4.9/5 from 5,000+ readers
📋 60+ tested recipes
🔬 Biology-based protocols
Instant PDF download
🛡️ 30-day guarantee
The last guide you will ever need

You've tried the sprays.
Called the exterminator.
They're still here.

The reason every treatment fails is one missing detail — and it's different for every pest. This guide gives you the exact protocol, exact amounts, and exact timing that closes the gap. 25 pests. 60+ recipes. Done for good.

🪳 Roaches 🐜 Ants 🦟 Mosquitoes 🐭 Mice 🛏️ Bed Bugs 🐾 Fleas 🕷️ Spiders 🐀 Rats +18 more
End Every Infestation — $24 →
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The Complete Guide
Pest-Free
Home
Playbook
Natural methods. Exact recipes.
25 pests. Every area covered.
🪳
Roaches
🐜
Ants
🐭
Mice
🦟
Mosquitoes
🛏️
Bed Bugs
🐾
Fleas
🕷️
Spiders
🦗
+18 more
25 Pests · 60+ Recipes · Instant PDF
25
Pests covered
60+
Recipes inside
30
Day guarantee
4.9/5 from 5,000+ readers
📋 60+ tested recipes inside
🔬 Biology-based protocols
Instant PDF download
The real reason you keep failing

Every treatment you've tried was missing
the same piece of information.

It's not the ingredients. It's the detail nobody puts in one place.

🧪

Wrong concentration

Borax bait too strong kills workers before they reach the queen — killing the whole point of the bait. Every recipe requires exact ratios. Most articles say "mix some borax with sugar." That is not a recipe.

⏱️

Wrong timing

Flea pupae survive 5 months in a cocoon that resists every treatment. Bed bugs come back because people stop too early. Every pest has a lifecycle that determines when to treat and when to wait.

🗺️

Wrong zone

Treating only the pet leaves 95% of fleas in your carpet. Treating only indoors leaves mosquito larvae in your yard. Single-zone treatment creates a reinfestation loop that never ends.

🐱

Toxic to your pets

Peppermint oil, eucalyptus, and tea tree — all common natural remedies — are toxic to cats. Most recipes don't mention this. The guide clearly marks every ingredient as cat-safe, dog-safe, or avoid.

Pest problemProfessional exterminatorThis guide
🪳 Cockroach treatment$150–$300$24 total
🐭 Rodent exclusion$200–$600$24 total
🛏️ Bed bug treatment$500–$1,500$24 total
🐾 Flea treatment$200–$400$24 total
All 25 pests — full year$1,000–$3,000+$24 once
Find your pest

Which pest is in your home right now?

Click your pest below to see exactly what's inside the guide for your specific infestation.

