Bed Bugs in Coastal Southeastern North Carolina
Waking up with bites you can’t explain is one of the most stressful things that can happen as a homeowner. The first reaction is usually panic. The second is embarrassment. Both deserve to be addressed up front.
Bed bugs are not a sign of an unclean home. They hitchhike in luggage, used furniture, deliveries, and grocery bags. They’ve shown up in five-star hotels, hospitals, schools, and college dorms. If you have them, you’re not the first person Healthy Home has helped through this, and you won’t be the last.
Healthy Home treats bed bugs discreetly and thoroughly across the 5-county service area: New Hanover, Brunswick, Pender, Duplin, and Columbus counties. The good news is bed bugs are very treatable when caught early. This page covers how to identify them, where they hide, what treatment looks like, and how the work is handled from start to finish.
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How to Identify Bed Bugs
Physical Features
- Adults: Reddish-brown, flat, oval-shaped, about 1/4 inch long (roughly the size of an apple seed)
- After feeding: Engorged and elongated, darker red color
- Nymphs (immature stages): Lighter, almost translucent when unfed, gradually darken as they molt and feed
- Eggs: Tiny white specks the size of a pinhead, often laid in clusters in cracks and crevices
- Shed skins: Translucent, hollow versions of the bug at each life stage, found near hiding spots
What Bed Bugs Are Not
- Not a flea (fleas are smaller, jump, and prefer pets)
- Not a roach (roaches are larger, have antennae, and are active in different areas)
- Not a tick (ticks have eight legs as adults; bed bugs have six)
- Not a result of cleanliness (this matters and bears repeating)
Signs You Have Bed Bugs {#signs}
You’re more likely to find evidence of bed bugs than to see live bugs themselves. The signs are subtle but distinctive once you know what to look for.
The Bites
- ften in lines or clusters of three ("breakfast, lunch, and dinner")
- Typically appear on exposed skin (arms, neck, shoulders, ankles, back)
- Show up overnight, often in places they weren't the night before
- Look like small raised welts, similar to mosquito bites
- Usually itchy, sometimes with a slight swelling
Some people don’t react to bed bug bites at all, while others have significant skin reactions. Two people sleeping in the same bed can have very different experiences.
Physical Evidence
- Fecal spots. Small dark dots (like ground pepper) on sheets, mattress seams, or behind headboards. These are bed bug droppings and often smear if rubbed.
- Blood smears. Small reddish-brown stains on sheets or pillowcases. These come from bed bugs being crushed during the night.
- Shed skins. Translucent, hollow casings in cracks, crevices, and along mattress seams. Bed bugs molt five times before adulthood, so a population leaves a lot of shed skins.
- Live bugs. Adults are visible to the naked eye if you know where to look (mattress seams, headboard joints, behind nightstands).
- A sweet, musty odor. Heavy infestations produce a distinctive smell, sometimes described as raspberries or coriander.
Where to Inspect First
If you suspect bed bugs, inspect these areas systematically:
- Pull back sheets and check the mattress seams, especially at the top of the mattress near pillows
- Lift the mattress and inspect the box spring seams and tags
- Check behind the headboard (this often requires moving the headboard)
- Inspect bed frame joints, especially the points where rails meet posts
- Look at the underside of any furniture within 5 feet of the bed
- Check around electrical outlets and switch plates near the bed
- Inspect picture frames hanging within 6 feet of the bed
Where Bed Bugs Hide
Bed bugs are masters of concealment. They prefer cracks the width of a credit card and locations close to where humans sleep. Common spots include:
Near the Bed (Most Common)
- Mattress seams, especially the upper seam near the head
- Box spring seams and tags
- Behind headboards and around fasteners
- Bed frame joints and screw holes
- Inside hollow bed posts
- Under loose wallpaper near the bed
- Behind picture frames within 6 feet of the bed
Other Bedroom Areas
- Cracks in nightstands and dressers
- Inside electrical outlets and switch plates
- Behind baseboards and trim
- Inside lamp bases on nightstands
- Inside alarm clocks and other bedside electronics
- Curtain seams (less common but possible)
Beyond the Bedroom
In heavy infestations, bed bugs spread to:
- Living room couches and recliners (especially in homes where people fall asleep on the couch)
- Office chairs (in home offices used heavily)
- Inside upholstered dining chairs
If you have bed bugs anywhere in your home, they’re probably within a few feet of where you sleep.
