Pest Control

Pest control web design that gets you found the second they spot one — on Google, and in the AI answer

Pest control web design that ranks for the exact bug they just saw — so you're the name Google's AI or ChatGPT hands back when a parent asks who's safe today. The moment they land, the site proves you're licensed and pet-safe, one tap to call or book the free inspection. The treatment is yours.

Found the second they spot onePet-safe, said up frontNo contract, no surprises
What your site needs

Found the second they spot it. Trusted before they dial. The treatment is yours.

Someone sees a bug, grabs their phone, and types it into Google — or asks an AI who's safe to call. They find you, they find a competitor, or they find no one local and give up. We build the site that gets found first and answers the two real fears before they reach for the phone. The part that takes a license and a truck stays yours.

  • Found for the sighting, not the plan. Nobody wakes up wanting quarterly pest control. They see one mouse dart across the kitchen and panic, and the buying window is hours, not days. So your site starts with a page for what they actually type: "how do I get rid of ants in my kitchen," "mouse in the house," "wasp nest by my door," "same-day exterminator near me." Each pest gets its own page that ranks for its own search, instead of one bland Services list that ranks for nothing. A new domain earns Google's trust over months — so the right time to start is now, not the next time the ants show up.
  • The name the AI gives back. A parent now asks ChatGPT or Google's AI: "there's a mouse in my kitchen and I have a toddler — who can come today, and is it safe?" That one question names the kid, the pet, and the panic. The site that answers all three in plain English — same-day service, pet-safe products explained, no-contract terms — is the one the assistant has something real to pull from and quote. We build your pages around those exact worried questions. We can't promise the algorithm, nobody honestly can; what we can do is give the AI a real answer to hand back instead of a contact form, which gives it nothing.
  • The recurring plan is the real business. The one-off call is the front door; the quarterly plan is the house. And roughly three-quarters of pest control revenue lives in that house — a plan runs typically $480 to $800 a year per household, and at 85-plus percent retention that customer is worth $4,000 to $6,000 over their lifetime. Steady inbound keeps your techs booked and the payroll defensible; the real ROI isn't clicks, it's a route that pays for itself. So we frame the plan the way it actually wins — not a subscription trap, but "we watch your home year-round so you never have to think about it, and you'll always know when we're coming and what we did" — because customers cancel from silence, not bad service. A restaurant or property manager on a documented program is worth $700 to $900 a year and cancels at half the rate of a home account, so the site carries a path for the manager searching "pest control for restaurant near me" too. We write the section; you deliver the plan.
  • Safe for kids and pets, answered first. "Is it safe for my family and pets?" is the single fear that stops the call or sends it to the other guy. So we answer it before the phone's in their hand: EPA-registered products in plain English, where the baits go so the dog can't reach them, when it's safe to walk back in, "tell us about your pets and we'll plan around them." Not buried on an About page, not a hazmat stock photo — the actual answer to the actual worry. And because the page reads like a neighbor who's seen it before, not a horror-show bug gallery, the person who's a little embarrassed to be calling doesn't feel judged before they dial. Pests find their way into the cleanest homes, and the page says so.
  • Pest pages that win the season. Spring brings swarming ants and termites; summer's the flood, with wasps and mosquitoes peaking May through August; fall sends rodents and spiders indoors; winter's mice hunting warmth. A page that says "it's wasp season — handle it before the nest grows" reads like a local who's done this for years; a flat year-round page reads like an out-of-towner. So your termite page names exactly what they just Googled — mud tubes at the foundation line, swarmers on the windowsill in March, hollow-sounding wood — and the person who searched those words feels understood before they call. Half of these calls start with a can of Raid that didn't work, so the page speaks to that too: if they keep coming back, that's a colony, not a few scouts, and here's what changes.
  • The panic search can't reach voicemail. The first company to respond wins the job about 78% of the time, and answering within five minutes makes you roughly a hundred times more likely to qualify the lead than waiting half an hour. Your tech is under a house, not by the phone — so the site keeps the clock from running out. Your number rides the top of every scroll, so the tap is always there, and we write the same-day, "we answer" wording right into the page, so the parent searching at 9pm sees you're available before they look at the next result. We add a free-inspection booking path too, because plenty of these searches happen after the kids are down and they'd rather tap than talk. The window's open; your phone is the next step.
  • Licensed, insured, and no stranger. Letting someone into your home with chemicals around the kids is a trust purchase, so we stack the proof up front: licensed, bonded, and insured spelled out plainly instead of left as a tiny footer line; your live Google stars; real photos of your trucks and your actual techs, background-checked and uniformed — not a Shutterstock guy in a hazmat suit. NPMA membership and QualityPro certification are the signals a careful buyer hunts for, and the ones that separate you from the franchise that carries neither. We also write your no-lock-in terms straight onto the page — "no pushy sales, honest upfront pricing, cancel anytime" — because someone burned by the door-to-door crews is searching for exactly that. Exterminator marketing that gets a stranger trusted before they're through the door.
  • The re-treat guarantee, front and center. "Will it actually work, or will they come back?" is the doubt that loses the sale, so a confident, specific guarantee earns the call. "If pests come back between visits, so do we — free" is one of the strongest signals in your whole trade, and we put it where they'll see it, not in the fine print. We pair it with honest timelines, because some infestations need two or three treatments, and saying so plainly is itself a trust signal. That guarantee is what turns a scared caller into a loyal quarterly account.
How it works

