Dec 21, 2021 | Pest Control
Mice are incredibly resourceful as they can quickly adapt to new environments. Small in size, these pests are looking for a warm place to shelter and provide a food source. If these rodents make it indoors, they can cause significant damage to your home. Here we list the major signs of mice in your home and how you can prevent them.
Seeing holes, tears, and gnaw marks is a major sign that mice are indoors. You can typically see this damage in bedding, clothing, fabrics, and other materials. Mice will use these shredded fabrics to help build their nests, usually located in dark, secluded areas. These pests will also chew and leave gnaw marks on inedible materials such as wood, plastic, cables, and electrical wiring.
A more obvious sign of a mouse infestation is hearing noises throughout the night. Mice can fit through holes and openings smaller than their bodies. Using their ability to fit through the smallest hole, they will often use the spaces between joists to travel from one part of the house to the other. If a mouse has gotten inside the walls, you’ll often hear scratching or scrabbling noises.
Another alarming sign that a mouse is inside is seeing their feces. Mouse droppings are around three to six millimeters or ¼ inch in length. They typically resemble small grains of rice and sometimes can be mistaken for cockroach droppings. If you see mouse droppings, it’s best to carefully pick them up with gloves and place them in a sealed plastic bag to ensure they don’t release bacteria or virus particles.
To help prevent mice, place the preventative measures below throughout your house.
- Seal any cracks and holes on the exterior of your home with caulk.
- Keep your basements, crawlspaces, and attics clean, decluttered, and dry.
- Clean up any spills and crumbs immediately, vacuuming and sweeping often.
- Don’t leave food out overnight, including pet food outside.
If you notice any signs of mice inside your house, consider reaching out to your local pest control provider, where they will provide you with the best plan of action.
Dec 15, 2021 | Pest Control
The holiday season is a time to enjoy family, eat delicious food, and not worry about pests! Unfortunately, overwintering pests such as spiders, rodents, ants, ticks, and more are looking indoors for food, water, and shelter. During the holiday season, Christmas trees, wreaths, firewood, decorations, and storage boxes provide the ideal opportunity for these pests to hitchhike inside.
Check out our top 3 pest prevention tips for holiday pest control.
Check Your Decorations
Attics, basements, and garages provide perfect storage spaces for our holiday decorations. These areas in your home are dark and secluded, making them the perfect place for pests to invade. Stored decorations provide an undisturbed hiding place for pests such as mice, rats, spiders, and more. These creatures will often crawl into the storage boxes you put away last season, contaminating and destroying your decorations.
To ensure that you do not bring these pests into your main living space, inspect and unpack these items outside first. After the holiday season has ended, pack your decorations like foliage, potpourri, and Indian corn in air-tight containers to help prevent pests for next year.
Check Your Firewood
With colder weather here, many homeowners start utilizing their fireplace, bringing in more firewood from outside. However, it’s crucial to inspect firewood before bringing it inside the home. Pests like spiders, termites, and ants are often found on firewood. Consider placing the firewood outside 20 feet from your home and on a raised platform.
Check Your Christmas Tree & Wreaths
If your family celebrates Christmas, you might opt to buy a real Christmas tree and wreath. While both can showcase the authentic look of Christmas, they also tend to carry pests such as spiders, moths, mites, and even squirrels!
To prevent these unwanted pests from hitchhiking indoors, inspect both items outside and then shake them. Also, check these items for any droppings, gnaw marks, or other damage before bringing them inside.
If you suspect that you have a holiday pest problem, consider reaching out to your local pest control company. These professionals will be able to inspect your home, provide the best pest control plan, and recommend prevention techniques for your home.
Dec 9, 2021 | Pest Control, Wildlife
By Anna V., Editorial Lead — Pest Education · Last updated: May 2026
The short answer: yes, a single home can have rats and mice at the same time. It happens more often than most Georgia and Alabama homeowners realize, especially in larger homes, older homes, and homes with crawl spaces, attics, and basements that give the two species enough territorial separation to coexist. At Northwest, we typically find dual-species infestations in about one of every six rodent calls we run during the late fall and winter months, which is peak rodent season in the Southeast.
