Understanding Centipede and Millipede Infestations in Alachua, FL
Centipedes and millipedes share a fundamental dependency on moisture that makes them reliable indicators of specific environmental conditions both inside and outside structures. When these arthropods appear indoors in significant numbers, they are communicating that the building has moisture levels, harborage conditions, or prey insect populations that are attracting them from the surrounding environment. Addressing their invasions effectively requires identifying and correcting these underlying conditions rather than simply treating the visible individuals.
House centipedes, the most commonly encountered centipede species inside Alachua, FL structures, are fast-moving predators with numerous leg pairs that appear alarming to residents but are actually beneficial in that they consume other pest insects and spiders. Despite their role as natural pest controllers, most homeowners understandably do not want house centipedes running across walls and ceilings in living spaces. The presence of house centipedes in significant numbers indicates that sufficient prey insects are present within the structure to sustain a predatory population.
Millipedes, by contrast, are harmless decomposers that feed on decaying organic matter and are typically found in high numbers only when conditions outside the structure have created an unusually large population in surrounding mulch, leaf litter, or soil, followed by a trigger event such as heavy rainfall that drives them to seek drier conditions inside the building. Millipede invasions tend to be episodic rather than persistent, with large numbers entering over a period of days following triggering environmental conditions.
Exterior perimeter treatment combined with moisture management and entry point exclusion consistently produces the best results for both centipede and millipede management. Reducing the exterior population through granular perimeter treatment and addressing moisture conditions that concentrate these arthropods near the building substantially reduces invasion pressure. Entry point exclusion through door sweep installation, foundation gap sealing, and utility penetration caulking limits access for individuals that do reach the building perimeter.
Key Differences Between Centipedes and Millipedes
House Centipede
Identified by long legs extending to either side of a flattened body. Fast-moving predators feeding on insects and spiders. Presence indicates prey insect populations within structure. Require prey reduction and moisture management alongside direct treatment for lasting control.
Common Millipede
Slow-moving decomposers with cylindrical bodies and two leg pairs per body segment. Harmless to humans and do not bite. Invade structures during moisture displacement events. Can enter in enormous numbers during episodic invasion events following heavy rainfall.
Preferred Habitats
Both species concentrate in moist environments including mulch beds, leaf litter accumulations, compost areas, and poorly drained garden borders immediately adjacent to structures. Reducing or repositioning these moisture-rich harborage materials away from the foundation substantially reduces invasion pressure.
Entry Conditions
Both enter through the same types of foundation gaps, door sweep gaps, utility penetrations, and low-lying cracks that allow other moisture-dependent pests to enter. A building with significant centipede or millipede invasion has identifiable entry points that exclusion work can substantially close.
Our Centipede and Millipede Treatment Program
Moisture Assessment and Contributing Condition Identification
Our technician examines the property for moisture conditions that concentrate centipede and millipede populations near the structure, including foundation drainage, gutter discharge, mulch depth and placement, irrigation system proximity to the building, and crawlspace or basement moisture levels. Correcting these conditions is the most durable component of any effective long-term program.
Exterior Perimeter Treatment
Granular insecticide treatment of the soil and mulch band immediately around the building perimeter creates a treated zone that affects centipedes and millipedes in the exterior harborage area. Liquid perimeter treatment is applied to the foundation wall surface and lower band of exterior siding to create a treated surface insects contact when approaching the building.
Interior Crack and Crevice Application
Interior treatment targets cracks and void spaces along foundation walls, under baseboards, in crawlspace entry areas, and along utility penetrations where centipedes and millipedes enter and harborage. Residual applications in these areas provide ongoing contact control for individuals entering the structure between scheduled service visits.
Entry Point Exclusion and Follow-Up
Identified entry points at doors, windows, utility penetrations, and foundation gaps are addressed through exclusion recommendations that reduce ongoing entry. A follow-up visit at two to four weeks confirms treatment efficacy and allows additional granular or liquid applications if population pressure from the exterior environment continues at elevated levels.