the whole population rather than only individuals contacted by a spray. Combined with perimeter treatment and entry point sealing, this is the approach that delivers lasting results. Call 0478 661 110 to book.
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