How Bed Bugs Spread {#how-they-spread}
Bed bugs don’t fly or jump. They get carried.
The Main Vectors
- Travel. Hotels are the most common source. A bed bug climbs into luggage in a hotel room, rides home, and emerges in a new bed.
- Used furniture. Mattresses, box springs, couches, and upholstered chairs purchased used (especially from yard sales or curbside pickups) are high-risk.
- Cardboard and packaging. Cardboard boxes, especially from storage facilities or moving services, can harbor bed bugs.
- Visitors and overnight guests. A guest who unknowingly has bed bugs can leave eggs behind.
- Multi-family housing. Apartments, condos, and townhomes can have bed bugs spread between units through shared walls, electrical outlets, and plumbing penetrations.
- Schools, offices, and public transit. Less common but documented. Bed bugs can ride along on backpacks, briefcases, or clothing.
What Doesn't Spread Bed Bugs
- Pets (bed bugs feed almost exclusively on humans)
- Outdoor activities (bed bugs don't live outdoors)
- Insect bites (mosquitoes, fleas, and bed bugs all bite, but they don't transfer between hosts)
How Healthy Home Treats Bed Bugs {#treatment}
Bed bug treatment is interior-only, room-by-room work. The process is built around discretion, thoroughness, and verification.
- Inspection visit. A trained technician inspects the suspected areas to confirm bed bug presence, identify the rooms affected, and assess the severity. This usually takes 30 to 60 minutes.
- Treatment plan. Based on the inspection, you receive a written treatment plan with the rooms requiring treatment, the timeline, and the total cost. No work begins until you approve the plan.
- Preparation. You receive a prep checklist to complete before treatment (see "Before Treatment" section below).
- Treatment visit. Targeted, room-by-room treatment of mattresses, furniture, baseboards, and harborages. Treatment is interior-only.
- Follow-up inspection. 2 to 3 weeks after treatment, a follow-up visit confirms the treatment worked and identifies any surviving activity (typically from eggs that hatched after the initial treatment).
- Re-treatment if needed. If activity remains, the affected rooms are re-treated. This is rare with thorough initial treatment.
Pricing
| Service | Price |
|---|---|
| Inspection | $175 (credited toward treatment if booked) |
| Treatment per infested room | $350 |
The inspection fee is credited directly toward your treatment cost if you book treatment with Healthy Home. If the inspection finds something other than bed bugs (some bite-causing pests can be confused with bed bugs), you still get a clear answer about what’s actually happening.
Why It's Priced Per Room
You only pay for rooms that are actually infested, not unaffected rooms. If bed bugs are confined to the master bedroom, you pay for one room. If they’ve spread to a guest room and a couch in the living room, you pay for three. This makes pricing predictable and proportional to the actual problem.
Why Bed Bug Service Isn't in the Protection Plans
Bed bug treatment is interior-only, focused on sleeping and resting areas, with a 2-to-3-week follow-up cycle. Standard recurring pest plans treat the foundation, perimeter, and entry points of the home on a quarterly schedule. The two services are fundamentally different in approach, location, and timing.
What to Expect Before Treatment {#prep}
Preparation matters. Following the prep checklist makes treatment significantly more effective.
Standard Prep Checklist
- Wash all bedding, clothing, and fabric items in the affected rooms on high heat. Sheets, pillowcases, blankets, comforters, curtains, and any clothing within reach of the bed. High heat (over 120°F) kills bed bugs and eggs.