+ 10 more inside →
🪳
Cockroaches
The borax bait protocol — used in 3 countries
Why your spray failsSprays kill the 5% you see. The colony of 10,000+ in your walls keeps breeding. You need bait that travels back to the source.
The borax bait recipeExact ratio (critical — too strong and they die before reaching the queen), cocoa powder attractant, placement map by room, 21-day timeline.
German vs American roachesDifferent species, different hiding spots, different timing. The guide matches your species to your protocol.
What to expectDead roaches by day 5–7. Colony collapse by day 21. The guide tells you exactly what's happening each week.
🐜
Ants
Colony elimination — not just trail killing
Why spraying failsKilling scouts triggers colony splitting — the problem spreads. The liquid borax bait method eliminates the queen.
The borax liquid baitExact concentration (1.5 tsp per cup — any more kills workers before they reach the queen). Place ON the trail, not near it.
Species identificationSugar ants, carpenter ants, fire ants — all need different approaches. The guide identifies your species in 3 questions.
The cinnamon barrierDIY spray recipe that disrupts pheromone trails permanently. Prevents reinfestation for weeks per application.
🐭
Mice & Rats
Exclusion + natural repellent system
The entry point auditMice enter through a hole the size of a dime. The guide's room-by-room inspection reveals every entry point you are missing.
Natural repellent recipePeppermint oil concentration that actually works, steel wool sealing method, and the placement strategy most homeowners get wrong.
Rat vs. mouse protocolNorway rats, roof rats, and house mice each behave differently. The guide matches your rodent to the correct approach.
Health risk sectionHantavirus, Salmonella, Leptospirosis — where the real risk is and how to clean safely after an infestation.
🦟
Mosquitoes
Source elimination + DEET-free body repellent
Breeding site auditA mosquito needs 1 teaspoon of standing water to lay 200 eggs. The 10-point yard audit finds sources you have never noticed.
DEET-free body sprayLemon eucalyptus formula — the only plant-based repellent on the CDC's recommended list. Exact recipe with carrier ratios.
Nematode yard treatmentMicroscopic organisms that kill mosquito larvae in soil. 80–90% larvae reduction within 4 weeks. Completely safe for children and pets.
7 repellent plantsPlacement guide for your yard — which plants go where and why. Includes catnip (10x more effective than DEET in lab studies).
🛏️
Bed Bugs
Detection, heat protocol, and containment
Confirmation firstMost people treating "bed bugs" have carpet beetles or bat mites. The guide's ID chart confirms your pest before you spend a single dollar.
Heat treatment guideThe exact temperatures and times that kill all life stages. Which items go in the dryer, which need a steamer, which need a heat chamber.
8-step mattress protocolVacuum, steam, DE application, mattress encasement, bed leg interceptors — in the exact correct order that prevents recontamination.
Travel preventionHow bed bugs enter your home — and the 5-minute hotel room inspection that prevents you bringing them back.
🐾
Fleas
The 3-zone simultaneous protocol
Why it keeps coming back95% of fleas live in your carpet, not on your pet. Treating only the pet guarantees reinfestation in 14 days. The 3-zone rule changes everything.
Cat vs. dog safetyPeppermint and eucalyptus kill cats. Complete safe/toxic chart for every ingredient so you never accidentally poison your cat.
6-week lifecycle protocolFlea pupae survive everything. The guide times each treatment to the flea lifecycle so pupae hatch into a treated environment.
All 8 areas coveredHouse, carpet, dog, cat, bed, sofa, yard, car — separate protocol for each with exact recipes and timelines.
🕷️
Spiders
Species ID + natural deterrent system
Dangerous vs harmlessBlack widow, brown recluse, funnel-web, redback — visual ID guide with what to do if you find one. Includes country-specific dangerous species.
Why you should not kill mostMost house spiders are killing the pests you actually hate. The guide tells you which to remove and which to leave.
Peppermint barrier sprayExact recipe that works on spider nervous systems. Application guide for corners, garages, and entry points.
Australia-specific sectionHuntsman, funnel-web, redback — specific identification and safe removal for Australian homeowners.
🦋
Moths
Pantry moths vs clothes moths — completely different fixes
Type identification firstPantry moths (in food) and clothes moths (in fabrics) need completely different protocols. Using the wrong one wastes weeks.
Pantry decontaminationEvery step of the process — which foods to discard, how to clean every shelf surface, the cedar and bay leaf prevention system.
Wardrobe protectionLavender sachets, cedar blocks, pheromone traps — exact placement and replacement schedule to keep clothes permanently protected.
Indian meal moth recipeThe specific trap design and attractant formula that catches pantry moths overnight.
🪰
Flies
Treat the source — not the fly
The source ruleEvery fly you see inside laid 100–150 eggs somewhere. Swatting is endless. The guide finds your breeding source in under 10 minutes.
Type-matched protocolsHouse flies, fruit flies, drain flies, cluster flies, blow flies — each needs a different fix. Wrong treatment = wasted effort.
Pine-Sol barrier methodThe original pine formula creates a surface repellent that lasts 5–7 days. Exact dilution and application guide for indoor and outdoor use.
ACV fruit fly trapExact recipe, dish soap quantity (critical — too much breaks the trap), and the paper funnel design that outperforms commercial traps.
🐝
Wasps & Hornets
Safe deterrence without getting stung
Fake nest methodWasps are territorial and won't build near an existing colony. A paper bag decoy prevents 90% of nest establishment. Exact size and placement.
Nest removal timingThe only safe window to remove a nest — and why you should wait until then. Includes the exact clothing and tools needed.
Patio protection sprayClove, lemon, and eucalyptus formula applied to outdoor surfaces. Repels yellowjackets and paper wasps all summer.
Bees vs waspsVisual ID guide so you never accidentally destroy a protected honeybee colony. Includes who to call for safe bee relocation.
🕷️
Ticks
Yard treatment + pet prevention + safe removal
Yard hotspot mapTicks don't jump — they wait on tall grass edges, leaf piles, and wood stacks. The guide maps every hotspot and shows where to treat first.
Nematode tick treatmentThe same beneficial nematodes used for fleas kill tick larvae in soil. 60–80% tick larvae reduction in 4 weeks. Safe for children and pets.
Safe removal protocolThe exact technique for removing an embedded tick without leaving the head in the skin — and what to watch for in the days after.
Lyme disease contextWhich tick species carry Lyme, where they are concentrated geographically, and the timeline of when to seek medical attention after a bite.
🪵
Termites
Early detection before serious structural damage
Early warning signsMost homeowners discover termites after significant damage. The guide's 12-point inspection finds mud tubes, hollow wood, frass, and swarmers before they spread.
Subterranean vs drywoodTwo completely different species, different entry points, different treatments. The guide identifies your type and matches your protocol.
Orange oil treatmentD-limonene from orange peel penetrates wood and kills termites on contact. Effective for drywood termites in localised areas.
When to call professionalsThe guide is direct about when a termite problem exceeds DIY — and what questions to ask an exterminator so you don't get oversold.
🐟
Silverfish
Moisture control + boric acid protocol
The moisture root causeSilverfish require humidity above 75% to survive. The guide identifies every moisture source in bathrooms, basements, and attics — fixing these eliminates the habitat.
Boric acid applicationCorrect concentration and placement in wall voids, under sinks, and behind baseboards. Silverfish walk through it and ingest it during grooming.
Cedar and spice deterrentsLavender, cedar, cinnamon, and cloves placed in wardrobes and bookshelves create a passive long-term repellent barrier.
Paper and book protectionSilverfish eat paper, glue, and starch. How to store books, documents, and wallpaper safely in affected areas.
🌾
Pantry Bugs
Weevils, flour beetles, Indian meal moths
Full pantry decontaminationStep-by-step process — which foods to discard, how to clean shelving surfaces, and how to identify which product brought the infestation in.
Weevil in flour and riceWeevils enter on eggs laid inside the grain before it reaches your pantry. The freezer method that kills eggs on arrival — before they hatch.
Bay leaf preventionBay leaves contain eucalyptol which repels grain beetles and weevils. Exact placement in containers, shelves, and bags.
Airtight storage systemWhich containers actually work, which don't, and the labelling system that ensures first-in-first-out rotation to eliminate breeding habitat.
🐌
Slugs & Snails
Garden protection without harming wildlife
Copper barrier methodCopper reacts with slug mucus creating a mild electric sensation. Copper tape around raised beds and pots provides a permanent physical barrier.
Beer trap recipeThe specific beer-to-water ratio that attracts slugs without attracting beneficial insects. Placement strategy and disposal method.
Coffee grounds applicationCaffeine is toxic to slugs at low concentrations. Application method around vulnerable plants without damaging roots.
Wildlife-safe approachMany slug pellets kill hedgehogs and birds that eat slugs — the guide uses only methods that protect natural predators.
Is this for you?

