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Termite Prevention: Costs, Strategies, and What Actually Works (2026)

Prevention costs a fraction of treatment. A $200/year monitoring program can save $3,000-$35,000 in treatment and repair costs. Here is what works, what it costs, and what to prioritize.

Prevention Cost Summary

StrategyCost
Wood-to-soil clearance (6+ inches)Free
Remove wood debris from yardFree
Fix drainage and gutters$0-$500
Crawlspace vapor barrier$500-$2,000
Borate wood treatment (exposed wood)$1-$3/sq ft
DIY bait monitoring stations$100-$300
Professional monitoring contract$200-$400/year
Annual professional inspection$75-$200
Perimeter liquid barrier (preventive)$500-$1,500
Pre-construction soil treatment$500-$1,500

Physical Prevention Strategies

These cost little or nothing and reduce termite risk significantly. They are the first things to address.

Maintain 6+ inches of clearance between soil and wood

This is the single most important physical barrier. Inspect your foundation and ensure no wood (siding, framing, fence posts, deck supports) touches the soil. Termites need soil contact to survive. Where wood-to-soil contact exists, it is an open invitation.

Free

Remove wood debris from the yard

Firewood stacks, tree stumps, construction lumber, old fence sections, and fallen branches near the house all attract termites. Move firewood at least 20 feet from the foundation and elevate it off the ground.

Free

Fix drainage, gutters, and grading

Termites need moisture. Ensure gutters direct water away from the foundation. Grade soil so water flows away from the house. Fix any standing water near the foundation. A dry perimeter is less attractive to termites.

$0-$500

Install crawlspace vapor barrier

If you have a crawlspace, a 6-mil polyethylene vapor barrier over the soil reduces moisture that attracts termites and dampwood rot. Ensure adequate ventilation (1 sq ft of vent per 150 sq ft of crawlspace).

$500-$2,000

Seal cracks and gaps in foundation

Fill cracks in concrete foundations, gaps around pipes, and openings where utility lines enter. While termites can find tiny entry points, reducing obvious access points helps.

$50-$200

Chemical Prevention

Pre-Construction Soil Treatment

$500-$1,500 during construction

Applied before the slab is poured or the foundation is backfilled. Termiticide is spread across the entire sub-slab area and along the foundation footings. This is by far the most effective prevention, as it creates a complete chemical barrier before the home is even built. Retrofit after construction costs $2,000+ and cannot achieve the same coverage.

Borate Wood Treatment

$1-$3 per square foot

Bora-Care or similar borate solutions are sprayed or brushed onto exposed wood in crawlspaces, attics, and wall cavities (during construction or renovation). Borates penetrate the wood and make it toxic to termites for the life of the wood. Highly effective and safe for humans and pets once dry.

Preventive Perimeter Liquid Barrier

$500-$1,500

Same as treatment for an active infestation, but applied preventively. Creates a chemical barrier around the foundation that lasts 5-10 years. Recommended in high-risk areas even without current termite activity.

Monitoring Strategies

DIY Bait Stations

$100-$300

Spectracide Terminate or similar products. Place around perimeter and check monthly. Good for detecting activity but limited colony control. Best as a supplement, not a standalone strategy.

Professional Monitoring

$200-$400/year

Sentricon or Trelona stations installed and monitored quarterly by a licensed technician. Detects and treats new colonies before damage occurs. The most reliable ongoing prevention strategy.

Annual Inspection

$75-$200

A trained inspector checks the entire home for signs of termite activity. Catches problems when treatment is cheap ($500) instead of when damage is expensive ($10,000+). The best single investment in termite prevention.

New Construction: Pre-Treatment

If you are building a new home in a termite-prone area, pre-construction treatment is the most cost-effective protection available. Many states in the Southeast and Southwest require it by building code.

TimingCost
During construction$300-$1,500
Retrofit after construction$2,000-$4,000+

States requiring pre-construction treatment: Many counties in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Hawaii require termite pre-treatment by building code. Check with your local building department.

Prevention ROI

Annual Prevention Cost

$200-$400

Inspection + monitoring

Treatment Cost (if needed)

$500-$3,000

Caught early

Treatment + Repair (if late)

$5,000-$40,000

Years undetected

10 years of annual inspections costs $750-$2,000. One late-detected infestation costs $5,000-$40,000. The math is clear.