- Vacuum floors, mattresses, and furniture thoroughly. Empty the vacuum into a sealed bag and dispose of it outside.
- Reduce clutter so the technician can access hiding spots. Move boxes, magazines, and stored items away from the bed and other treatment areas.
- Don't move infested items between rooms. This spreads bed bugs to previously uninfested areas. If you've already moved furniture, mention this during inspection.
- Don't apply DIY products before treatment. Surface sprays interfere with professional treatment and can scatter bed bugs into harder-to-reach areas.
- Plan for the home to be empty during treatment (typically 2 to 4 hours per visit). Pets need to be removed during this time as well.
A complete prep checklist is provided when you book.
After Treatment
- Allow surfaces to dry completely before re-entering treated rooms (typically 2 hours)
- Sleep in the treated bed the night after treatment. Bed bugs are attracted to human CO2, which helps the residual product reach surviving bugs.
- Don't wash bedding for at least 2 weeks after treatment unless directed otherwise
- Watch for any bites in the 2 to 3 weeks following treatment, and report them at the follow-up inspection
Frequently Asked Questions About Bed Bugs
The most common signs are unexplained bites (often in lines or clusters of three on exposed skin), small dark fecal spots on sheets or mattress seams, shed translucent skins in cracks and crevices, small blood smears on sheets or pillowcases, and live bed bugs themselves (reddish-brown, flat, about the size of an apple seed). If you have any combination of these signs, schedule a professional inspection to confirm before deciding on treatment.
DIY bed bug treatment almost never works. Bed bugs hide in cracks, mattress seams, electrical outlets, and behind picture frames where surface sprays can’t reach. They’ve also developed resistance to many common pesticides. Incomplete treatment makes infestations harder to eliminate later because surviving bugs can develop further resistance. Professional treatment with the right products and complete coverage is the most reliable path.
Healthy Home Pest Control charges $175 for the inspection (credited toward treatment cost if you book one) and $350 per infested room for treatment. You only pay for the rooms that are actually infested, not unaffected rooms. Most homes need a single treatment visit per infested room, with a follow-up inspection 2 to 3 weeks later to confirm the treatment worked.
Bed bugs spend most of their time within a few feet of where you sleep. Common hiding spots include mattress and box spring seams, behind headboards, in bed frame joints, inside nightstands and dressers, behind picture frames near the bed, in electrical outlets, under loose wallpaper or trim, and inside upholstered furniture. They come out at night to feed, then retreat to their hiding spots.
Bed bugs don’t fly or jump. They spread by being carried, usually in luggage from hotels or other infested locations, on used furniture (especially mattresses and couches), in clothing or backpacks, and between connected apartment units through walls and electrical outlets. They are not a sign of an unclean home. Bed bugs are equally happy in five-star hotels and college dorms.
Bed bugs are not known to transmit any diseases to humans. The bites themselves are usually itchy and can be uncomfortable, but they’re not medically dangerous. The bigger impact is psychological. Sleep disruption, anxiety, embarrassment, and the stress of dealing with an infestation are common and very real. Severe allergic reactions to bed bug bites are rare but possible.
A single treatment visit per infested room is typical, with a follow-up inspection 2 to 3 weeks later to confirm the treatment worked. Severe infestations may require a second full treatment. The 2-to-3-week follow-up window is important because it allows any eggs that survived initial treatment to hatch, at which point they can be identified and addressed.
Several practical habits reduce the risk. When traveling, inspect hotel mattress seams and headboards before unpacking. Keep luggage off the bed and floor when staying in hotels. Be cautious with used furniture, especially mattresses, box springs, and upholstered pieces. Inspect any used furniture thoroughly before bringing it into your home. After visits from guests who travel frequently, check sleeping areas for signs. Early detection makes treatment much faster and less expensive.
You don’t have to wonder, and you don’t have to be embarrassed. A professional inspection gives you a clear answer about what’s actually going on, and treatment is handled discreetly from start to finish.
