Bats are federally and state-protected. Doing this wrong is illegal — and the wrong removal method leaves dead bats in your walls, attic insulation saturated with guano, and a public health hazard. We do it the legal way, the careful way, and we we stand behind every seal.
Wildlife in your home is not a problem that resolves on its own. Every day they’re inside, the damage compounds — and the longer you wait, the more expensive the eventual fix becomes. Here’s specifically what’s at stake when bat get inside.
Bat guano harbors histoplasmosis — a fungal lung infection that can sicken or hospitalize. Dry guano becomes airborne when disturbed, including through your HVAC.
Bats are the leading source of rabies exposure in the U.S. Any contact — including a bat found in a bedroom — should be treated as potential exposure and reported to your county health department.
A colony can deposit hundreds of pounds of guano in an attic. Once insulation is saturated, it has to be fully removed and replaced — guano cannot be ‘cleaned’ out of fibrous insulation.
Urine and droppings are acidic. Over years, they degrade drywall, eat through paint, stain ceilings, and corrode metal fasteners and ductwork.
Bats can fit through gaps smaller than a dime (3/8 inch). DIY exclusions almost always miss something — and missing one gap means the colony comes right back.
Tennessee protects bats during maternity season (typically May 15 – August 15). Sealing a colony in during these months kills flightless pups — and is a violation of state wildlife law.
If any of these match what you’re hearing or seeing, call us for a free inspection. We’ll confirm the species and rule out anything else before we ever quote work.
A real solution requires more than catching the animal — you have to seal the access points, repair the damage, and prevent re-entry. Here’s the process we follow for every bat job.
We walk the full exterior with binoculars, then enter the attic with proper PPE and thermal imaging. We identify the species (big brown vs. little brown vs. Mexican free-tail), estimate colony size, and locate every primary and secondary exit point.
Tennessee law (and federal Endangered Species Act for some species) prohibits exclusion during maternity season — typically May 15 to August 15. If you call during that window, we’ll inspect, plan the exclusion, and schedule the work for the legal date.
Once outside the maternity window, we install one-way exit devices on every primary exit. Bats leave at dusk to feed and physically cannot get back in. We monitor for 5–10 nights to confirm full evacuation.
After confirmed evacuation, we permanently seal every potential re-entry point — including gable vents (with hardware cloth), ridge vents, soffit gaps, chimney junctions, and pipe penetrations. Materials are color-matched.
If the colony was sizable, we remove contaminated insulation, vacuum guano with HEPA-filtered equipment, and apply an enzymatic sanitizer. We document everything with photos for your records.
Every bat exclusion comes with a written work done right the first time. If any sealed area fails, we come back and re-do it at no charge.
No upcharges, no surprise fees. Flat-rate quote up front and full insurance coverage on every exclusion.
Tennessee law protects bats during maternity season (roughly May 15 – August 15). During this window, flightless pups are in the roost. Sealing the colony out leaves the pups to die in your attic — which is illegal under state law and creates a worse problem for you. We inspect any time of year, but we schedule the exclusion outside the maternity window. We’ll be honest with you about timing.
Treat it as one. Bats are the leading source of rabies exposure in the U.S. If a bat is found in a bedroom — especially with someone sleeping, a child, or anyone unable to confirm contact — contact your county health department about post-exposure prophylaxis. Then call us to inspect for a colony. A bat in the living space almost always means a colony in the attic.
It varies — every bat job is different. The price depends on roof complexity, the size of the colony, the number of access points, and whether guano remediation is needed. Bat work is also the most regulated wildlife job in Tennessee, which affects timing. We provide a flat-rate written quote after the inspection — no hourly billing, no surprises.
It depends on volume and location. A small colony (under a dozen bats, less than a year) often produces guano that can be left in place under existing insulation. Larger or longer-established colonies typically require removal of saturated insulation, HEPA vacuuming, and enzymatic sanitization. We’ll show you what we find and give you both options.
No. Bats are loyal to roost sites and will work hard to find any unsealed gap. That’s why we use one-way exclusion devices instead of just sealing — and why DIY exclusions usually fail. We seal after confirmed evacuation, not before.
From inspection to fully sealed: typically 2–3 weeks. The one-way devices need 5–10 nights of monitoring to confirm evacuation, then the perimeter seal happens in 1–2 days. If guano remediation is needed, add 1–2 more days.
Free inspection, flat-rate quote, and work done right the first time. Call us or schedule online — same-day available.