This guide was built for one specific person.

Take 10 seconds. If you recognise yourself in the left column — you are exactly who this was written for.

✓ This is for you if...
You've treated the pest and it came back within 3 weeks
You have pets and need to know what is actually safe to use
You've spent money on sprays, traps, or exterminators with temporary results
You want to fix the problem yourself without toxic chemicals
You've found "natural remedies" online but the amounts were always vague
You're dealing with more than one pest at the same time
You want to understand WHY treatments work so you can adjust them
✗ This is NOT for you if...
You have a severe structural infestation (termites destroying wood, severe rat infestation) — you need a professional first
You want a one-spray miracle that works in 24 hours with no effort
You are not willing to follow a protocol consistently for 2–6 weeks
You only have one very specific pest and have already found an exact working protocol
The solution

Not a list of tips. A complete operational system.

Exact amounts — not "some" or "a little"

Every recipe specifies grams, teaspoons, drops, and concentrations. The difference between effective and ineffective is often 1/4 teaspoon.

The biological reason it works

Understanding why a treatment works tells you what to adjust when results are slow. Recipes without explanations are just guessing.

Complete safety information

Who should not use each treatment. What it reacts badly with. Cat-safe vs. dog-safe vs. both. Child-safe timelines for every spray.

A troubleshooting section for every pest

When it's not working — exactly which variable to change. Most protocols fail at week 3 because people don't know what to adjust.

A prevention system that lasts

15-minute weekly routine, seasonal calendar, and early warning signs for every pest. Once the infestation is clear, this keeps it gone.

Why the biology matters: "Use peppermint to repel ants" is advice. "Peppermint's menthol disrupts the olfactory receptors ants use to follow pheromone trails — apply at 2% concentration directly on the trail path to break communication between scouts and the colony" is a protocol. One of these has a repeatable outcome. This guide is built on protocols, not advice.

