Trinity Watershed
The Trinity River, creeks, floodplain areas, and extensive stormwater infrastructure influence moisture and mosquito movement.
Local Service • Free Estimate
From compact urban patios to wooded creek lots and large North Dallas properties, mosquito control works best when it reflects the water, shade, and outdoor-use patterns on the site.
Local mosquito pressure
Dallas spans dense urban neighborhoods, mature residential areas, creek corridors, lakes, the Trinity River watershed, and rapidly changing development. Storm drains, alley containers, irrigated landscapes, pools, and shaded gardens can all contribute to mosquito pressure within a small area.
We build Dallas mosquito-control plans around the property itself. A courtyard near Uptown, a wooded lot near White Rock Lake, and a large North Dallas backyard may each need a different combination of source reduction, yard treatment, trapping, misting, or ongoing system service. Request a property-specific recommendation →

Why activity builds
The Trinity River, creeks, floodplain areas, and extensive stormwater infrastructure influence moisture and mosquito movement.
Alley bins, planters, roof drainage, construction materials, and small patios can hold overlooked pockets of water.
White Rock Lake, Bachman Lake, Turtle Creek, and neighborhood waterways add nearby habitat that may extend beyond one property.
Established trees, dense foundation plantings, pools, and shaded courtyards provide protected adult resting areas.
Local pressure can vary from one block to the next. Conditions around the Trinity River corridor, White Rock Lake, Turtle Creek, Bachman Lake, neighborhood greenbelts, and Dallas's extensive storm-drain network illustrate the mix of water, shade, vegetation, drainage, and outdoor activity that can influence mosquito encounters.
For a Dallas property we draw on the full range of services, matched to what the site needs:
Not sure which fits? Tell us what you’re seeing and we’ll recommend a starting point.
We help homeowners across Dallas, including:
Near the city line? We also serve Highland Park, University Park, Irving, Plano, Garland, and Richardson. View our service area.
Local answers
In Dallas, mosquito activity usually picks up in spring as temperatures warm and stays strong into fall. Areas near the Trinity River corridor, White Rock Lake, and Bachman Lake, plus irrigated inner-city yards, can see activity early. Starting before peak season tends to keep pressure lower all year.
We treat properties across Dallas, including Lakewood, Preston Hollow, Lake Highlands, North Dallas, East Dallas, Oak Lawn, Kessler Park, Uptown, Oak Cliff, and the White Rock Lake area, along with nearby Highland Park, University Park, and surrounding Dallas County communities.
Properties near the Trinity watershed, White Rock Lake, Turtle Creek, or neighborhood greenbelts sit close to standing water, shade, and humidity that support mosquito breeding and resting. Pressure there can come partly from off-site habitat, so a plan combines on-property treatment with source reduction.
See all mosquito-control FAQs → • How we protect pets & pollinators →
Tell us what you’re seeing and how you use your outdoor space. We’ll recommend the most practical next step for your property.