Tick Control Services

Our Service Area

Protect Your Kids Pets Family Yard

with Safe Tick Control

  • Greenwich
  • Stamford
  • Norwalk
  • Ridgefield
  • Darien
  • Westport
  • Weston
  • New Canaan
  • Fairfield


GET A FREE TICK TREATMENT

Full-property tick treatments across Fairfield County, CT — natural or synthetic options.

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🕷️ Type of Safe Tick Control

Serving Fairfield County, CT. Get a Free Treatment!
Questions? Call (888) 998-4257

Areas We Serve in Fairfield County, CT

Get a Free Tick & Mosquito Quote

Schedule Your Tick & Mosquito Service, Call (888) 998-4257

Frequently Asked Questions

Learn Everything about Safe Tick Control Services

Yes. Safe Tick Control provides tick and mosquito control in Greenwich, Stamford, Darien, New Canaan, Westport, Weston, Wilton, Norwalk, and Fairfield. We service every major neighborhood and ZIP code across Fairfield County.

Yes. We specialize in large estates, wooded properties, stone walls, shaded landscapes, and high-tick environments common in Back Country Greenwich, Wilton, New Canaan, and Weston.

Most customers receive same-day or next-day treatment. Instant quotes available by phone using satellite mapping.

Yes. Our treatments are safe for children and pets once dry (30–60 minutes). Ideal for families concerned about Lyme disease exposure.

Yes. Tick treatments are routinely used on properties with dogs in Greenwich, Darien, and New Canaan. Keep pets inside until the product dries.

Once dry, residue binds to vegetation and is safe for pets that nibble grass. Thousands of Fairfield County pet owners use our service safely.

Yes. After drying, the lawn is safe for children to play, roll, or run on.

Yes. Once dry, tick treatments are safe for pregnant women, infants, and sensitive households.

No. We avoid wellheads and water sources. Treatments bind to vegetation and do not migrate. Ideal for homes in Back Country Greenwich and North Stamford.

Yes. We do not spray pool water. Treatments are applied only to surrounding vegetation where ticks hide.

Yes. We avoid flowering plants, gardens, and pollinator zones. Only shaded, non-flowering areas are treated.

Start in early spring (March) when nymph ticks emerge. Ticks are active whenever temperatures exceed 40°F.

Yes. Adult deer ticks stay active throughout fall and during warm winter days in Fairfield County.

Synthetic treatments last up to 4 weeks, depending on shade, moisture, and vegetation.

Most customers see significant reduction within 24 hours. Best results come from seasonal treatments.

Yes. In suburban towns like Darien, Westport, and Greenwich, ticks migrate from stone walls, shrubs, hedges, and wildlife paths even in non-wooded areas.

No. Ticks stay low in grass, leaf litter, brush, and shaded areas. They do not fall from branches.

We treat the entire property: lawn, perimeter, landscape beds, stone walls, foundations, shaded areas, and wooded edges.

No. As long as we have yard access, you don’t need to be home. We notify you when service is complete.

Light rain after drying does not affect results. If heavy rain occurs immediately, we re-treat as needed.

Yes. Reducing ticks around your home lowers your pets’ exposure to Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, and babesiosis.

Yes. Yard treatments + vet preventatives offer the strongest protection.

No. Treatments target vegetation, not animals. We avoid sensitive habitats.

Yes. We offer cedarwood-oil treatments for eco-conscious households.

Yes, but they act mainly as repellents and do not last as long. They require more frequent applications.

Natural oils break down faster and do not provide the residual strength needed for guaranteed 30-day control.

Yes. We provide seasonal and one-time mosquito treatments across all Fairfield County towns.

Every 3–4 weeks during mosquito season for consistent results.

Areas like Old Greenwich, Riverside, Saugatuck, and Southport have higher mosquito pressure due to marshes, wetlands, and coastal humidity.

Mosquitoes rest high in tree canopies and vegetation, so mosquito treatment targets elevated foliage, unlike ground-level tick treatments.

Yes, including weddings, backyard parties, and special occasions.

We avoid all vegetable gardens, fruit trees, and edible plants during treatment.

No. Synthetic formulas are odorless; cedar oil has a mild cedar scent.

Ticks thrive in shade, moisture, leaf litter, tall grass, stone walls, wooded edges, and wildlife pathways.

