← All Articles
Pest Guide Biting Flies 4 min read

Biting Flies in South Florida: Horse Flies, Deer Flies, No-See-Ums, and Stable Flies — What's Biting You?

South Florida has more biting fly species than most residents realize. No-see-ums at the beach cause more complaints than mosquitoes in coastal areas. Horse flies deliver the most painful bite of any Florida insect. Each species breeds differently, bites differently, and requires different control strategies.

South Florida Biting Fly Season

Unlike mosquitoes, biting flies are active year-round in South Florida but peak in warm months (May–October). No-see-ums are a coastal concern April–December. Horse flies peak June–August near any water. Stable flies cause the biggest disruption in October (the 'fall beach fly' event).

Serving Boca Raton · Fort Lauderdale · Pompano Beach · Coral Springs
Free property assessment · Plant-oil MPB formula · No contracts · FL License JB313837
Get Free Assessment →

South Florida Biting Fly Species

No-See-Ums (Biting Midges)
Culicoides spp. · 1–3mm — barely visible
VERY COMMON
Activity: Dawn and dusk; worse at coastal areas, especially near mangroves, saltmarshes, and organic-rich soil. Worst during calm, humid conditions.
Breeding: Saltmarsh margins, mangrove mud, organic-rich moist soil. Coastal Broward and Palm Beach county areas with mangrove edges are highest-density breeding zones.
Bite: Multiple rapid bites in cluster patterns; intense itching that lasts hours to days; small red welts. Many people react significantly worse to no-see-um bites than mosquito bites.
Control: Fine-mesh screens (standard window screens let them through — 16-mesh biting midge screens required). Barrier spray helps reduce populations in yard vegetation. DEET-based repellents effective for personal protection. Avoidance of coastal areas at dawn/dusk most effective.
Horse Fly
Tabanus spp. · Large — 13–25mm. One of Florida's largest biting flies.
PAINFUL
Activity: Daytime, especially in bright sunlight near water. Active April through October; peak June–August in South Florida.
Breeding: Edges of ponds, marshes, streams, and canals — larvae develop in moist soil at water margins. South Florida's extensive canal system provides year-round breeding habitat. Cannot be effectively controlled at the breeding source.
Bite: The most painful biting fly bite of any South Florida species. Scissor-like mandibles cut through skin; pain is immediate and significant. Single bites, not clusters. Female horse flies are the biters — they require blood for egg development.
Control: No practical breeding source control for horse flies in South Florida — the breeding habitat (canal margins, wetland edges) is too extensive for targeted treatment. Personal protective equipment (long sleeves, DEET repellent) most effective for individuals. Horse traps and sticky traps reduce local populations near recreation areas.
Deer Fly
Chrysops spp. · Medium — 6–10mm; typically smaller than horse flies with distinctive patterned wings
PAINFUL
Activity: Daytime; active April through November in South Florida. Often found near wetlands, creeks, and wooded areas. Frequently attacks the head and face.
Breeding: Wetland margins, damp soil near ponds and streams. Similar to horse fly in habitat selection.
Bite: Painful scissor-cut bite similar to horse fly but smaller wound. Deer flies circle the head and are notoriously difficult to deter. They transmit Tularemia (rare in Florida) and mechanical transmission of other pathogens.
Control: Same practical limitations as horse fly — breeding habitat too extensive for targeted control. DEET repellents somewhat effective; head nets effective for recreation in high-activity areas. Permethrin-treated clothing reduces attack success rate.
Stable Fly
Stomoxys calcitrans · 6–8mm; resembles housefly but with prominent forward-pointing proboscis
COMMON
Activity: Year-round in South Florida; peak activity in fall. Most notorious as the 'beach fly' — populations explode at Florida Gulf Coast beaches in October, but also affect Atlantic coast communities. Both sexes bite.
Breeding: Decaying vegetation — decomposing seaweed on beaches is the primary breeding site for the 'beach stable fly' phenomenon. Also breeds in decaying hay, vegetable matter, and moist compost.
Bite: Sharp, painful probe-and-suck bite. Targets lower legs especially. A single stable fly can bite repeatedly. Historically linked to major tourism impact in coastal Florida communities.
Control: Beach seaweed removal is the most effective intervention for beach-adjacent stable fly events. For residential properties, removing decaying organic matter (compost piles, rotting vegetation) reduces breeding. Professional treatment of beach-adjacent vegetation can reduce adult resting populations.

Ready to reclaim your yard? Free assessment — no contracts, plant-oil formula.

Get Free Assessment → 561-443-3333

Frequently Asked Questions

What is biting me at the beach when I can't see anything?

