Rodent control in Astoria: what to know
Astoria blends low-rise apartment buildings, two- and three-family homes and one of the city's densest restaurant scenes — a combination that drives heavy rodent and fly pressure, especially along 30th Avenue and Steinway Street.
The mix of older homes with yards and dense apartment blocks means both outdoor pests (ants, stinging insects) and classic apartment pests (mice, cockroaches).
Proximity to Astoria Park and the waterfront adds seasonal mosquito pressure.
Signs you need rodent control
- Droppings in the trash room, basement, or compactor area rather than just an individual kitchen
- Gnaw marks on trash room doors, bins, or utility penetrations
- Grease (rub) marks along baseboards or basement walls where rodents travel the same route repeatedly
- Scratching in walls or ceilings at night, especially in units near a shared riser or chase
- Burrow holes near building foundations, tree pits, or landscaped areas close to Central Park
How we treat rodent control in Astoria
Rodent pressure on the Upper East Side doesn't track with a building's polish. Shared trash and service areas in large co-ops and high-rises — compactor rooms, loading docks, basement corridors — sustain rat and mouse activity independent of how immaculate the lobby or individual apartments are, because those shared spaces are where food waste concentrates and where a single weak point serves an entire building.
Norway rats are burrowers, not climbers, and Central Park's grounds give them established outdoor harbourage within blocks of many Upper East Side addresses. Mice, meanwhile, move indoors through the same shared risers and pipe chases that connect units in pre-war co-ops, meaning one apartment's problem is rarely only that apartment's problem.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Astoria and the surrounding Queens area — including Astoria Park, Steinway Street, 30th Avenue, Socrates Sculpture Park — across ZIP codes 11102, 11103, 11105, 11106.