Co-infestation matters because the treatment plan changes when both species are present. Mice and rats respond to different bait, different trap placements, different timing, and different exclusion strategies. A control plan designed for one will leave the other behind. Here’s how to recognize when you have both, why it happens, what the combined health risks look like, and how to handle it without the two-species problem becoming a year-long battle.

Larger Southeast homes can support both species at once, especially through the winter.
Understanding Rats and Mice as Different Species
Mice and rats are both rodents but they’re meaningfully different animals. Recognizing the differences is the foundation of effective dual-species treatment.
Mice (house mouse, deer mouse) are small, slender, and curious. Adult body length is 2 to 4 inches not counting the tail. They reproduce fast (5 to 10 litters per year per female), build small nests in wall voids and stored boxes, and explore new objects in their territory within hours.
Rats (Norway rat, roof rat) are much larger, heavier, and cautious. Adult body length is 7 to 10 inches. They reproduce more slowly than mice (2 to 5 litters per year) but produce larger litters. They build bigger nests, prefer outdoor burrows or basement-level indoor spaces, and will avoid new objects in their territory for days before approaching.
For the full physical and behavioral identification breakdown, see our companion guide on how to tell a mouse from a rat.
Signs of a Rat and Mouse Co-Infestation
The clearest evidence that both species are present is finding signs of both at the same time. Here’s what to look for.

When you see both small rice-grain droppings AND larger capsule-shaped droppings, you likely have both species.
Two Different Sizes of Droppings
The most reliable sign of dual-species infestation is finding both sizes of droppings in your home. Mouse droppings are tiny (1/8 to 1/4 inch, shaped like rice grains with pointed ends). Rat droppings are much larger (1/2 to 3/4 inch, capsule-shaped). If you’re finding both in the same week, you almost certainly have both species.
The droppings often appear in different rooms because each species typically occupies different territory in the home. Mouse droppings concentrate in pantries, cabinets, drawer backs, and along baseboards on upper floors. Rat droppings concentrate in basements, crawl spaces, garages, and near food storage on lower levels.
Gnaw Marks at Two Different Scales
Mouse gnaw marks are small and scratchy: fine tooth marks on food packaging, the corners of cardboard boxes, and the edges of wooden trim. Rat gnaw marks are dramatically larger, including chewed holes the size of a quarter or larger, gnawed-through electrical wiring, and damaged plumbing or HVAC ducts. Finding both scales of damage in the same home suggests both species are present.
Activity in Different Parts of the House
Because rats are territorial and tend to exclude mice from their immediate range, the two species often partition the home rather than share the same nesting space. Common patterns:
- Rats in the basement or crawl space, mice in the upper-floor walls and attic.
- Rats in the garage and behind the kitchen appliances, mice in the pantry and bedroom closets.
- Rats outdoors in burrows (around the foundation or under decks), with mice indoors year-round.
Sounds at Two Different Volumes
Mice produce light scurrying and scratching sounds, usually high in walls or above ceilings. Rats produce much heavier, slower sounds, often including audible thumps when they jump from surface to surface. If you’re hearing both light scratching and heavier thumping at night, you may have both species in different parts of the home.
Why Rats and Mice Sometimes Coexist
Rats normally exclude mice from their territory. Where one rat is established, mice usually move out or get killed. So how do dual-species infestations happen?
Three factors make co-infestation common in Southeast homes:
Abundant Food and Water
When food is unlimited, competition between species drops. A home with overflowing trash, accessible pet food, an unused pantry, or an unsecured garbage can outside provides enough resources that rats don’t need to actively chase off mice. Both species can sustain populations without fighting for territory.
Separated Territories Within the Home
Larger homes, multi-story homes, and homes with multiple “zones” (basement, crawl space, attic, garage, main floor) give each species its own preferred space. Rats stake out the basement or crawl space. Mice take the attic, upper walls, and pantry. The two populations rarely overlap, so the rats don’t displace the mice.
