
New Jersey has one of the highest per-capita Lyme disease rates in the country — and Monmouth County, with its mix of wooded residential neighborhoods and heavy deer population, sits firmly in the hot zone. Yard-level tick control is a real health-protection measure for families with kids playing outside or pets going in and out.
A single tick bite can cause years of chronic illness if Lyme disease isn't caught and treated early. The most dangerous fact about Lyme: the ticks that transmit it most often are nymphs — roughly the size of a poppy seed, easily missed during tick checks, attached for 36–48 hours before most people notice them. By the time a nymph is visible enough to spot, transmission has often already occurred.
For Monmouth County families — especially those in Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver, Holmdel, Colts Neck, and other towns with wooded lots or mature tree canopy — yard-level tick population reduction is one of the most practical health interventions available. It doesn't eliminate tick exposure entirely (ticks hitchhike on deer and birds into any yard), but it significantly reduces the local population and therefore significantly reduces the number of ticks encountering your family on your own property. Combined with personal checks and tick prevention for pets, it's the practical backbone of Lyme disease risk reduction.
Every Fight the Bite tick control job is structured around the same principle: do the full work properly the first time. Here's exactly what's included.
Residual barrier treatment applied to yard perimeters, wooded edges, shrub lines, tall grass, leaf litter, and tick-typical habitat. Most deer ticks in Monmouth County yards come from bordering wooded areas and tall-grass edges — treating these zones creates a reduced-tick buffer before they reach the active part of your yard.
Strategic placement of permethrin-treated cotton bait that mice carry into their nests. Since mice are the primary Lyme disease reservoir and larval/nymphal ticks feed on mice, the tubes kill the next generation of ticks at the nest before they emerge to bite humans. Excellent long-term complement to perimeter treatment.
All products chosen for effectiveness AND safety. Keep dogs off treated grass for 1 to 2 hours until dry. Cats should stay indoors during treatment (most outdoor cat owners already do this for any yard work). Anthony coordinates timing around your pet schedule before any application.
Monmouth County tick pressure peaks in May through July (adult and nymph activity overlap) and again in October for fall nymph activity. We time treatments to hit these windows. Spring treatment (late April/early May) provides protection through the nymphal peak; fall treatment catches the second seasonal wave.
For pet-owner properties, our tick barrier products also provide residual flea control in the treated zone. No added charge for the integrated coverage when we're already treating for ticks.
High deer traffic properties face significantly higher tick pressure. Anthony will assess deer pressure on your property during the initial walk and recommend coverage level, plus discuss landscaping changes that reduce tick habitat (leaf litter removal, vegetation trimming at wooded edges, physical barriers from wooded lots when practical).
Black-legged ticks (Ixodes scapularis, commonly called deer ticks) are the Lyme disease vector and the primary tick concern in Monmouth County. Adults are small — sesame-seed sized — and nymphs are even smaller, about the size of a poppy seed. That's why they're so frequently missed during tick checks. They're active whenever ground temperatures are above freezing (essentially March through December in most years). Peak transmission risk is May through July, when nymphs are active and statistically most likely to be undetected long enough to transmit Lyme (roughly 36–48 hours of feeding).
Lone star ticks (Amblyomma americanum) have expanded their range significantly in New Jersey over the last decade. They're larger than deer ticks, aggressive, and adult females have a distinctive white dot on the back. Lone star ticks transmit ehrlichiosis, tularemia, and — most unusually — they can cause alpha-gal syndrome (red meat allergy) after a bite. Developing an allergy to red meat because of a tick bite sounds fictional; it's real and increasingly common in New Jersey.
American dog ticks (Dermacentor variabilis) are the largest of the three common Monmouth County ticks and primarily parasitize dogs, though they'll bite humans readily. They transmit Rocky Mountain spotted fever and tularemia. Less common than the other two species but regularly encountered, especially in properties with outdoor pets or proximity to wooded trails.
The reason these details matter: treatment approach and timing differ slightly by species, and seasonal risk patterns differ too. A good tick program in Monmouth County targets Ixodes nymphs (May–July) and Ixodes adults (October–November) specifically — those two windows account for the vast majority of Lyme transmission locally. A generic "spring spray" without attention to nymph timing misses the point.
Tick control is specifically the area where pet-owner homeowners need to genuinely trust their pest company. The products used, the timing of application, the recommendations around when pets can go back on the lawn — all of this directly affects your animals and kids. Anthony — a local Monmouth County owner who talks to every customer personally — is the right fit for that level of trust. He's not reading off a franchise script. He'll tell you specifically when to keep the dog indoors and specifically when it's safe to send kids back out on the lawn.
The practical difference shows up in results. Full-service tick control for a wooded-border Long Branch, Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver, or Holmdel property means perimeter barrier treatment + tick tubes + timing around nymph and adult peaks — not just one spray a year. Most Monmouth County tick treatments run $125 to $350. Recurring season protection programs are priced lower per visit. Call (732) 272-1929 for free estimate and seasonal scheduling.
Tell Anthony about your yard and he'll get back to you fast.