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Mouse-Proofing Your Orlando Home: 9 Entry Points Florida Mice Use Most

Florida's year-round warmth means rodents stay active every month. Here's where they get in โ€” and how to stop them.

Mouse proofing Orlando Florida home entry points

Rodent control in Florida is fundamentally different from northern states for one reason: we don't have a hard winter. In Wisconsin or Michigan, outdoor rodent populations crash in December and homeowners get a natural reprieve. In Central Florida, mice and rats stay active and keep seeking entry year-round โ€” pressuring the building envelope every month of the year.

The most effective rodent control starts with exclusion โ€” sealing the entry points. Treatment without exclusion is a treadmill. Here are the nine entry points we find in Orlando homes most frequently.

The 9 Most Common Entry Points

  1. Gaps around utility penetrations. Plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and cable lines entering the home often have gaps around the penetration point โ€” sometimes inch-wide gaps at the foundation. A mouse needs only 1/4 inch; a rat needs 1/2 inch. Seal with copper mesh and spray foam or hydraulic cement.
  2. Weep holes in brick veneer. These necessary ventilation points are standard-size entry for mice. Weep hole inserts (plastic mesh screens sized to fit) are inexpensive and block entry without compromising ventilation.
  3. The garage door seal. Most garage door bottom seals are made of flexible rubber that degrades in Florida's sun and heat. A degraded bottom seal leaves a gap that rodents enter easily, then access the home through the wall behind the garage. Inspect and replace every 3โ€“4 years.
  4. Vents without screens or with damaged screens. Foundation vents, crawl space vents, attic vents โ€” any without intact 1/4" hardware cloth screens are open invitations. Check all vent screens annually.
  5. Roof line gaps and soffits. Where soffits meet roof decking, gaps commonly develop in older homes โ€” and roof rats (extremely common in Central Florida) use these to access the attic. Look for chew marks, trails of grease (from their fur), and droppings in the attic.
  6. Around plumbing under sinks. The pipe cutout in cabinet floors is rarely well-sealed. Steel wool packed around the pipe (not just foam, which rodents chew through) and covered with a pipe collar is the right approach.
  7. Door sweeps and thresholds. Exterior door sweeps wear out and lose contact with the threshold, leaving a gap. Check by shining a light under every exterior door at night โ€” visible light means a mouse can enter.
  8. Crawl space access doors. Poorly fitting crawl space doors are extremely common entry points, particularly in older Orlando-area homes built on raised foundations. The door should close flush with no gaps larger than 1/4".
  9. The area around air conditioning conduit and refrigerant lines. Where the lineset enters the home there's often an unsealed gap. This is one of the most overlooked entry points โ€” check where the insulated lines enter the wall near your air handler.
"We tell homeowners: every mouse we trap inside your home walked in through one of these nine spots. Finding and sealing entry points is the difference between controlling a rodent problem and managing one indefinitely."

Exclusion is time-consuming but it's what makes rodent control permanent rather than perpetual. We offer a full exclusion assessment as part of every rodent treatment โ€” we identify every entry point, give you a written list of what needs to be sealed, and can handle the sealing work for you or leave it to your handyman.

Dealing With Mice or Rats in Your Orlando Home?

Free rodent assessment โ€” we identify every entry point and recommend permanent exclusion solutions.

Rodent Control๐Ÿ“ž (813) 555-0342

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