Different Entry Strategies
Mice enter through holes the size of a dime (around 1/4 inch). Rats need holes the size of a quarter (around 1/2 inch). A home can have both small and large entry points active simultaneously: rats coming in through a garage gap or compromised crawl space vent, mice slipping in through a gap around the dryer vent or a small foundation crack. Each species has its own door, so to speak.
Risks of Co-Infestation
Having both species at once compounds the typical rodent risks in three ways:
Doubled Health Risk Exposure
Mice can transmit hantavirus (especially deer mice), salmonella, and allergens that trigger asthma. Rats can transmit leptospirosis, rat-bite fever, salmonella, and pathogens carried by the fleas that often travel with them. A dual-species infestation exposes your household to the full pathogen profile of both. The CDC’s rodent disease guidance documents the specific risks for each species and recommends professional cleanup of any active rodent contamination, especially when both species are present.
Faster Property Damage Accumulation
Rats cause significant structural damage (chewed wiring, torn insulation, gnawed plumbing). Mice cause widespread food contamination and minor damage to packaging and trim. Together, they produce both types of damage simultaneously, which means repair costs accumulate faster and across more categories than single-species infestations.
More Complex Treatment
The treatment plan for mice doesn’t work as effectively against rats, and vice versa. Mouse-sized snap traps won’t catch a Norway rat. Rat-sized snap traps placed for rat trails will be ignored by mice on completely different routes. Bait stations sized for one species often go untouched by the other. Treating both species at once requires planning trap and bait placement for two different size profiles, two different behavior patterns (mice are curious, rats are cautious), and two different territory maps.
Natural and Preventive Measures
The good news: the prevention measures that work for either species work for both. Co-infestation prevention is the same as single-species prevention, just applied more thoroughly.
Seal Entry Points (at Two Different Sizes)
- Walk the foundation and look for any opening larger than 1/4 inch. Mice can squeeze through anything bigger.
- Seal small gaps with steel wool and caulk. Steel wool is the only material rodents can’t gnaw through.
- Look for larger openings the size of a quarter or bigger. Garage door gaps, compromised crawl space vents, unsealed utility line penetrations, and damaged soffits are common rat-sized entry points.
- Install door sweeps and weatherstripping. Worn weatherstripping on garage side doors and basement hatches is a leading cause of rodent entry in older Southeast homes.
- Screen every crawl space vent with galvanized 1/4-inch hardware cloth.
Cut Off Food and Water
- Store all food (including pet food) in airtight glass or hard plastic containers, not bags.
- Take out trash daily during warm months and use lidded cans both indoors and outdoors.
- Fix slow drips and leaky pipes. Both species need water and seek it out.
- Don’t leave standing water in pet bowls overnight in active rodent areas.
Reduce Harborage
- Cut clutter in basements, attics, garages, and stored areas. Both species nest in undisturbed clutter.
- Move cardboard storage to plastic bins. Mice and rats both gnaw through cardboard easily.
- Trim outdoor vegetation back from foundations and rooflines. Rats use vegetation as cover; mice travel along it.
- Store firewood at least 20 feet from the house on raised racks.
Outdoor Yard Maintenance
- Keep grass short along the foundation.
- Remove fallen fruit under pecan, fig, or persimmon trees promptly.
- Don’t leave pet food bowls outside overnight.
- Block burrow entrances under decks and sheds with hardware cloth.

Dual-species infestations need traps and bait stations sized for both rat and mouse activity in different parts of the home.
When to Call a Professional for Dual-Species Rodent Control
Dual-species infestations are one of the situations we strongly recommend professional treatment for. The reason isn’t the rodents themselves (DIY can handle individual species), it’s the complexity of treating two species simultaneously without one undermining the treatment for the other.
Call Northwest for professional dual-species rodent control if:
- You’ve found droppings of two different sizes in the same week.
- You’ve heard both light scratching and heavier thumps in different parts of the house.
- Sightings or signs have appeared in both upper and lower levels of the home.
- DIY traps caught some rodents but the activity hasn’t stopped.
- You’re seeing rodents during daylight hours, which usually indicates a large hidden population.
- You’ve found gnaw marks at both small and large scales.