Almost certainly no-see-ums (biting midges, Culicoides species). They are 1–3mm — smaller than standard window screen mesh — and are effectively invisible at arm's length. The characteristic signs: (1) You feel bites but cannot see an insect on your skin. (2) Multiple bites appearing as small red welts in clusters, often on exposed ankles, legs, arms, and neck. (3) Bites occur at dawn and dusk, especially near water. (4) Intense itching that starts immediately and lasts significantly longer than a typical mosquito bite. Where no-see-ums are worst in South Florida: coastal areas near mangrove edges (Deerfield Beach, Pompano Beach coastline, Fort Lauderdale beach approaches, Boca Raton coastal parks) are highest-concentration zones. They breed in the saltmarsh and mangrove mud margins. Calm, humid, low-wind evenings are peak activity conditions. Wind significantly reduces no-see-um activity — the ideal beach day is actually great for them because it's calm. What works: (1) DEET-based repellents applied to all exposed skin. (2) Fine-mesh biting midge screens (16-mesh) if you have a screened lanai — standard window screens do NOT stop no-see-ums. (3) Avoiding the highest-activity windows (30 minutes after sunset is often the peak no-see-um time in coastal South Florida). (4) Fans — they cannot fly in any wind above about 2mph, so a fan in an outdoor dining or patio setting provides significant relief.

Can horse flies be controlled or reduced?

Horse fly population control is not practically achievable in South Florida for most homeowners. Here's why: Horse flies breed in moist soil at the margins of ponds, canals, marshes, and wetlands — the same extensive water management infrastructure that covers Broward and Palm Beach County. A single horse fly breeding habitat can cover acres of canal margin. Targeted treatment of horse fly breeding habitat would require treating the margins of hundreds of miles of South Florida canals — practically impossible. What DOES work: (1) PERSONAL PROTECTION: DEET-based repellent applied generously to skin and permethrin-treated clothing significantly reduces attack success rate. Long, light-colored sleeves reduce surface area for bites. Horse flies are visual hunters that track dark, large, moving targets — light-colored clothing makes you a less attractive target. (2) TRAPS: Horse fly traps (ball traps, canopy traps) placed at the edge of properties near water can capture significant numbers and reduce local population near the trap. These work on the horse fly's attraction to dark, round targets — mimicking an animal. (3) HORSE FLY FREE AREAS: Open water swimming and poolside activities are generally lower-risk — horse flies are strong fliers but tend to not pursue prey into water. Moving to a shaded area away from water edges reduces attack frequency. What does NOT work: Standard mosquito barrier spray does not significantly impact horse fly populations. They don't rest in yard vegetation the way mosquitoes do, and their flight patterns are not intercepted by typical barrier spray application zones.

Does mosquito barrier spray help with no-see-ums and biting flies?

Partial benefit, with important species-specific differences: NO-SEE-UMS (Biting Midges): Mosquito barrier spray targeting vegetation does provide meaningful no-see-um reduction for property-specific populations. No-see-ums rest in low vegetation (especially moist, shaded areas near the ground) between activity periods — the same vegetation zones where barrier spray is applied. Treatment of yard vegetation, property perimeter shrubs, and ground-level ornamentals reduces the resting no-see-um population at your property. Limitations: No-see-ums breeding in the saltmarsh or mangroves beyond your property cannot be addressed by residential barrier spray. Coastal populations migrating from beach and mangrove breeding sites will continue arriving regardless of property treatment. HORSE FLIES AND DEER FLIES: Standard barrier spray has minimal impact on horse fly and deer fly populations. They do not rest in yard vegetation the way mosquitoes and no-see-ums do, they do not respond to the same repellent mechanisms, and their source breeding is in canal and wetland margins that residential treatment cannot reach. STABLE FLIES: Barrier spray has limited but some impact on adult stable flies resting in yard vegetation. The more effective intervention is removing the decaying organic matter (seaweed accumulations, compost, rotting vegetation) that serves as their breeding habitat. BOTTOM LINE: Professional barrier spray is highly effective for mosquitoes and meaningfully reduces no-see-um pressure at the property level. For horse flies, deer flies, and stable flies, barrier spray is not the primary intervention.

No-See-Um Guide → Repellent Guide → Spider ID Guide →

Mosquito and No-See-Um Control for South Florida Properties

Professional biweekly barrier spray reduces mosquito populations by 80%+ and meaningfully reduces no-see-um resting populations in yard vegetation. All-natural MPB formula — no neonicotinoids. FL License JB313837.

Get My Free Assessment 561-443-3333
Professional Mosquito & Pest Control in South Florida
Our Services
Mosquito ControlPerimeter Pest ControlTick & Flea ControlMisting SystemsHOA ProgramsCommercial ServiceAll Services
We Serve
Boca RatonFort LauderdalePompano BeachCoral SpringsParklandAll Service Areas →
Get a Free Property Assessment →
Eric Vincent, Owner of Mosquito Shield of Boca and Fort Lauderdale
Eric Vincent
Owner & Certified Pest Control Operator
CPCO JF341961 MBA · Rollins Crummer UF Pest Control Technology AMCA Member In2Care Certified Quoted in Sun Sentinel

After nearly two decades in corporate finance — including managing a $1B+ P&L at Chico's FAS — Eric Vincent earned his MBA from Rollins College and made a deliberate pivot into pest control, completing his Pest Control Technology degree at the University of Florida while building Mosquito Shield of Boca and Fort Lauderdale from the ground up. He holds five Florida state licenses including Certified Pest Control Operator (JF341961) and Public Health licensee (PH340549), and is currently partnered with Arkion Life Sciences on next-generation all-natural mosquito control research.

FL Pest Control Licenses & Certifications
CPCO — GHP & RodentCPCO — Lawn & OrnamentalCPCO — Termite & WDOPublic Health (PH340549)Business License JB313837
Call Eric Text Quote Get Free Quote