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Pest Library · Residential Pest

Carpenter Ant

BC's largest structural-pest ant — they don't eat wood, they hollow it out to build galleries inside damp framing.

Carpenter Ant (Camponotus modoc) — specimen photograph for identification reference, The Wild Pest field guide.
Carpenter AntCamponotus modoc. Field guide specimen photo, The Wild Pest reference library.

Identification

Camponotus modoc is the dominant carpenter ant species across coastal British Columbia, and the largest ant most Delta + Surrey homeowners will ever see indoors. Workers range from 6mm (minors) to 13mm (majors), with a matte black body, reddish legs, and a single-node waist. Viewed in profile, the thorax is evenly rounded — no spines, no humps — which distinguishes them from pavement ants and most other house-invading species. Antennae are elbowed. A second species, Camponotus vicinus, also occurs locally and looks similar but often shows a reddish thorax. Reproductive swarmers (alates) emerge with wings in spring; the females shed their wings after mating, and finding discarded wings on a windowsill or bathtub is a strong indicator of an established, mature colony rather than a casual foraging trail.

Habitat in BC

Carpenter ants follow moisture. In Delta + Surrey that means cedar-shingle roofs with aged flashing, rotted fascia boards, window frames behind failed caulking, deck ledgers, hot-tub surrounds, and anywhere a roof leak has persisted unnoticed. Parent colonies are usually outside — in a dead fir, a rotting stump, or a woodpile — with satellite colonies inside the structure. North Shore homes against the forest edge in North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Deep Cove, and Anmore see the heaviest activity, but we find active structural infestations every week across Burnaby, New Westminster, and South Surrey. Any home older than thirty years with wood-to-soil contact somewhere on the perimeter is a candidate.

Signs you have carpenter ant

  • Coarse frass — looks like a mix of sawdust and insect parts — accumulating under window sills, baseboards, or deck beams.
  • Large black ants (6–13mm) foraging indoors, especially at night, often along the same route for weeks.
  • A faint rustling or crinkling sound inside walls or ceilings after dark, most audible in quiet rooms.
  • Winged reproductives emerging indoors in March, April, or May — almost always means a mature satellite colony in the wall.
  • Hollow-sounding wood at window frames, door jambs, or deck ledger boards when tapped with a screwdriver handle.
  • Discarded ant wings on windowsills, in spider webs near lights, or on bathroom countertops.

Risk & damage

Carpenter ants do not eat wood — they excavate it to build galleries for the colony. Over years, a mature colony of Camponotus modoc can hollow out structural framing, joist ends, and roof rafters in a way that is not immediately visible from outside. Unlike subterranean termites, the damage is slower and more localised, but it is structural. In BC's wet climate, carpenter-ant damage almost always coexists with a moisture problem — a leaking roof, failed flashing, a neglected gutter — which means the wood is already compromised and the ants are accelerating what rot has started. Health risk to humans is minimal; they can bite defensively but rarely do. The financial risk is the concern.

Seasonality in Delta + Surrey

Delta + Surrey's carpenter-ant season runs roughly late February through mid-October, with peak activity in May, June, and July. Reproductive swarmers emerge in spring when overnight lows sit above 10°C for a week — in Vancouver this usually means mid-April to late May. Foraging peaks in the warm, dry window of July and August, when you'll see the most indoor activity. Colonies slow through fall as temperatures drop, and from November through February they're largely dormant inside their galleries. That dormant window is actually an excellent treatment period: the colony is concentrated, not dispersed, and non-repellent baits placed on known trails are carried back with high efficiency.

Treatment approach

Our approach follows Integrated Pest Management principles required under Health Canada's Pest Control Products Act. Step one is always identification and trail-tracing — we confirm Camponotus modoc (or vicinus) and locate the moisture source driving the infestation, because without fixing the water problem, treatment is temporary. Step two is a non-repellent active such as fipronil or a borate-based gel, applied along foraging trails and at galley entry points. The workers carry the active back to the queen and satellite colonies, eliminating the colony at the source rather than fragmenting it. Step three is an exterior perimeter barrier to prevent re-colonisation. We pair every carpenter-ant job with a written moisture audit — the treatment will fail without fixing the water intrusion that brought them in.

When to call a professional

If you see large black ants indoors more than twice in a week, hear rustling in walls at night, or find winged swarmers inside your home, call a professional. Retail sprays are contact-kill repellents that scatter the colony into multiple satellites and make the infestation worse. DIY is reasonable only for a casual trail on a patio with no indoor activity; once carpenter ants are inside the envelope, you need professional diagnosis of the moisture source plus a non-repellent treatment.
Prevention playbook

How to prevent carpenter ant in Delta + Surrey homes

  1. 1

    Fix every moisture source on the envelope

    Carpenter ants follow water. Before anything else, audit the roof, gutters, downspouts, flashing, deck ledgers, and window caulking for leaks. In Delta + Surrey's climate, any persistent damp-wood site becomes a candidate nest within one wet season.

  2. 2

    Eliminate wood-to-soil contact

    Keep a 6-inch gap between soil and any wood siding, deck post, or fence rail. Remove stacked firewood, rotting stumps, and leaf litter within 6 feet of the foundation — these are the outdoor parent-colony sites that seed indoor satellites.

  3. 3

    Seal the perimeter

    Caulk gaps around utility penetrations, window frames, and siding transitions with high-grade silicone or polyurethane. Pay particular attention to cedar-shingle roof returns and fascia boards on 1940s–1980s homes across Vancouver, Burnaby, and North Delta — the highest-risk stock.

