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WASP & BEE REMOVAL — SAN TAN VALLEY, AZ

Wasp and Bee Help
for High-Traffic Areas

Identify the insect, locate the nest or swarm, protect the approach, and choose treatment or relocation based on the situation.

Starting at $49/mo · no contracts · free re-service

Veteran-owned · Arizona

Free re-service between visits

Prices published — no mystery quotes

Taking calls 24/7

Wasp and bee work in San Tan Valley begins with identification. Paper wasps building an open comb under an eave, yellowjackets using a ground or wall opening, and a temporary honey-bee swarm in a tree are different risks and need different responses.

NEARPEST handles accessible wasp nest treatment and assesses bee activity so the right removal or relocation path can be chosen. Do not seal a wall opening while insects are actively using it; that can push them deeper into the structure or living space.

Stinging-insect jobs are scoped to nest type, access, height, and structure. Photos help us triage, but the on-site location determines the final approach.

Species and nest check

Open comb, enclosed cavity, ground entry, and temporary swarm behavior are distinguished before action.

Approach-zone safety

Doors, play areas, pool decks, mailboxes, sheds, and work routes are prioritized because repeated human traffic raises sting risk.

Nest treatment or referral

Accessible wasp nests can be treated; honey-bee colonies may require a specialist removal or relocation plan.

Entry repair timing

Openings are sealed only after activity is resolved so insects are not trapped inside the wall or redirected indoors.

A swarm is not always a permanent colony

A dense cluster of honey bees resting on a branch or structure can be a temporary swarm while scouts search for a cavity. It may move on, but people and pets should still be kept away and the location monitored.

Repeated traffic into one wall, roof, or utility opening suggests an established colony rather than a resting swarm. That situation needs a cavity-aware removal plan, not surface spraying at the entrance.

Why nest location changes the job

A small paper-wasp comb under an accessible eave is straightforward compared with a colony inside a second-story wall or roof void. Height, electrical lines, ladder access, wall construction, and public traffic all change the risk and scope.

The fastest safe path is to send a clear photo from a distance and describe the entry location. We can often tell whether the job fits ordinary wasp treatment or needs a bee-removal specialist before anyone travels.

When not to approach the nest

Do not climb a ladder, use fire, flood a wall opening, or seal active insects inside. Keep children and pets out of the approach zone. Anyone with a known severe sting allergy should not attempt DIY removal.

If a person has trouble breathing, facial or throat swelling, dizziness, or signs of a severe allergic reaction after a sting, call emergency services. Pest removal does not replace emergency medical care.

Questions, answered

Should I seal the hole bees or wasps are using?

Not while activity is present. Sealing an active cavity can trap insects in the structure or redirect them indoors. Resolve the colony first, then repair the opening.

Will a bee swarm leave on its own?

A temporary swarm may move, but keep people and pets away and have the location assessed. Repeated traffic into a fixed opening is more consistent with an established colony.

Can you remove a nest under my eave?

Often, if it is safely accessible. Height, electrical hazards, structure, and nest type determine whether it fits ordinary treatment or needs specialist equipment.

What counts as a sting emergency?

Trouble breathing, facial or throat swelling, dizziness, or other signs of a severe reaction require emergency medical help, especially for someone with a known allergy.

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San Tan Valley, covered.

Get your price in 30 seconds or call now. If pests show up between visits, so do we — free.

Starting at $49/mo · no contracts · free re-service