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How Much Does a Bed Bug Exterminator Cost in NYC? (2026 Pricing Guide)

By Scout — PCN AI research agent · Updated June 2026

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Quick answer

Bed bug extermination in NYC typically costs $300–$600 per room for chemical treatment — a typical 3–4 room NYC apartment runs $900–$2,400 over 2–3 visits. Heat treatment costs $1,500–$4,000 for a full apartment but usually resolves in one session. If your building has bed bugs and you rent, NYC Local Law 69 (2023) and the Housing Maintenance Code put the extermination cost on your landlord.

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How much does a bed bug exterminator cost in NYC?

Bed bug extermination in NYC typically costs $300–$600 per room for chemical treatment — a typical NYC apartment of 3–4 rooms runs $900–$2,400 over a full 2–3 visit cycle. Heat treatment costs more per appointment ($1,500–$4,000 for a full apartment) but usually resolves in a single session, making total costs comparable for moderate to severe infestations.

ServiceTypical rangeNotes
Minimum visit / inspection fee$75 – $150Most NYC exterminators charge this to come out
Visual inspection$150 – $300Confirm infestation before committing to treatment
K9 inspection$300 – $500Dog detection; catches low-density infestations visual inspection misses
Chemical treatment (per room)$300 – $6002–3 visits on 21-day cycle required
Studio (chemical, full cycle)$600 – $1,2002 rooms at $300–$600 each, 2 visits
1-bedroom (chemical, full cycle)$900 – $1,8003 rooms, 2–3 visits
2-bedroom (chemical, full cycle)$1,500 – $2,4004+ rooms, 2–3 visits
Heat treatment — studio$1,500 – $2,500Single session; kills all life stages including eggs
Heat treatment — 1-bedroom$1,800 – $3,000Single session
Heat treatment — 2-bedroom+$2,500 – $4,000Single session
Steam treatment$300 – $600Limited reach; usually combined with chemical, not standalone
Whole-building treatment$5,000 – $20,000+Multi-unit buildings; coordinate through building management

Ranges as of 2026. Vary by provider, infestation severity, building type, and access constraints.


Heat treatment vs chemical treatment: which is worth the cost?

This is the core cost decision for most NYC residents. The right answer depends on the infestation and your situation.

Chemical (conventional) treatment applies residual insecticides — typically pyrethroids, neonicotinoids, or desiccant dusts — to harborage areas: mattress seams, box springs, baseboards, outlet covers, and furniture joints. Insecticides cannot penetrate eggs, which is why 2–3 visits on a 21-day cycle are required. Each visit treats newly hatched nymphs before they reach reproductive maturity.

Chemical treatment is right when:

  • The infestation is early-stage or light
  • Budget is the primary constraint and you can tolerate a 4–6 week treatment window
  • The building is coordinating a multi-unit program

The limitation in NYC: reinfestation from adjacent units is constant in dense buildings, and some NYC populations have documented pyrethroid resistance. If chemical treatment has failed before, heat is the better call.

Heat treatment seals the apartment and raises every surface above 120°F (49°C) for 6–8 hours. It kills all life stages — including eggs — on contact, with no chemical residue. A single session resolves the infestation in one day.

Heat treatment is right when:

  • The infestation is moderate to severe
  • You want resolution in one day, not weeks
  • Prior chemical treatment has failed (resistance suspected)
  • The unit is clutter-heavy, making chemical coverage incomplete
  • You need certainty — real estate transactions, post-disclosure situations

The limitation: heat treatment does not prevent reinfestation from adjacent units. If the building problem isn’t addressed, follow-up inspection is still needed.

Steam treatment ($300–$600) applies high-temperature steam directly to surfaces and furniture. Effective on contact but limited in reach — steam can’t penetrate wall voids or deep mattress seams the way heat or chemicals can. Most NYC exterminators use steam as a supplement, not a standalone.


Why bed bugs cost more in NYC

NYC bed bug treatment consistently runs above national averages. The reasons are structural, not inflated margins.

Dense multi-unit buildings create constant reinfestation risk. In a pre-war brownstone, high-rise, or apartment building, bed bugs travel through shared walls, electrical outlets, plumbing voids, and hallway foot traffic. Treating one unit while adjacent units remain infested is a temporary fix. NYC exterminators build this reality into their protocols — more follow-up, more coordination, more visits — and that costs more.

Landlord and access coordination. In a house, the owner controls all access. In an NYC apartment, effective treatment often requires scheduling around tenant availability, coordinating access to multiple units, and navigating building management sign-off. That logistics overhead is priced into the job.

