Rat Control Brisbane
Roof rats in the ceiling, brown rats in sewers and subfloors. Tamper-resistant bait stations installed in the roof void along confirmed rat runs. Entry-point exclusion after bait is working. Confirmed elimination at 14-28 days. From $220.
Rat Species in Brisbane
Species identification matters because it determines where bait stations are placed. Treating a roof void infestation with ground-level stations, or vice versa, wastes time and money. In Brisbane residential properties, the answer is almost always roof rat.
Roof Rat
The dominant rat species in Brisbane residential roof voids. Slim body (150-200g), large prominent ears, pointed nose, and a tail clearly longer than the body. An agile climber that travels along tree branches, power lines, and fence tops to reach rooflines. In Brisbane homes, almost exclusively found in the roof void rather than at ground level. Nocturnal. Runs heard in ceiling at night are almost always roof rats. Does not burrow.
Brown Rat (Sewer Rat)
Larger and heavier (300-500g), blunt nose, small ears, and a tail shorter than the body. Ground-dwelling burrower. Found in sewers, subfloors, under concrete, in compost heaps, and along drain surrounds. Common in commercial and industrial areas near stormwater infrastructure. Less frequent in Brisbane suburban homes than the roof rat. Treatment uses ground-level stations rather than roof void placement.
Ground-level. Commercial premises. Sewers.Pacific Rat
Small (40-80g), similar appearance to a large mouse but with rat-like features. Less common in Brisbane metro. Found in older timber construction and suburban bushland interfaces. Treated with the same methods as roof rat. If droppings are much smaller than expected for a rat, Pacific rat is a possibility worth confirming before treatment.
Smaller. Less common in Brisbane.Signs of Rats in Brisbane Homes
Most Brisbane homeowners first notice rats by sound. A confirmed sighting from one sign is enough to warrant treatment. Hearing sounds from the roof at night combined with any physical evidence confirms rat activity.
Ceiling sounds at night
Running, scratching, and gnawing sounds from the roof void between 10pm and 4am. Roof rat movement is fast and runs along established routes. Possum movement is slower and heavier. Hearing fast, light running along the same path is a strong indicator of roof rats.
Droppings along roof joists
Roof rat droppings are 12-18mm, dark, and pointed at both ends. Accumulate along joist surfaces and in corners of the roof void. Fresh droppings are moist and dark. Older droppings are dry and grey. Brown rat droppings are 18-25mm with blunt ends.
Grease marks on joists and pipes
Dark grease smears along roof joists and pipes where rats repeatedly travel the same route. The grease comes from oils in their fur. Well-established smear marks indicate a long-running infestation with a consistent travel route.
Gnaw marks
Chew marks on timber, electrical cable insulation, roof insulation, and water pipes. Rat gnaw marks are 4-6mm wide. Gnawing on electrical cables is a significant fire risk and warrants urgent treatment regardless of how minor the infestation appears.
Nesting in roof insulation
Roof rats nest in roof insulation batt material. The nest site appears as a compacted hollow in the insulation, often with shredded material, droppings, and dark staining around it.
Ammonia smell from roof void
A persistent urine smell from the ceiling cavity. Detectable in heavily infested properties and in hot weather. If a distinct ammonia odour is noticeable from a ceiling light fitting or roof hatch, a significant rat population is almost certain.
Why Brisbane Roof Voids Are the #1 Rat Hotspot
Brisbane has a specific rat profile that differs from southern Australian cities. The roof rat's climbing ability, Brisbane's tree canopy, and the year-round warmth combine to make every unprotected roof void a viable rat habitat.
Tree canopy to roofline
Roof rats travel across the urban tree canopy and use branches that overhang or touch the roofline as bridges. Mango, fig, lychee, and Poinciana trees adjacent to the roof are the most common entry bridges in Brisbane.
6mm is enough
Roof rats can squeeze through any gap larger than 25mm. Common entry gaps include eave-to-fascia gaps, gaps at the roofline where corrugated iron meets timber, and utility penetrations through the roof.
Warm, dry, undisturbed
Brisbane's roof voids are warm year-round with no temperature extreme to drive rats out. Insulation provides nesting material. Rats establish permanent colonies in the roof void and forage to ground level at night for food and water.
Food above and below
Fruit trees provide food from above. Pet food, compost, and outdoor food bins provide food below. Properties with both a tree bridge to the roof and a ground-level food source have the highest persistent rat pressure in Brisbane.
Rat Treatment Process
Effective rat treatment in Brisbane requires three elements working together: bait in the right location, a follow-up to confirm activity reduction, and exclusion after the population is reduced. Any one of these missing produces a recurring infestation.
Roof Void Inspection
Roof hatch accessed and full roof void inspected for droppings, grease marks, gnaw marks, nesting, and active runs. Activity zones mapped. Species confirmed. Entry points at the roofline identified.
Bait Station Installation
Tamper-resistant, lockable bait stations secured to joists along confirmed rat runs in the roof void. First-generation anticoagulant bait installed. Additional stations at subfloor or ground level if brown rat activity is also present.
14-Day Follow-Up
Return visit at 14 days. Bait stations checked in the roof void. Bait consumption assessed. Consumed bait replaced. Activity should be significantly reduced at this visit. Entry point sealing conducted once bait is confirmed working.
Exclusion
Roofline gaps sealed with appropriate materials. Eave gaps closed. Utility penetration gaps fitted with mesh or foam. Tree branches touching the roof reported for pruning. Prevention recommendations for food source management.
Bait Safety for Households with Pets
Bait safety is the most common concern from Brisbane households with dogs and cats. Here is how we handle it.
Roof void placement only in pet households
For households with dogs or cats, all bait is placed in the roof void, secured to joists, in stations pets cannot reach. No floor-level bait is used. This completely removes the direct access risk.
First-generation bait as default
We use first-generation anticoagulant bait (Ditrac, Talon) as our residential default. First-generation products require multiple feeds to be lethal, reducing secondary poisoning risk to pets that may eat a dead rat compared to second-generation products.
Tamper-resistant stations only
All stations are lockable and require a key to open. A dog that finds and carries a station cannot open it to access the bait. We do not use open bait trays or loose bait in any residential property.
Secondary poisoning risk discussion
If you have raptors (owls, hawks) nesting on or near the property, we discuss second-generation bait avoidance specifically. Secondary poisoning in raptors that eat poisoned rodents is a known risk with brodifacoum products. First-generation alternatives present lower risk.
Rat Treatment Cost Brisbane
All single treatment prices include roof void inspection, bait station installation, and the 14-day follow-up visit. Entry point exclusion report included. See our rodent pricing page.
Rat Control FAQ
Same-Day Rat Treatment. Roof Void Specialists. 14-Day Follow-Up.
Tamper-Resistant Bait Stations · Exclusion · Brisbane-Wide · from $220