Northwest’s rodent control approach for co-infestations uses integrated pest management (IPM): identifying species and territory, setting appropriately-sized traps and bait stations for each species, sealing entry points at both 1/4-inch and 1/2-inch+ scales, and following up to confirm both populations have cleared before closing out the treatment.
(Suspect both rats and mice are present? Request a free Northwest rodent inspection and we’ll identify both species, map their territories, and lay out the dual-species treatment plan.)
What Happens If You Treat Only One Species
This is the most common mistake we see in homes that have tried DIY rodent control before calling us. A homeowner spots a few small droppings, identifies mice, sets mouse-sized snap traps in the pantry, catches three or four mice, and concludes the problem is solved. Two weeks later they’re hearing thumps in the basement at night and finding much larger droppings near the water heater.
That happens because rats and mice often coexist quietly in different parts of the home. Treating only the mice leaves the rat population fully intact. Within a few months, the rat population grows large enough to become noticeable on its own, and what felt like a successful single-species treatment turns into a much bigger second problem.
Effective rodent control assumes co-infestation is possible and treats accordingly: traps and bait stations sized for both species, placed throughout the entire structure, with follow-up to confirm both populations have cleared.
Rodent Control Drives Other Pest Outcomes
One last point worth knowing. Rodent populations don’t sit in isolation. They drive other pest outcomes in your home:
- Fleas and mites ride in on rodents and establish indoor populations of their own.
- Snakes follow rodent populations as a food source. The single most common reason snake sightings spike in a Southeast yard is an unaddressed rodent problem in or under the house. See our snake repellent guide for more on the rodent-snake connection.
- Stored product pests (pantry moths, weevils, beetles) thrive in the contaminated food residues rodents leave behind.
Solving a dual-species rodent infestation often clears two or three secondary pest issues at the same time.
Frequently Asked Questions About Rats and Mice
Can rats and mice live in the same area at the same time?
Yes. When food, water, and shelter are abundant and the two species can occupy separated territories within the home (rats in basements or crawl spaces, mice in walls or attics), they can coexist. About one of every six rodent calls we run involves both species in the same home.
How do I know if I have rats or mice or both?
The clearest sign is finding droppings of two different sizes. Mouse droppings are tiny (1/8 to 1/4 inch) and rice-shaped. Rat droppings are larger (1/2 to 3/4 inch) and capsule-shaped. Two different scales of gnaw marks, two different sound patterns (light scratching plus heavier thumps), and activity in different parts of the house also indicate co-infestation.
Are rats more dangerous than mice?
Rats cause more structural damage and carry a broader range of diseases than mice. Both species warrant treatment, but rat problems should be addressed faster. When both species are present, the combined health-risk and damage profile is more serious than either alone.
How quickly can rodents multiply?
Mice reproduce very fast: 5 to 10 litters per year per female, with each litter containing 5 to 8 pups. A single pair can become dozens within a few months. Rats reproduce more slowly (2 to 5 litters per year) but produce larger litters of 8 to 12 pups each. In a dual-species infestation, the mouse population usually grows faster than the rat population.
What’s the best way to remove rats and mice from a home?
Effective dual-species removal combines exclusion (sealing entry points at both 1/4-inch and 1/2-inch+ scales), sanitation (removing food and water access), and species-appropriate trapping and baiting. Professional integrated pest management is the most reliable approach when both species are confirmed present, because the treatment plan needs to address two different size profiles, behavior patterns, and territory maps simultaneously.

A dual-species inspection looks for entry points at two different sizes in two different parts of the home.
Schedule a Rodent Inspection
If you suspect both rats and mice are in your home, or you just want a professional confirmation of which species you’re dealing with, the smartest move is an inspection before the populations grow further. Dual-species infestations are very treatable when caught early, and Northwest’s team has been clearing rodent problems out of Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and South Carolina homes for decades.
About the Author
Anna Vaccaro, Editorial Lead — Pest Education leads pest education content for Northwest Exterminating, working with senior technicians and service center managers across our Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and South Carolina service areas to translate field expertise into homeowner-friendly guides. The focus: accurate, regionally-specific answers to the pest questions Southeast homeowners are actually searching for.