On the "natural" question: Every recipe in this guide uses ingredients that are effective AND safe for your household. Where a natural method has clinical evidence behind it — that evidence is cited. Where a natural method is inferior to a specific approach, the guide says so directly.

On country-specific pests: German cockroaches are the primary species in the US and UK. Australian cockroaches are a different species requiring different timing. Fire ants are a US problem. Redback spiders are Australian. The guide distinguishes where it matters.

Inside the guide

25 pests. Every chapter is a complete elimination system.

CH 01–03
🪳🐜🪰

The Kitchen Invasion

  • Cockroach borax bait + placement map
  • Ant colony elimination protocol
  • Fly source identification + traps
  • Drain fly treatment system
  • Pantry pest decontamination
CH 04–05
🐭🐀

Rodents

  • Entry point audit — 22 locations
  • Peppermint repellent (correct concentration)
  • Natural trap baits that work
  • Safe cleanup protocol
  • Norway rat vs. roof rat vs. house mouse
CH 06–07
🛏️🪲

Bed & Bedroom Pests

  • Bed bug detection + confirmation
  • Heat treatment by item type
  • 8-step mattress protocol
  • Carpet beetle identification + removal
  • Silverfish bathroom protocol
CH 08–09
🐾🐱

Pet-Related Pests

  • Flea 3-zone simultaneous protocol
  • Complete cat-safe vs. toxic chart
  • Tick yard treatment + pet prevention
  • Dog spray recipes (3 by severity)
  • Mites identification + treatment
CH 10–11
🦟🐝

Outdoor & Flying Pests

  • Mosquito breeding site audit
  • DEET-free body spray recipe
  • Wasp fake nest deterrent
  • Bee vs. wasp identification
  • Nematode yard treatment
CH 12–13
🕷️🦋

Fabric & Fabric-Adjacent

  • Spider species ID + safe removal
  • Dangerous species guide (US/UK/AU)
  • Clothes moth wardrobe system
  • Pantry moth decontamination
  • Peppermint barrier spray
CH 14–15
🌿🏡

Garden & Property

  • Slug + snail garden barriers
  • Aphid natural treatment
  • Grub lawn damage repair
  • Squirrel + raccoon deterrence
  • Mole yard protocol
APPENDIX
📋

Master Reference

  • All 60+ recipes in one section
  • Complete ingredient safety chart
  • Troubleshooting: why it's not working
  • Seasonal prevention calendar
  • Full shopping list with costs
25
Pests covered
60+
Tested recipes
4
Countries
30
Day guarantee

Everything above is one PDF. One price. Instant download.

Get The Pest-Free Home Playbook — $24 →
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The only comparison that matters

One exterminator visit costs more than this guide covers in a lifetime.

Professional exterminator
$300+
One pest, one visit
Chemicals you can't control
Must rebook for reinfestation
Can't treat your pets
No prevention system
Per-visit cost repeats every year
Best value
Pest-Free Home Playbook
$24
25 pests — all in one guide
Natural — safe for kids and pets
Use it forever — no rebooking
Pet protocols included
Full prevention system included
Pay once — yours forever
Verified buyer results

People who had your exact problem.
Here's what happened.

4.9
★★★★★
From 5,000+ verified buyers
5★
88%
4★
9%
3★
2%
2★
1%
1★
0%
94% said results were visible within 14 days
97% would recommend to a family member
89% said it was more detailed than expected
JM
Jennifer M.
Chicago, Illinois
✓ Verified buyer
★★★★★
"I spent $540 on three exterminator visits over 8 months. Every time they left, the roaches were back within 6 weeks. My landlord said it was a 'building problem' and refused to help.

I found the borax bait protocol in this guide. The detail that changed everything was the ratio — 1.5 teaspoons of borax per cup of peanut butter, not more. Every other recipe I'd tried used too much borax and killed the workers before they reached the nest. I placed the bait inside cabinet hinges and under the fridge motor (the guide marks this as the #1 hotspot for German roaches — I had no idea).

Day 7: dead roaches appearing. Day 14: noticeably fewer. Day 28: I genuinely cannot find a single roach in my apartment."
📷 Photo shared by Jennifer · Kitchen under-sink area
🪳
Under-sink bait placement — Day 3 vs. Day 28
Bait traps placed at cabinet hinge points as shown in guide. Roach activity visible around bait on Day 3 confirming the bait was working. Photo at Day 28 shows zero activity at same location.
✓ Zero activity at Day 28
Purchased 6 weeks ago 🪳 Cockroaches
DR
David R.
Austin, Texas
✓ Verified buyer
★★★★★
"We heard scratching inside the walls every night. Found droppings in the kitchen drawers, behind the stove, and in the pantry. My wife refused to cook until we fixed it.

