Does Insurance Cover Pest Infestations: Termites, Bed Bugs, Rodents

Updated June 2026
No. Homeowners insurance excludes damage from all pests, including termites, carpenter ants, bed bugs, mice, rats, bats, and raccoons. Insurers classify pest infestations as a preventable maintenance issue. Termites alone cause an estimated $5 billion in property damage annually in the United States, and none of it is covered by standard homeowners policies. The only narrow exception involves sudden, hidden damage from pests that leads to a covered peril, such as rodents chewing through electrical wiring and causing a fire.

Why Pest Damage Is Excluded

The insurance industry classifies pest infestations as maintenance issues because they develop over time and are preventable through regular inspection and treatment. The standard HO-3 policy excludes damage caused by "birds, vermin, rodents, or insects." The rationale is straightforward: a homeowner who maintains their property through regular pest inspections, preventive treatments, and prompt response to signs of infestation can prevent the structural damage that pests cause. Because the damage is preventable and accumulates gradually, it does not meet the "sudden and accidental" standard that insurance requires.

This exclusion applies regardless of the severity of the damage. Whether termites cause $2,000 in cosmetic damage to a door frame or $50,000 in structural damage to floor joists and support beams, the standard policy excludes it all. There is no sub-limit or partial coverage for pest damage, and no endorsement is available from mainstream insurers to add pest damage coverage to a homeowners policy.

Termites and Wood-Destroying Insects

Subterranean termites are the most destructive pest in the United States, present in every state except Alaska. They enter homes through soil contact, foundation cracks, and wood that touches the ground. A mature termite colony can consume roughly one foot of a 2x4 board per year, and most homes have multiple entry points. Because termite damage is slow and hidden inside walls and structural members, it often goes undetected for years.

Termite damage repair costs range from $2,000 for localized damage to $30,000 or more for extensive structural compromise. Treatment costs add another $500 to $3,000 depending on the method (liquid barrier treatment, bait stations, or fumigation). In severe cases requiring structural repair, homeowners face total costs of $15,000 to $50,000 with no insurance assistance.

Carpenter ants, powder post beetles, and carpenter bees cause similar structural damage and are equally excluded from homeowners coverage. Carpenter ants are especially common in the Northeast, Pacific Northwest, and upper Midwest, where they excavate galleries in moist or damaged wood. Unlike termites, carpenter ants do not eat wood but tunnel through it to create nests, leaving piles of sawdust-like frass as evidence of their presence.

Are bed bugs covered by homeowners insurance?
No. Bed bug infestations are excluded under the same vermin and insect exclusion. Treatment costs for bed bugs range from $1,000 to $5,000 per home depending on the severity and the treatment method (chemical treatment, heat treatment, or a combination). Bed bugs do not cause structural damage, but the treatment, replacement of contaminated bedding and furniture, and psychological impact make them one of the most dreaded pest problems homeowners and renters face. Some renters insurance policies have similarly excluded bed bugs, though a few states have debated requiring landlords to bear treatment costs.
Does insurance cover damage from rodents?
Rodent damage itself is excluded, but a covered event caused by rodent damage may be covered. For example, if mice chew through electrical wiring and the damaged wiring causes a house fire, the fire damage is covered under the fire peril even though the underlying cause was rodent activity. The key distinction is that the fire is a covered peril, and the policy pays for fire damage regardless of what started the fire. However, the cost to repair the chewed wiring itself would be excluded as rodent damage. This "resulting loss" exception is narrow and does not apply to all policies.
Can I get a termite bond or warranty instead of insurance?
Yes. Termite bonds (also called termite warranties or termite contracts) are offered by pest control companies and provide annual inspections and treatment. A retreatment bond ($200 to $400 per year) covers the cost of re-treating if termites return but does not cover repair costs. A repair bond ($300 to $600 per year) covers both re-treatment and structural repair up to a specified limit. Repair bonds are the closest equivalent to insurance for termite damage and are the primary way homeowners protect themselves from termite-related financial loss.

Wildlife and Larger Animals

Raccoons, squirrels, bats, opossums, and other wildlife that enter your home cause damage that is excluded under the same vermin provision. Raccoons in an attic can destroy insulation, damage ductwork, and contaminate the space with feces that require professional cleanup. Squirrels chew through wood, wiring, and PVC pipes. Bat colonies leave guano that creates health hazards and can require $5,000 to $15,000 in professional removal and attic restoration.

The exception for wildlife is limited. If a deer crashes through a window, the damage is typically covered under the "vehicle" or "vandalism" perils (depending on the policy language) rather than the pest exclusion, because a deer impact is a sudden event, not an infestation. Similarly, if a bird flies into a window and breaks it, some insurers cover the glass damage. But sustained wildlife habitation and the damage it causes is treated the same as any other pest infestation: excluded.

Prevention Is the Only Protection

Since insurance offers no safety net for pest damage, prevention is your only financial protection. Annual termite inspections ($75 to $150) catch infestations early when treatment is cheaper and structural damage is minimal. Sealing entry points around the foundation, pipes, and utility lines keeps rodents and wildlife out. Maintaining proper ventilation and moisture control in crawl spaces and attics makes your home less attractive to wood-destroying insects. Keeping firewood at least 20 feet from the house and eliminating wood-to-soil contact around the foundation removes termite highways.

When buying a home, the home inspection should include a wood-destroying insect (WDI) inspection. In many states, this inspection is a separate report from the general home inspection. Lenders often require a clear WDI report before approving the mortgage. If active termite damage or other pest issues are found, negotiate repairs or treatment as part of the purchase agreement, before the problem becomes yours.

Key Takeaway

Homeowners insurance provides zero coverage for pest damage of any kind. Termites, rodents, bed bugs, and wildlife are all excluded as maintenance issues. The only narrow exception is when pest activity triggers a separate covered peril, like a fire started by rodent-chewed wiring. Annual inspections, preventive treatments, and termite bonds are the only financial protections available for pest-related damage to your home.