Dec 8, 2021 | Wildlife
Food, water, and a warm place to live are three things wildlife creatures are in search of this winter season. For them, our house can give them direct access to these needs, where they often find their way into our chimneys, attic, basements, and crawlspaces. It’s important to know what pests to look out for and what preventative measures to take, to help prevent a wildlife infestation.
Rats
Seeing a rat inside is always alarming. These rodents are known to live in crawlspaces and between the side beams of walls, often accessing inside through the smallest hole and gap. Once inside, rats will chew on electrical wire, causing property damage and an increased risk of fires. Their droppings are also a risk, as they contain pathogens dangerous to humans.
Raccoons
Nocturnal omnivores, raccoons are dexterous and can use their paws to open lids and doors. These animals will use their hands to dig for food, especially in garbage cans. A creature of habit, once raccoons discover food sources in a particular area, such as your house, they will keep coming back over and over, causing both a risk of an infestation and damaged property.
Squirrels
Squirrels are one of the most common wildlife creatures homeowners see. While they are cute from afar, if found inside your home, they can cause considerable damage. Squirrels will take refuge in basements and attics, often bringing acorns to store for the wintertime. Like rats, these rodents will also chew on electrical wire, creating a risk of a fire. Both squirrels themselves and their droppings can contain diseases and pathogens.
To avoid a winter wildlife invasion, prevention is key. Here are a few wildlife prevention tips to help with wildlife control:
- Seal garbage cans and compost bins at night.
- Bring pet food and water bowls indoors at night.
- Trim tree limbs and shrubs away from your house.
- Place a grated screen on top of your chimney.
- Consider enclosing your crawlspace to eliminate entry points.
- Examine your home exterior for any holes and gaps. If holes or gaps are found, seal them immediately.
Nov 18, 2021 | Pest Control
A common myth is that rodents like rats, mice, and even squirrels hibernate in the winter. Unfortunately for us, this is not true. While their activity may slow down while outside in the colder months, rodents are actually active year-round. Rodents can survive a wide range of places and climates. They are also known to carry diseases that can easily be spread to humans. Rodent-borne diseases like hantavirus and salmonella can be serious when contracted by people.
Rodents have developed several survival mechanisms to get through the winter.
Increasing Food Intake
In late summer and fall, rodents will start gathering as much food as possible to store in their burrows and nests for the winter. While they don’t hibernate, they will stockpile resources to help limit the number of times they have to venture out in the cold in search of food. They also have to increase the amount of food they eat to help retain their body temperature.
Burrowing
Rodents need a warm place to spend the winter. Like other overwintering pests, they will try and access your home to seek shelter from the cold. Rats, in particular, are capable of chewing through cinder blocks, lead, glass, aluminum, vinyl, brick, and even concrete in order to access your home. If they can’t get indoors, they are also great at digging tunnels and will burrow for shelter, usually under walls or near utility lines that come into your home.
Taking Advantage of Opportunities
Rodents are extremely creative when it comes to survival. They can adapt to most any situation. Our homes provide the ideal opportunity for rodents to overwinter by providing convenient cavities in walls, attics, crawlspaces, and between floors that protect them from the elements. These hiding spots are usually filled with insulation, as well, which gives them the perfect nesting material. Add in the heat we turn on in the winter and the food crumbs and other food sources we provide and they have an ideal living situation during the winter.
To keep these pests out this winter, try these rodent prevention tips:
- Empty garbage regularly and put it in cans with tightly fitting lids.
- Keep your house clean and decluttered.
- Avoid using open compost piles.
- Store food in sealed containers.
- Only leave enough pet food out for one sitting.
- Keep pets, especially cats, around the house.
If you have a problem with rodents, contact your local pest control company who can help identify the type of rodent you are dealing with and set you up with the appropriate rodent control program.
You May Also Be Interested In:
Prevent Bed Bugs this Holiday Season
How to Deal with a Pest Delivery at Your Business
Preventing Pantry Pests
Why Are German Roaches Hard to Get Rid Of?
Avoiding A Winter Wildlife Invasion