Stumbled on a swarm or hive in Phoenix? Call now — we’re open 7:00am–7:00pm with 24/7 emergency response for urgent situations. Our local technicians arrive fast, assess safely, and handle everything from live bee relocation to full honeycomb removal and entry sealing.


Established colonies inside stucco eaves, attic voids, block-wall cavities, and meter boxes are common across Maryvale, Biltmore, and North Phoenix. We locate the brood, remove the colony, and relocate when conditions allow, prioritizing safety in Africanized-bee zones.

Seasonal bee swarms around Arcadia palms, Ahwatukee greenbelts, Desert Ridge, and Downtown roof decks. We gently capture swarms of bees on trees, fences, patio covers, and mailboxes before they establish a hive. Ideal for clusters hanging from palm fronds or stucco soffits.

Leftover bee honeycomb melts in the Phoenix heat, causing odors and repeat infestations. We perform clean cut-outs in tile or shingle roofs, pergolas, and garage walls, then sanitize and repair. Finish work matches local textures—stucco, elastomeric paint, and pop-out trims found in Phoenix.

Paper wasps on courtyard lights, yellowjackets near irrigation valve boxes, and hornets in block walls show up around Phoenix. Targeted, low-drift treatments protect kids and pets near pools, play sets, and HOA common areas.

We seal common Phoenix entry points: roofline gaps, weep holes, utility penetrations, and soffit vents on ranch homes, Santa Fe, and Tuscan styles. Includes screening, mortar/foam sealing, and odor neutralization to deter “returners”—great for Phoenix homes.

Urgent bee stinging activity near schools, parks, or resort patios in Phoenix? Call anytime. We triage by phone, dispatch the closest Phoenix tech, and stabilize the site quickly—then schedule full comb removal and bee-proofing.
You call, we assess the situation in minutes: location (Arcadia palm, Ahwatukee greenbelt, Biltmore eave, Maryvale block wall), activity level, people/pet exposure, and site hazards (pools, schools, resorts). We coach you to keep distance and stage access for our tech.
Your Phoenix tech confirms species/behavior, pinpoints the colony (stucco soffits, tile roof voids, meter boxes, irrigation valve boxes common across Desert Ridge, Glendale, and Chandler), and maps the safest removal path.
For swarms hanging from trees, pergolas, or Downtown/Midtown balconies, we collect and relocate when conditions allow. If defensive (Africanized-leaning) behavior threatens safety, we shift to a public-safety protocol.
Established hives inside walls or roofs in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Peoria require careful cut-out. We expose voids, remove brood/comb/honey, and verify queen removal so “returners” don’t re-occupy.
Phoenix heat melts leftover comb and scent trails. We scrape, HEPA-vac, and apply enzymatic neutralizers so the area doesn’t attract ants, roaches, or new swarms—critical for garages and patios in Gilbert, Mesa, and Tempe.
We seal weep holes, roofline gaps, utility penetrations, and soffit vents using screen, mortar, or foam matched to local finishes (smooth stucco, sand finish, elastomeric paints). HOA-friendly solutions for communities in Surprise, Goodyear, Avondale, Buckeye, and Queen Creek.
You get a written warranty, follow-up check if needed, and prevention tips tailored to your property style (ranch, Santa Fe, or two-story tile).
How long does the visit take in Phoenix?
Swarm removals are often under an hour; in-wall hive cut-outs with repair can run 2–4 hours depending on access (tile roofs and stucco eaves take longer).
Do you handle repairs after comb removal?
Yes. We patch, texture-match, and paint so finishes blend with Phoenix-area stucco and trim standards, then re-seal entries to prevent re-infestation.
We’ll coach you by phone, dispatch the nearest Phoenix bee removal tech, and finish with humane removal, full comb extraction, and bee-proofing.
Why avoid using a garden hose in Phoenix?
Water doesn’t stop a defensive colony; it can trap you near patios and pool decks, increasing bee sting risk.
Should I block the hole where bees are entering?
No—plugging weep holes or soffit gaps can push bees indoors. Wait for our team to remove the bee colony, sanitize, and seal correctly.
