Quick answer
Rat control in NYC costs $200–$500 for a one-time baiting treatment, or $400–$900 for a full exclusion job that seals entry points. Exclusion is the only approach that provides lasting results — without it, baiting manages a population rather than eliminating a problem.
How much does rat control cost in NYC?
Rat control in NYC costs $200–$500 for a one-time baiting treatment, or $400–$900 for a full exclusion job that includes sealing structural entry points. Baiting without exclusion is a short-term fix — it reduces the current population but doesn’t stop the next wave. For a property to stay rat-free, the physical entry points have to be found and sealed.
| Service | Typical NYC cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Initial inspection | $100 – $200 | Identify entry points and activity level |
| One-time baiting (bait stations) | $200 – $500 | Population reduction only; no exclusion |
| Full exclusion (baiting + sealing) | $400 – $900 | Lasting solution; price varies by entry count |
| Ongoing monitoring plan | $100 – $200/mo | Monthly bait station checks and restock |
| Commercial property (restaurant/warehouse) | Quoted | By size, DOH compliance needs, visit frequency |
Ranges as of 2026, vary by provider, property type and number of entry points.
Why NYC has a rat problem that most cities don’t
New York City’s rat population — Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) primarily — exists at a scale shaped by the city’s infrastructure. A few key factors:
Underground infrastructure. NYC’s subway system, combined sewer overflow network, and utility tunnels create a below-grade habitat that is essentially rat-proof from a human-access perspective. Surface-level control is always fighting against a replenishing underground population.
Food density. Restaurant density, street-level garbage, and the city’s outdoor bin system create continuous food access. Rats don’t need to risk exposure to enter buildings when food is accessible without doing so — but they will enter when food or nesting opportunity is available inside.
Building age. Pre-war construction with original foundations has decades of cracking, settling, and unrepaired utility penetrations. A 1940s building in the Bronx has had 80+ years for foundation gaps to develop and for plumbing runs to create accessible entry points.
The DOHMH Rat Index. NYC’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene runs an active rat indexing program that grades city blocks by active rat signs. High-index blocks include many commercial corridors in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx. If your building is on a high-index block, rodent pressure is persistent — not episodic.
What rat exclusion actually involves
Exclusion is not a pest control novelty — it’s the only approach that addresses the source of the problem rather than its symptoms. A full residential exclusion job includes:
Entry point identification. A trained technician inspects the building perimeter, basement, crawl space (if present), and utility entry points. Common entry points in NYC buildings:
- Foundation cracks (quarter-inch or larger — rats can compress through any gap their skull fits through, roughly the size of a quarter)
- Gaps around pipe penetrations (water supply, drain lines, gas, electrical conduit)
- The space under exterior doors (particularly older buildings where door sweep weatherstripping has degraded)
- Weep holes and ventilation gaps in brick construction
- Uncapped sewer cleanouts
Sealing work. Entry points are sealed with materials that rats can’t gnaw through — typically steel wool packed into gaps and sealed with caulk, hardware cloth over larger openings, or purpose-made rodent exclusion plates over utility penetrations.
Baiting. Bait stations placed at active areas to reduce the current population while the exclusion makes entry harder.
For a typical NYC row house or brownstone, a full exclusion typically involves 3–8 entry points. For older buildings with deteriorated foundations, there can be significantly more.
HPD violations and landlord responsibility
For renters in NYC — the majority of Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens apartment residents — the first step in dealing with rats is not booking an exterminator. It’s understanding your rights.
The legal baseline. NYC Housing Maintenance Code section 27-2018 requires landlords to maintain dwellings free of rodent infestation. This is not a grey area — rat infestation in a rental unit is a landlord violation, not a tenant problem.
How to enforce it. HPD (the Department of Housing Preservation and Development) handles housing maintenance complaints. Rat infestation in a residential unit is classified as Class C (immediately hazardous) — the most serious violation category. File at hpdonline.nyc.gov. A Class C violation requires the landlord to correct the condition within 24 hours of notice.
What happens if the landlord doesn’t act. HPD can issue civil penalties, and in serious cases, the city can arrange repairs and bill the landlord. The more effective practical lever is often a written notice to the landlord combined with an HPD complaint — most landlords move faster when there’s a formal record.
If you need to act before the landlord does. For severe active infestations, you may have grounds to arrange treatment yourself and seek reimbursement or rent reduction. This is fact-specific — consult a tenant’s rights organisation (Legal Aid, Met Council on Housing) before acting unilaterally.
Commercial rat control in NYC
Restaurants, food-processing facilities, and commercial properties have different compliance requirements. NYC DOH requires active pest management programs for food service establishments — and a rat sighting during a DOH inspection can trigger a violation, permit suspension, or closure order.
Commercial rat control programs are priced differently from residential:
- Quoted by square footage and facility type
- Include DOH-compliant documentation (inspection logs, bait station maps, corrective action records)
- Typically structured as ongoing monthly or quarterly contracts rather than one-time treatments
If you’re a restaurant owner or commercial operator near Hunts Point, the Fulton Fish Market, or any food-distribution corridor, ongoing rat control is a compliance requirement, not an optional service.
Getting an accurate rat control quote in NYC
For residential properties, have ready:
- Property type and approximate size
- How long you’ve seen signs of activity
- Whether the issue is in the unit, common areas, or the building perimeter
- Any visible entry points you’ve noticed
For the most lasting solution, prioritise providers who perform exclusion work alongside baiting — not just bait-station placement. See our rodent control service page for what a proper job covers, and our NYC exterminator cost overview for cross-pest context.