  4. 4

    Trim vegetation off the building

    Cut back shrubs, climbing vines, and tree branches so nothing touches the roof, soffits, or siding. Carpenter ants use branches as direct foraging highways into attics — a common entry path for North Shore homes.

  5. 5

    Never spray visible ant trails with retail repellents

    Pyrethroid sprays from the hardware store are contact-kill repellents. They scatter the colony into multiple satellite sub-colonies and make the infestation dramatically worse. If you must act before a professional arrives, wipe trails with plain soapy water and observe — never spray.

  6. 6

    Schedule a spring inspection on older homes

    For any home built before 1985, or any home with a known moisture history, book an annual exterior inspection in early April — before the reproductive swarm. Identifying satellite colonies before swarmers appear indoors prevents the worst structural damage.

The Wild Pest service

See our Carpenter Ant treatment page

Transparent pricing, 60-day return guarantee, same-day response across Delta + Surrey. Every treatment is documented with photos and service notes.

Frequently asked questions about carpenter ant

How do I tell carpenter ants from regular black ants?+
Size and shape. Camponotus modoc workers are 6–13mm — much larger than pavement ants or odorous house ants (2–4mm). Viewed from the side, a carpenter ant has an evenly rounded thorax with no humps or spines, and a single-node waist. If you're finding large black ants indoors in Delta + Surrey, it is almost certainly a Camponotus species.
Why do I only see them at night?+
Carpenter ants are primarily nocturnal foragers, especially in warm weather. Workers leave the nest after dusk, travel along established trails to food and water sources, and return before dawn. You can confirm a colony's direction by turning off interior lights, waiting 20 minutes, then following a single flashlight beam along baseboards — you'll usually pick up the trail.
Is carpenter-ant damage covered by home insurance in BC?+
Almost never. Most BC homeowner policies exclude pest damage, including carpenter ants, classifying it as preventable maintenance. The exception is consequential damage — if a carpenter-ant gallery contributes to a sudden structural failure, some insurers will cover the collapse but not the ant work. Treat it as out-of-pocket and prioritise the moisture fix.
Can I spray the trail myself?+
Don't. Retail contact-kill sprays are repellents — they eliminate the workers you see but signal the colony to fragment into multiple satellite nests, making your problem worse and harder to treat. Professional treatment uses non-repellent actives the workers carry back to the queen. Spraying a visible trail is the single most common mistake we see on arrival.
We live near the forest in North Vancouver — are we higher risk?+
Yes. North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Deep Cove, and Anmore see the highest carpenter-ant activity in Delta + Surrey because parent colonies live in the adjacent Douglas-fir and cedar forest. Homes within 30 metres of the forest edge should assume annual activity and consider our quarterly plan with a spring carpenter-ant focus.
How long does it take to eliminate a colony?+
A typical Camponotus modoc satellite colony collapses within 2 to 4 weeks of proper non-repellent bait placement. A large multi-satellite infestation tied to a chronic roof leak can take 8 to 12 weeks and requires the moisture source to be fixed mid-treatment. We include a 60-day guarantee and re-treat at no cost if activity reappears in that window.
Related species
Local field guides

Where we treat carpenter ant in Delta + Surrey

Hyper-local field guides for carpenter ant (Camponotus modoc) — every page documents the housing stock, microclimate, and seasonal activity specific to one neighbourhood.

Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Kitsilano
Kitsilano's pre-1960 Craftsman homes with cedar shingles, persistent roof moisture, and mature West 4th tree canopy make carpenter ants (Camponotus modoc) one of our most common callouts in the neighbourhood.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Dunbar
Dunbar's mature tree canopy, cedar-shingle West-Side heritage stock, and slow-drying rooflines drive persistent carpenter ant (Camponotus modoc) activity — every West 41st block sees active colonies.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Kerrisdale
Kerrisdale's heritage West-Side homes and mature gardens produce steady carpenter ant (Camponotus modoc) activity — especially along the mature tree-lined blocks between 41st and 49th.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Sunshine Hills
Sunshine Hills' mature cedar and Douglas fir canopy, V4C 1960s-80s cedar-shake roofs, and Watershed Park edge moisture make carpenter ants (Camponotus modoc) one of the highest-activity infestations in our entire service area.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Beach Grove
Beach Grove's coastal sun exposure produces drier roof decks than inland — lowering carpenter ant activity overall — but cedar-clad outbuildings, driftwood structures, and wood fencing exposed to salt-air rot still attract Camponotus colonies.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Tsawwassen Heights
Tsawwassen Heights' newer 1990s-2010s housing has tighter envelopes and less original cedar than older Tsawwassen stock, producing the lowest carpenter ant activity in our service area — but mature plantings and townhouse cedar-shingle complexes can still establish satellite colonies.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Newton
Newton's dense urban housing stock has lower carpenter ant activity than Surrey's wooded eastern suburbs — but heritage detached homes near 72 Avenue, mature street trees, and damp basement-suite construction still produce regular Camponotus callouts.
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Neighbourhood field guide
Carpenter Ant in Fleetwood
Fleetwood's 1980s-2000s detached homes with cedar fencing, mature backyard trees, and aging deck ledgers produce moderate carpenter ant activity — activity that has increased noticeably as the original landscape plantings have matured.
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