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Termite ⚠️ High Threat — Structural Damage

Drywood Termite

Incisitermes snyderi / Cryptotermes brevis

Lives entirely inside the wood it eats · No soil contact required · Detected by distinctive pellet frass

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Research source: UF/IFAS Featured Creatures: Drywood Termites — University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences

Drywood termites are South Florida's "silent destroyer" — they live entirely inside the wood they consume, leave no mud tubes, require no contact with soil or water, and can silently destroy furniture, framing, window frames, and hardwood flooring for years before detection. The only reliable sign is the small piles of hexagonal fecal pellets (frass) they push out of kick-out holes in infested wood.

The Critical Diagnostic Difference: Frass

Subterranean termites leave mud tubes. Drywood termites leave frass pellets. If you find small piles of what looks like sawdust — but the pellets are hexagonal in shape, roughly 1mm long, and appear near window frames, furniture, or baseboards — that is drywood termite frass. Finding frass is a reliable indicator of active drywood termite infestation and warrants an immediate professional inspection.

Identification Guide

Feature Drywood Termites
Soil contact required? No — lives entirely within wood
Moisture required? Minimal — obtains moisture from wood metabolism
Primary sign Hexagonal frass pellets pushed through kick-out holes
Swarmer size 7–11mm with wings; yellowish-brown to dark brown
Swarm time (FL) Late summer to fall (C. brevis); spring/early summer (I. snyderi)
Colony size Small — hundreds to a few thousand (vs. millions for subterranean)
Damage rate Slower than Formosan but can still cause severe damage over years
Wood preference Any dry wood — furniture, framing, window/door frames, flooring

Florida's Three Termite Species Compared

Feature Drywood Eastern Subterranean Formosan
Lives inWood onlyUndergroundUnderground (+ aerial nests)
Key signFrass pelletsMud tubesMud tubes + carton
Soil required?NoYesYes (except aerial)
Colony sizeHundreds–few thousand60K–1M1–10 million
Swarm timeSummer/fall eveningsSpring morningsSpring/summer evenings
Damage speedSlow (years)ModerateFast (weeks–months)
TreatmentFumigation or spot treatLiquid barrier or baitBait stations + liquid

Common Infestation Sites in South Florida Homes

Attic framing and raftersWindow frames and sillsDoor frames and jambsHardwood floorsWood furniture (solid wood)Wooden picture framesKitchen cabinets (solid wood)Baseboards and crown moldingFascia boardsGarage door framesWooden shuttersInterior doorsEaves and soffitsWood paneling

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes drywood termites different from subterranean termites?

Drywood termites (family Kalotermitidae) live entirely within the wood they consume — they require no soil contact and no external moisture source. This makes them fundamentally different from subterranean termites (which live underground and need soil moisture) and from Formosan termites (which also require soil but can build aerial nests). Drywood termites infest furniture, structural framing, window and door frames, hardwood floors, wooden fixtures, and any other dry wood inside or outside your home. They are not detected by the same mud tube signs used to identify subterranean species.

How do drywood termites get into a house?

Drywood termites enter primarily through alate (swarmer) flights during their mating season. Swarmers fly into structures through gaps around windows, doors, vents, utility penetrations, and any exposed unfinished wood. Once inside, the male and female pair shed their wings, excavate a small gallery in a wood surface (often unpainted wood, window frames, or furniture), seal themselves inside, and begin founding a new colony. Infested furniture, lumber, and wooden items can also introduce drywood termites into a home that was previously uninfested.

What is drywood termite frass?

Frass is the primary diagnostic sign of drywood termites — and the key difference from subterranean species that leave no frass. Drywood termites excavate wood into galleries and push their fecal pellets out through small 'kick-out holes' in the wood surface. These pellets accumulate in small piles on surfaces below the infested wood — on window sills, floor surfaces, in cabinets, or on furniture. The pellets are typically hexagonal in shape, roughly 1mm long, and range in color from light tan to dark brown depending on the wood species being consumed. Finding a pile of these pellets is a reliable indicator of active drywood termite activity.

When do drywood termites swarm in South Florida?

In South Florida, the two primary drywood termite species swarm at different times. The West Indian drywood termite (Cryptotermes brevis) typically swarms in late summer, often August through November, often in the evening. The southeastern drywood termite (Incisitermes snyderi) typically swarms in spring and early summer. Swarms in South Florida can occur after rain, during humid evenings, or when temperature conditions trigger emergence. Swarmers are attracted to light and will often appear near windows, light fixtures, and lamps.

Can I treat drywood termites myself?

Spot treatments with over-the-counter products (foam injected into termite galleries through holes drilled in the wood) can provide temporary relief for small, localized infestations. However, drywood termite colonies can establish multiple separate infestations throughout a structure that are not connected, meaning a spot treatment that eliminates one colony may miss several others. Whole-structure fumigation (tenting) is the only treatment method that guarantees elimination of all drywood termite colonies throughout a structure simultaneously. This requires professional licensing and is not available to homeowners.

What is drywood termite fumigation (tenting) and how long does it take?

Structural fumigation (commonly called 'tenting') involves covering the entire structure with a tarpaulin system and introducing a gaseous fumigant (typically sulfuryl fluoride, sold as Vikane) throughout. The gas penetrates all wood throughout the structure and eliminates all drywood termite colonies. The process requires 24–72 hours of exposure followed by a clearance period. Residents, pets, plants, and all food items must leave the structure. The process eliminates all drywood termites throughout the structure but provides no residual protection against future infestation — follow-up preventive treatments are recommended.

Finding Frass? Get a Termite Inspection.

FL License JB313837 — Wood Destroying Organisms category. We inspect for all three Florida termite species and recommend the appropriate treatment for your property. Serving Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, and 28+ South Florida communities.

Call 561-443-3333 Termite Protection →
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