The Black Fire Ant

The Black Fire Ant (Solenopsis richteri) is the lesser-known cousin of the more notorious Red Imported Fire Ant. It was introduced to the United States around 1918, decades before its red counterpart, through the port of Mobile, Alabama. Despite that head start, it never spread widely. Today its established range is concentrated in a small region of northern Mississippi and Alabama, and it’s rare to find in coastal southeastern North Carolina.

This page exists as an identification resource. If you’re trying to determine which fire ant species you have, this information will help you rule the Black out. In coastal NC, the answer is almost always Red Imported Fire Ants.

Quick Identification

Range in the United States

Black Fire Ants occupy a relatively small geographic footprint:

In coastal NC, you are extremely unlikely to encounter a Black Fire Ant colony. If you’ve found a fire ant in your yard, the overwhelming probability is that it’s the Red Imported Fire Ant.

How to Tell Black from Red Imported

The two species look similar at a glance, behave identically, and sting just as painfully.
The reliable identifier is color:

Feature Red Imported Black Hybrid
Color Reddish-brown head/thorax, darker abdomen Uniformly dark brown to black Intermediate, variable
Range in coastal NC Dominant species Extremely rare Extremely rare
Mound appearance Dome-shaped, loose soil Same dome shape Same dome shape
Sting Severe, painful Severe, painful (identical) Severe, painful (identical)
Treatment approach Bait + direct mound treatment Same as RIFA Same as RIFA

If you’re in coastal NC and have fire ants, the simplest explanation is correct: they are Red Imported.
Visit the Red Imported Fire Ant page for full identification details, sting information, and treatment specifics.

Why They Matter (When You Find Them)

Despite their limited range, Black Fire Ants are functionally identical to their red cousins in terms of risk:
If you encounter what you suspect is a Black Fire Ant in coastal NC, the practical response is the same: treat the colony, and have a professional verify the species during inspection.

How Healthy Home Handles Fire Ant Treatment

Fire ant treatment doesn’t change based on which species is present. Whether you have Red Imported, Black, or Hybrid Fire Ants, the approach is the same:

Healthy Home’s protection plans cover all fire ant species under one service.

Covered Under:

Frequently Asked Questions

Almost never. They are concentrated in a small region of northern Mississippi and Alabama. Coastal NC is well outside their established range.

Black Imported are uniformly dark brown to black throughout. Red Imported have a reddish-brown head and thorax with a darker abdomen. Sting and behavior are otherwise identical.

Identically to Red Imported: broadcast bait plus direct mound treatment. Healthy Home’s Home + Yard, Home + Mosquito, and Ultimate plans cover any fire ant species.
Possible but unlikely in coastal NC. The reliable check is color: if your fire ants have noticeably reddish heads and thoraxes, they’re Red Imported. If they’re uniformly very dark throughout, photograph one and bring it up during your next service visit so the technician can confirm.

Not Sure Which Fire Ant Species You Have?

It rarely changes the treatment, but it's good information to have. Our technicians can identify any fire ant species during your service visit and treat the colony the same day.

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