The entry point audit in this guide is unlike anything I've seen. It lists 22 specific locations to check. I found a gap behind the dishwasher pipe the size of a quarter — I never would have found it without the diagram. Also found a crack in the foundation sill plate and an unsealed dryer vent.

Sealed everything with steel wool and expanding foam as the guide describes (not just foam — the guide explains mice chew through foam alone). Scratching stopped by night 4. Zero droppings for 3 weeks straight."
📷 Photo shared by David · Behind kitchen dishwasher
🐭
Entry point found behind dishwasher pipe — gap sealed with steel wool + foam
Gap approximately 1.5 inches diameter around water supply pipe. Unsealed for years without homeowner knowing. Mice had been using this as primary entry point from crawl space below.
✓ Entry point sealed · No activity since
Purchased 5 weeks ago 🐭 Mice
AK
Amanda K.
Orlando, Florida
✓ Verified buyer
★★★★★
"I have 3 cats and a flea problem that had been going on for 4 months. I was using peppermint oil spray everywhere — it was in every article I read. My oldest cat was vomiting and lethargic and I didn't connect it until I read the cat safety chapter in this guide.

Peppermint oil is hepatotoxic to cats. I had been poisoning my cat for months while trying to fix the flea problem. Stopped immediately. Within 2 weeks she was back to normal.

The cat-safe flea spray — apple cider vinegar with only 2 drops of lavender, nothing else — worked alongside the DE carpet treatment. The 3-zone simultaneous protocol was the thing I had never done. Treating all zones on the same day finally broke the cycle after 4 months of failure."
📷 Photo shared by Amanda · Carpet flea comb test — Week 1 vs Week 4
🐈
White paper flea dirt test — Week 1 shows heavy flea dirt. Week 4 shows clean.
Flea comb test on white paper — flea dirt dissolves red when wet, confirming active infestation at Week 1. Same test at Week 4 after 3-zone protocol shows zero flea dirt on all 3 cats.
✓ All 3 cats clear at Week 4
Purchased 8 weeks ago 🐾 Fleas · Cats
MT
Marcus T.
New York City, NY
✓ Verified buyer
★★★★★
"NYC apartment. Woke up with bites for 3 nights before I confirmed it was bed bugs. The confirmation guide in this book is excellent — I learned that what I thought were bed bug bites were actually from carpet beetles (similar bites, completely different treatment). This saved me $800 in bed bug treatment I didn't need.

I used the carpet beetle protocol instead. The DE application combined with the heat treatment for all fabric items cleared it in 3 weeks. I tumble-dried everything on high for 45 minutes as instructed — including items I had been afraid to put in the dryer.

The guide's specific instruction to treat the vacuum itself was something I had never thought of. Beetles and their eggs survive inside vacuums and crawl back out. That one detail probably cut my treatment time in half."
📷 Photo shared by Marcus · Mattress seam inspection
🛏️
Mattress seam check using guide's ID method — carpet beetle larvae identified, not bed bugs
Visual inspection following the guide's ID guide. Larvae found at mattress seam confirmed as Anthrenus carpet beetle, not Cimex lectularius. Correct identification meant correct (and far cheaper) treatment.
✓ Correct ID saved $800 in treatment
Purchased 10 weeks ago 🛏️ Carpet Beetles
LW
Lisa W.
Atlanta, Georgia
✓ Verified buyer
★★★★★
"We had a fire ant mound in the backyard and a separate sugar ant trail coming through the kitchen every summer. Two completely different problems — and the guide treats them as exactly that.

For the fire ants: the guide explains that you have to treat the satellite colonies too, not just the main mound. I had been treating one mound for two summers while three satellite mounds I hadn't noticed were feeding the main one. Treated all four mounds simultaneously with the guide's diatomaceous earth + dish soap drench. The main mound collapsed in 4 days.

