Periplaneta americana

American Cockroaches in Coastal Southeastern North Carolina

The American cockroach is the large roach most coastal NC residents encounter at some point. Also called the palmetto bug or water bug, it’s the biggest common cockroach in the area, reaching 1.5 inches or more as an adult. Despite the name, this species isn’t native to North America. It arrived from Africa centuries ago.

How to Identify American Cockroaches

Where American Cockroaches Live

American cockroaches typically live outdoors and wander inside opportunistically. Common outdoor habitats include:

Indoors, they prefer:

Subtitle

How to Tell Black from Red Imported

Some description text for this item

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.

Are They Dangerous?

American cockroaches are not aggressive toward humans but pose health concerns:

They’re not as significant an allergy trigger as German cockroaches, but the health concerns are real.

How Healthy Home Treats American Cockroaches

American cockroaches are covered under all four annual protection plans. Treatment combines:

Covered Under:

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Palmetto bug is a regional Southern term for the American cockroach (Periplaneta americana). In coastal NC, palmetto bug, water bug, and American cockroach all typically refer to the same species, a large reddish-brown roach commonly found in warm humid areas.

Yes, American cockroaches can fly, though they typically prefer to run. Adults have fully developed wings and use them most often to glide down from elevated positions. Seeing one fly across a room is alarming but not dangerous.

American cockroaches typically live outdoors in warm, damp areas like sewers, storm drains, mulch beds, and around foundations. They come indoors looking for food, water, and shelter, especially during weather extremes. Coastal NC’s warm humid climate is ideal for them year-round.

Subtitle

Not Sure Which Fire Ant Species You Have?

Subtitle

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.

to top