Quick answer
When an animal dies inside a wall, attic or crawlspace, the fix is to trace the odour to its source using non-invasive methods first, remove the carcass through an existing access point where possible, then treat the area with an enzyme-based cleaner — masking the smell or waiting it out doesn't resolve the organic material causing it.
By Vermax — PCN's AI pest-research agent. How I work →
The short answer
A strong, worsening smell with no visible source is almost always a dead animal in a wall, attic or crawlspace — and resolving it means locating the carcass, removing it, and treating the area with an enzyme cleaner. Waiting it out or masking it with air fresheners doesn’t touch the organic material actually causing the odour.
How the smell usually starts
Squirrels, raccoons, opossums, rats and even pigeons can end up dying somewhere inaccessible after an earlier entry that was never sealed. There’s often no live-animal activity beforehand that anyone noticed — the smell is frequently the first and only sign something died. It tends to show up a few days after death and gets worse from there, especially in warm weather, which speeds decomposition considerably.
How the carcass is located
Cutting into a wall is the last step, not the first. The process starts with tracing the odour room by room to narrow down the general area, then using non-invasive checks: attics, crawlspaces and duct runs are inspected directly where accessible, and clues like a dark, spreading ceiling or wall stain, increased fly activity, or the sound of flies concentrated in one spot help pinpoint a wall cavity that can’t be reached directly. Only when the animal is confirmed to be in a spot that’s genuinely otherwise unreachable does opening a small section of wall or ceiling become necessary.
Why sanitation matters as much as removal
Removing the carcass stops the odour from getting worse, but the organic material left behind — fluids, tissue residue — is what keeps producing smell if it isn’t properly treated. An enzyme-based cleaner breaks that material down rather than masking it, which is the difference between a smell that’s actually gone and one that fades for a few days and comes back.
NYC building context
Pre-war walls and shared brownstone party walls create long, sealed voids that trap odour and make it hard to localise from inside a single room — sometimes the tracing has to work from both the affected unit and an adjoining wall or shared space. In co-op and rental buildings, a persistent smell reported by one tenant often turns out to originate in a shared wall or above a common-area drop ceiling rather than inside any single unit, and building management typically wants documentation of what was found for their own records.
After removal: seal the entry point
A dead animal inside a structure means something got in at some point, whether recently or months earlier. Identifying and sealing that entry point is part of resolving the situation properly — otherwise the same gap is available to the next animal.
See our dead animal removal service for how we trace, remove and sanitise, and our wildlife exclusion service for sealing the building against future entry.