Yes. Ticks overwinter under leaf litter and become active on warm winter days.

Maintain short grass, remove leaves, trim vegetation, and reduce moisture — but professional treatments provide the strongest protection.

Pricing starts at $95 and up. It is based on property size, terrain, vegetation density, and coverage needs. Quotes provided instantly by phone.

Connecticut has some of the highest Lyme disease rates in the U.S. Seasonal plans prevent reinfestation all season.

If you see ticks within 30 days of a synthetic application, we return and re-treat at no charge. Natural treatments are excluded.

People are confused why ticks show up even in clean, suburban lawns. They want to understand wildlife pathways, brush, and shaded areas.

Connecticut has one of the highest tick populations in the U.S. due to forests, wetlands, and deer/mouse habitats. Fairfield County towns such as Greenwich, Stamford, Darien, New Canaan, and Westport provide ideal conditions—shade, moisture, and wildlife corridors—allowing ticks to thrive year-round.

Ticks hide in leaf litter, tall grass, shaded beds, stone walls, and perimeter brush. They don’t jump or fly—they use a behavior called questing, waiting at ground level to latch onto people or pets passing by. This is common across Fairfield County properties.

The black-legged tick (deer tick) is responsible for nearly all Lyme disease cases in CT. Infection rates in Fairfield County regularly exceed 30–50%, making towns like Greenwich, Darien, and Wilton high-risk areas for Lyme and other tick-borne diseases.

Deer ticks are small and dark; dog ticks are larger with distinct markings; lone star ticks have a white spot on the female’s back. Deer ticks are the primary spreaders of Lyme disease in CT. Lone star ticks are increasing in Stamford, Norwalk, and coastal areas.

Nymph ticks peak April–August in Fairfield County, posing the greatest Lyme risk. Adult ticks peak in fall and remain active during warm winter days in Greenwich, Weston, and Ridgefield. Ticks are active anytime temperatures exceed 40°F.

Nymph ticks are tiny (poppy-seed sized) and often go unnoticed, allowing them to stay attached longer. In CT, nymph ticks are responsible for most human Lyme infections because they are so hard to detect.

Only about 30% of Lyme infections produce the classic bullseye rash. Many bites look like a small red bump. In Greenwich Hospital and Stamford Hospital urgent care reports, many Lyme cases show no rash at all, which is why prevention is critical.

Yes. Nymph ticks are so small that most people never see them. Many Fairfield County residents diagnosed with Lyme disease report no known tick bite, especially in wooded neighborhoods like Back Country, North Stamford, and Wilton.

Lyme transmission typically requires 24–36 hours, but other diseases like Anaplasmosis and Powassan virus can transmit much faster. Because ticks are so small, attachment often goes unnoticed beyond this window.

Yards with shade, moisture, leaf litter, deer traffic, stone walls, bird activity, and dense shrubs attract more ticks. Homes near woods or conservation land in Greenwich, Darien, Westport, and New Canaan have the highest exposure.

Yes. Ticks overwinter under leaf litter and become active anytime temperatures rise above 40°F. Many homeowners in Fairfield County find ticks outdoors even in January and February.

Use fine-tipped tweezers, grasp the tick close to the skin, and pull straight up. Do not twist or apply heat/oils. After removal, clean the area and monitor for symptoms. Veterinarians across Greenwich, Stamford, and Norwalk recommend professional yard control to prevent repeated exposure.

Medications kill ticks after they bite, but they don’t stop ticks from getting onto pets. In high-pressure areas like Wilton, Weston, and New Canaan, professional tick control significantly reduces the number of ticks pets bring indoors.

Yes. Even manicured lawns in Greenwich, Darien, and Westport can harbor ticks—especially in shaded pockets, foundations, hedges, and stone walls. Lawn maintenance helps, but it does not eliminate ticks.

The most effective prevention combines: professional tick control, pet preventatives, regular tick checks, trimming vegetation, removing leaf litter, and reducing moisture. Fairfield County homeowners see the greatest protection from monthly tick treatments during peak season.

Eliminate 100% of ticks—and reclaim your Fairfield County, CT yard. We specialize in targeted tick-spray applications.

Fairfield County Tick SERVICE

New customers get a free treatment with the purchase of seasonal package.

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