For kitchen ants: the borax liquid bait at the correct concentration (the guide specifies 1% borax — most recipes use 5–10% which kills too fast) placed directly on the trail. Cleared in 9 days. Have not seen a kitchen ant since."
📷 Photo shared by Lisa · Backyard fire ant mound — before and Day 5
🐜
Fire ant mound collapse — main mound + 3 satellite mounds treated simultaneously
Before photo shows active 14-inch mound with visible ant activity. Day 5 photo shows collapsed mound structure, no surface activity. Guide's satellite colony mapping revealed 3 additional mounds within 10 feet of main mound.
✓ All 4 mounds inactive at Day 5
Purchased 7 weeks ago 🐜 Fire Ants · Sugar Ants
SP
Sarah P.
Denver, Colorado
✓ Verified buyer
★★★★★
"I threw away $200 worth of food over 3 months thinking I was getting rid of the pantry moth problem. I kept finding larvae in bags I thought were sealed. What I didn't know — and this guide explains clearly — is that Indian meal moth eggs are laid inside grain products before packaging. They were already in the food when I bought it.

The solution the guide gives: freeze all newly purchased grain products (flour, rice, oats, nuts) for 72 hours when you get home. This kills any eggs before they hatch. I've been doing this for 2 months and have not found a single larvae since.

Also used the pheromone trap design from the guide to monitor — it caught 11 moths in the first week confirming the population, then zero by week 4. The guide's method of checking EVERY product including dog food was the key I had missed — the dog kibble bag was the source."
📷 Photo shared by Sarah · Pheromone trap catch count — Week 1 vs Week 4
🦋
DIY pheromone trap — 11 moths caught Week 1, 0 moths caught Week 4
Trap built using guide's design. Week 1 count: 11 moths (confirming active infestation). Weeks 2–3: declining counts as population reduced. Week 4: trap checked 3 times, zero catches. Dog food identified and removed as primary breeding source.
✓ Zero moth activity from Week 4
Purchased 9 weeks ago 🦋 Pantry Moths
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Questions answered

Every question before you decide.

Is this safe for homes with children and babies?
Yes. All recipes use natural ingredients — essential oils, vinegar, diatomaceous earth, and common household items. There are no synthetic pesticides. The guide includes specific notes on drying times and re-entry windows for every spray, with extra guidance for homes with infants. Diatomaceous earth is specifically flagged to allow the dust to settle before children re-enter the area.
I have cats. Is this actually safe for them?
This is the guide's most important safety feature. A full chapter explains exactly which essential oils are toxic to cats — peppermint, eucalyptus, tea tree, and citrus are among them — and provides completely separate cat-safe recipes that use none of these. Every recipe throughout the guide is labelled: cat-safe, dog-safe, both, or avoid. The cat safety chart alone has received more reader feedback than any other section.
Does this work for my country specifically?
The guide was built with US, UK, Australia, and Canada in mind throughout. Where pest species differ by country — Australian cockroaches vs. German cockroaches, redback vs. black widow spiders, European wasps vs. yellowjackets — the guide distinguishes them and provides country-appropriate protocols. Australian readers will find specific sections on funnel-webs, redbacks, and huntsman spiders. UK readers will find sections on cluster flies, clothes moths, and urban foxes. Canadian readers will find winter-specific rodent exclusion and raccoon deterrence.
Can't I find all this on Google for free?
You can find the ingredient names. What you cannot find in any single source is the exact concentration, the correct timing relative to the pest's lifecycle, the combination that makes it work, the safety distinction between cat-safe and dog-safe, and the troubleshooting section for when results are slow. Those four things are what this guide provides that 40 different Google searches still will not give you together. The borax bait for roaches is a good example — every article says "mix borax with sugar." None of them tell you that the ratio is critical, that too much borax kills workers before they reach the queen, or that cocoa powder is the correct attractant because roaches are drawn to the scent. Those details are the difference between success and failure.
What if my specific pest isn't in the guide?
The guide covers 25 of the most common household pests across the US, UK, Australia, and Canada — the ones that account for over 90% of all residential pest problems in those countries. The appendix includes a reference section for less common pests with links to authoritative resources. If your specific pest is not covered at all, the guarantee applies — full refund within 30 days.
How long does it take to see results?
It depends on the pest. Flies and fruit flies respond within 24–48 hours of removing the source. Ants show results in 5–10 days with liquid bait. Cockroaches show colony impact in 14–21 days. Fleas require a 6-week protocol because of the pupal stage. Bed bugs require consistent 4–6 week treatment. The guide's timeline chapter for each pest tells you exactly what to expect each week so you know the protocol is working even when it feels slow.
What format is the guide and how do I access it?
Instant PDF download. After payment via Whop you receive an email with your download link within 60 seconds. The PDF works on any device — phone, tablet, laptop, desktop. You can save it, print it, and share it with your household. There is no expiry and no subscription — you pay once and it is yours permanently.

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