How to eliminate biting midges from the home?

How to eliminate biting midges from the home?

Biting midges (no-see-ums) are extremely small but can pass through window screens and breed in large numbers in damp indoor areas. Eliminating them requires addressing both the source and the adults — keeping things dry is essential for a complete solution.

Step 1: Eliminate breeding environments (fundamental)

Biting midge larvae grow in water or damp organic matter. Removing standing water is the most fundamental control method:

  • Check all plant pot trays; empty standing water promptly after watering — do not let water sit for more than 2 days.
  • Clear drains; clean hair and grime from floor drains — the buildup on pipe walls is a larval breeding ground.
  • Run exhaust fans after using bathrooms and kitchens to keep them dry and reduce indoor humidity.
  • Keep garbage bin bottoms dry; dispose of kitchen waste daily, not overnight.
  • Check balconies and window sills for containers or dead spaces with standing water.

Step 2: Kill adults (symptomatic)

After environmental cleaning, spray dinotefuran-containing household insecticide on areas where midges frequently rest:

  • Wall corners, baseboards, and lower edges of screens — midges like to rest here.
  • Around flower pots and window sill corners.
  • Drain openings and around floor drains — emergence points for adults.
  • Inside and outside of garbage bins.

After spraying, the dried insecticide forms an invisible film; midges that land on it lose activity and die. Residual effect lasts 2-4 weeks.

Step 3: Ongoing prevention

Biting midges have a short breeding cycle (7-14 days). Maintain these habits:

  • Keep indoor areas ventilated and dry; midges struggle to breed below 50% humidity.
  • Check plant pot trays and floor drains weekly; remove any standing water immediately.
  • Reapply dinotefuran-containing insecticide weekly for 2-3 weeks to ensure newly emerged adults are also killed.
  • Install fine-mesh screens (40 mesh or finer) — ordinary screens cannot block midges.

As long as the environment remains dry and clean, midges cannot continue breeding, and they will be completely controlled within a short time.