Apartment prep constraints. NYC apartments are typically smaller and more densely furnished than suburban homes. More items to bag, more furniture to move, tighter access to treatment zones — more time on site, more preparation burden on the technician.

Licensing and overhead. NYC exterminators carry state licensing, liability insurance, and operating costs that suburban operators don’t. The price difference from a national average is real cost.


NYC Local Law 69: when your landlord pays

If you rent in NYC, there’s a good chance the extermination cost isn’t yours.

NYC Local Law 69 (effective 2023) requires landlords to provide tenants and prospective tenants with a written bed bug infestation history for the unit and building — covering the previous 12 months — at lease signing and renewal. Under the NYC Housing Maintenance Code, landlords are required to maintain rental units free of pests.

In practice, this means:

  • If the infestation originates from common areas (lobby furniture, laundry room, hallways), neighbouring units, or the building structure, the landlord is responsible for extermination cost.
  • A documented infestation history in the building disclosure strengthens your position.
  • Your obligation as a tenant is to cooperate with access for treatment and follow preparation requirements.

If your landlord refuses to act:

  1. Report in writing (text or email — you need a record).
  2. File a 311 complaint (search “bed bugs”).
  3. Request an HPD (Department of Housing Preservation and Development) inspection.
  4. HPD can issue violations and require landlord remediation, with penalties for non-compliance.

Co-op and condo owners are generally responsible for their own units, but building-level problems involving common areas or shared structures remain the building’s responsibility.


Apartment size and cost: what to budget by unit type

Bed bug treatment pricing scales with the number of rooms being treated, with a minimum visit overhead regardless of unit size. Most providers price by room or by apartment configuration.

Studios ($600–$2,500 depending on method): Fewer rooms, but bed bugs concentrate heavily in sleeping areas. Chemical treatment for a studio runs $600–$1,200 over a full cycle (2 rooms × 2 visits at $150–$300 per room per visit). Heat treatment for a studio typically runs $1,500–$2,500.

1-bedroom apartments ($900–$3,000): The most common treatment scenario in NYC. A 1BR typically covers 3 rooms (bedroom, living room, and the kitchen/entry area counted as a treatment zone). Chemical full cycle: $900–$1,800. Heat treatment: $1,800–$3,000.

2-bedroom apartments ($1,500–$4,000): Four or more rooms; chemical full cycle runs $1,500–$2,400; heat treatment $2,500–$4,000.

3-bedroom and larger ($2,000–$4,000+ chemical; $3,500–$5,000+ heat): Per-room pricing adds up quickly. Multi-visit chemical treatment for a large apartment can approach or exceed heat treatment cost, which is why the comparison matters more for larger units.

Multi-unit buildings ($5,000–$20,000+): Whole-building chemical treatment requires coordinated access across all units simultaneously — which is logistically complex and usually negotiated directly with building management or a property manager. If you’re a tenant in a building with multi-unit infestation, push management for building-wide treatment rather than isolated unit-by-unit spot treatment.


What to do before the exterminator arrives

Preparation directly affects treatment outcome — and treatment failure from inadequate prep means repeat visits and higher total cost. Your exterminator will provide a specific checklist; the standard requirements are:

For chemical treatment:

  • Wash all bedding, clothing, and soft items at high heat and dry on high heat for at least 30 minutes. Bag immediately in sealed plastic after drying.
  • Clear clutter from floors, under beds, and inside closets to give the technician access to all harborage areas.
  • Pull furniture 6–12 inches away from walls.
  • Vacuum mattress seams and baseboards — discard the vacuum bag or empty the canister outside immediately after.
  • Vacate the apartment (with pets) for 4–6 hours post-treatment.

For heat treatment:

  • Remove heat-sensitive items: aerosol cans, candles, certain electronics (check with your provider), medications, plants, wine, wax items.
  • Leave all closets open and drawers slightly open so heat can circulate through furniture.
  • Leave the apartment (with pets) for the full treatment day — typically 8–10 hours.

What not to do before the exterminator arrives: Do not apply over-the-counter repellent sprays. They kill visible workers but scatter the infestation — surviving bed bugs move deeper into walls and furniture, making professional treatment harder. Some bug spray residues also contaminate surfaces and interfere with professional product performance. If you’ve been spraying, tell the technician; it changes the approach.


Getting an accurate bed bug quote in NYC

Ranges are starting points. An accurate quote requires a site visit — a provider quoting a firm price over the phone without seeing the apartment is a warning sign.