From hello to live in three easy steps

Finch wiring up a glowing new website at his workbenchSTEP 01

We build it — on us

Tell us about your business in a quick chat — that's the only part we need from you. Then we design and build your whole site, start to finish.

Finch presenting your finished website on a retro TV setSTEP 02

You take a look

See your real, finished website — not a sketch. Click around it, show your family, sleep on it. Take your time.

Finch giving a thumbs-up beside a rocket ready to launchSTEP 03

You decide

Love it? Keep it for one simple monthly fee and we handle everything from there. Want changes? We'll keep at it until you love it.

Simple pricing

One price. Everything included.

Three honest monthly plans — Kiloton $99, Megaton $179 and Gigaton $299 a month. Every plan includes the free build, hosting, edits and real human support — no setup fee, ever.

Every plan includesCustom build includedHosting, SSL & domainContact form → your inboxOngoing editsPhone + in-person support
Good questions

Pest Control website questions, answered.

Will my site actually show up when someone sees a bug and searches?

That's what pest control SEO is for — and the honest part is it takes months, not days. A page per pest tells Google exactly what you handle, so "how do I get rid of roaches" or "wasp nest removal near me" matches you instead of the bland category page; those exact-match searches are where a newer site can win first. We build it so when a parent asks ChatGPT or Google's AI who's safe to call, your name is set up to come back. A brand-new domain earns Google's trust over time, so while that compounds underneath, your Google Business Profile is the faster lane to today's emergency calls — we wire the site to feed it, you keep it warm. Anyone promising you page one in 30 days is selling you.

Is the page going to make safety promises I can't keep?

Never — we don't invent a single claim. We write the safety answer in your words: EPA-registered products, pet- and family-safe handling, where the baits go, when it's safe to re-enter, "tell us about your pets and we'll plan around them." You tell us what you actually use and how you actually work, and we put it in plain English right where the worried parent is standing. No fake certifications, no invented stats, no "100% safe" nonsense — just your real practice, said clearly. The trust comes from it being true, because it has to be.

Do I have to lock customers into a long-term contract?

No — and not locking them in is one of your best selling points. This industry earned its trust wound honestly: hidden setup fees, $150-plus cancellation charges, 12-to-24-month auto-renew traps, high-pressure reps rushing the signing. So we write the opposite straight onto the page — "no pushy sales, no long-term lock-in, honest upfront pricing, cancel anytime" — which is exactly what someone burned by the door-to-door crews is searching for. It wins the "pest control no contract" search and disarms the fear in the same breath. You set the terms; we say them plainly.

I already paid an agency that didn't get pest control.

That comes up a lot — the general shop that sold you pest control website design, ran a few Facebook ads, called it exterminator marketing, treated you like an HVAC account, and mailed a monthly report full of impressions that never paid a tech. One honest note: we can't count booked jobs through the site — that's your phone and your front desk, and we won't pretend otherwise. What we do show, on the plans that include rank tracking, is the search side straight: the pest page that climbed in rank, the exact phrase that started sending people to your site, the month it moved. No impression counts, no click graphs — every line is a search that could turn into a booked truck. And we actually know your business runs on recurring plans and seasonal panic, not one-off calls. Closing the call is yours; we show you whether the search side is working — so when the phone should be ringing, you know why it isn't, and what to fix.

How much does it cost?

The build is free, and then it's one flat monthly price — $99 Kiloton, $179 Megaton, or $299 Gigaton — covering hosting, security, the SEO work, your pest pages, revisions, and a neighbor who answers when you call. No setup fee, no per-lead charges, no per-job nonsense, no year-long fog. Three-month minimum, then month to month, no cancellation fee, and the site is yours to keep — stay because it's working, or leave anytime and take it with you. One flat line on your books, nothing hidden, nothing extra. Didn't we say simple?

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