Camponotus species

Carpenter Ants in Coastal Southeastern North Carolina

Carpenter ants are large black ants that tunnel through wood to build their nests. Unlike termites, they don’t eat the wood. They just hollow it out to create galleries for their colony. Given enough time, the structural damage can rival what termites cause.

If you’re seeing large black ants in your home, especially near windows, door frames, or in damp areas, you may have a carpenter ant problem.

How to Identify Carpenter Ants

Where Carpenter Ants Nest

Carpenter ants prefer wood that’s already been compromised by moisture. Common nesting sites include:

The nest is rarely the first place you’ll see them. Workers travel up to 100 yards from the nest looking for food, so the ants you see in the kitchen may be coming from a nest in a backyard tree.

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.

Damage Carpenter Ants Cause

A single year of activity rarely produces visible damage. Over multiple seasons, untreated carpenter ant colonies can:

Signs of significant damage include:

How Healthy Home Treats Carpenter Ants

Carpenter ant treatment is included in all four annual protection plans. The approach combines:

Persistent carpenter ant problems often signal a moisture issue in the home that needs separate attention.

Covered Under:

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Carpenter ants tunnel through wood to create nesting galleries, but they don’t eat the wood. They eat other insects and sugary substances. The wood damage comes from the tunneling itself, not consumption, but the structural impact can resemble termite damage over time.

Signs include large black ants (1/4 to 1/2 inch) inside the home, small piles of sawdust-like material near baseboards or windowsills, faint rustling sounds inside walls at night, and winged ants emerging in spring. Carpenter ants are most active at dawn and dusk.

Yes. Carpenter ants are covered under all four annual protection plans starting at $540 per year. Treatment combines targeted inspection of likely nesting sites, residual application at entry points, and recommendations for eliminating moisture issues that attract them.

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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