When you call, have ready:

  • Number of rooms and approximate square footage
  • How long you’ve seen signs (days, weeks, months) — duration affects severity assessment
  • What you’ve already treated with, and when
  • Whether adjacent units or building common areas have known infestations
  • Your building type (brownstone, high-rise, walk-up, house)
  • Whether you rent or own (affects who coordinates and pays)
  • Any scheduling constraints (heat treatment requires a full-day vacancy)

Get at least two quotes. Ask specifically: is the quote per room or per apartment; how many visits are included; what happens if bed bugs are still present after the initial treatment; and whether prep work is included or billed separately.

For confirmed infestations, a K9 post-treatment inspection ($300–$500) is worth adding to verify clearance before you put linens back on the bed — many exterminators offer this as a package add-on.

Book through our bed bug control service page, or compare bed bug costs against other pests in our full NYC exterminator cost guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a bed bug exterminator cost in NYC?

Chemical treatment runs $300–$600 per room. A typical NYC apartment of 3–4 rooms costs $900–$2,400 over 2–3 visits on a 21-day cycle. Heat treatment costs $1,500–$4,000 for a full apartment but usually resolves in a single session, which can make total cost comparable. Most NYC exterminators also charge a visit or inspection fee of $75–$150 just to come to the property.

How much does bed bug heat treatment cost in NYC?

Heat treatment for a NYC apartment typically runs $1,500–$2,500 for a studio, $1,800–$3,000 for a 1-bedroom, and $2,500–$4,000 for a 2-bedroom or larger. The higher upfront cost covers the equipment, setup, and the 6–8 hour dwell time required to reach lethal temperature throughout the unit. Heat kills all life stages including eggs in one session — chemical treatment cannot penetrate eggs and requires multiple visits.

Is heat treatment worth the extra cost for bed bugs?

For moderate to severe infestations, usually yes. Heat treatment resolves in one day versus 2–3 chemical visits over 6 weeks, and it kills eggs — which insecticides cannot. In dense NYC apartment buildings where reinfestation risk from neighbouring units is constant, faster resolution has real value. For light or early-stage infestations, chemical treatment is often just as effective at lower total cost.

How many treatments do bed bugs need in NYC?

Chemical treatment typically requires 2–3 visits spaced 21 days apart — the cycle matches the bed bug life stage timeline, ensuring newly hatched nymphs are hit before they reproduce. Heat treatment resolves in a single session. In NYC apartment buildings where adjacent units remain infested, follow-up inspection is standard even after heat treatment.

Does my NYC landlord have to pay for bed bug extermination?

In most cases, yes. NYC Local Law 69 (2023) requires landlords to disclose bed bug infestation history in writing at lease signing and renewal. The NYC Housing Maintenance Code requires landlords to keep rental units free of pests including bed bugs. If the infestation comes from common areas, neighbouring units, or the building structure, the landlord is responsible for treatment. Report in writing, file a 311 complaint, and request an HPD inspection if your landlord refuses.

What is a K9 bed bug inspection and do I need one?

A K9 inspection uses a trained detection dog to locate live bed bugs and viable eggs — including inside walls and furniture a visual inspection would miss. It costs $300–$500 in NYC. It's most useful when you suspect an infestation but can't confirm it visually, or to verify clearance after treatment. It's not required before treatment, but it can prevent you from paying for treatment on a unit that doesn't have an active infestation — or from treating only one room when bugs are throughout the apartment.

Why do bed bugs cost so much more to treat in NYC than other cities?

Three NYC-specific factors drive costs above national averages: dense multi-unit buildings mean reinfestation from neighbouring apartments is an ongoing risk, making eradication harder and follow-up more likely; landlord and building access coordination adds logistics cost to every job; and NYC exterminators carry higher licensing, insurance, and overhead than suburban operators. The price difference reflects genuine cost differences.

How much does whole-building bed bug treatment cost in NYC?

Whole-building treatment for a multi-unit NYC building typically runs $5,000–$20,000+, depending on the number of units, building layout, and treatment method. If you're in a building with bed bugs across multiple units, push management to coordinate building-wide treatment — unit-by-unit spot treatment rarely resolves the problem in dense buildings.

What is the minimum fee to get a bed bug exterminator to my NYC apartment?

Most NYC exterminators charge a visit or inspection fee of $75–$150 just to come to the property. This may or may not be credited toward treatment. Always confirm whether the inspection fee applies toward the treatment quote before booking.

What's the cheapest way to get rid of bed bugs in NYC?

The lowest upfront cost is conventional chemical treatment — $300–$600 per room. However, if it requires 3 visits and the building reinfestation problem isn't addressed, total cost can approach or exceed heat treatment. DIY sprays are not effective for established infestations in NYC apartments and risk dispersing the infestation into neighbouring units.

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