
Local rodent removal and exclusion for Corona, CA. We trap rats, mice, and gophers, then seal the home so they stay out.
Corona grew up around citrus, and that heritage still shapes its rodent problems today. Fruit trees, mature landscaping, and the foothills near the Cleveland National Forest give roof rats exactly what they look for, which is why attic and roofline calls are so common across the city.
In Corona, roof rats climb citrus and ornamental trees straight into eaves and attics, then settle into walls and garages. The older neighborhoods near downtown have the wood eaves and roof gaps that rats love, while the newer developments in south Corona and Temescal Valley back up to open hillside that keeps the pressure coming. We also work the homes along the Norco border, where larger lots and outbuildings bring their own rodent activity. The fix is the same one we use everywhere: a full inspection of the attic, roofline, and yard, targeted trapping where the rats actually travel, and sealing of every gap at the roofline, vents, and pipe penetrations. Trapping clears the noise tonight, but in a citrus town like Corona the homes stay open to the next wave until those gaps are closed. That is why sealing is part of every job we do here, followed by a return visit to make sure the attic has stayed quiet.
It contributes. Roof rats use fruit trees as both a food source and a climbing route to the roof. We seal the structure so tree access alone is not enough to get them inside.
Yes, along with the older downtown neighborhoods and the homes near the Norco line. We cover the whole city.
Trimming helps remove their highway to the roof, but the lasting fix is closing the entry points on the home itself, which is what we focus on.
Call to describe what you're hearing or seeing. We'll set up a no-obligation inspection and give you a clear price before any work starts.