How to Get Rid of Mosquitoes: Brisbane Prevention Guide
Quick answer: Eliminate all standing water every 7 days (gutters, pot saucers, bird baths, tarps). Treat ornamental ponds with BTi larvicide. Spray shaded vegetation with residual pyrethroid. Apply DEET or picaridin repellent during peak activity. For bayside and canal properties: monthly professional programs October through April.
Most mosquito control fails because people focus on killing adults rather than eliminating the source. Spraying your garden kills mosquitoes currently present but does nothing about the breeding water producing hundreds of new adults every 7-10 days. Source elimination is the only intervention that reduces the underlying population rather than just the current visible adult numbers.
Step 1: Source Elimination Is the Most Important Action
A female Aedes aegypti mosquito needs as little as a bottle cap of water to breed. At Brisbane's summer temperatures (28-32°C), the egg-to-adult cycle completes in 7-10 days. This means any standing water that persists for more than a week on your property is a breeding site.
Step 2: DIY Yard Spray for Adult Mosquitoes
After source elimination, residual spray targets the adult population currently resting in garden vegetation. Adult mosquitoes spend most of the day resting in dense, shaded vegetation: under large-leafed plants, in established shrubs, and in shaded garden bed edges. These areas are the primary spray target.
What to spray
Bifenthrin or deltamethrin-based outdoor residual sprays (available from hardware stores) applied to the underside and stems of garden vegetation in shaded areas, along fence lines, and under eaves where vegetation is dense. Apply in the morning or late afternoon. Residual duration: 4-6 weeks on vegetation in Brisbane's wet season (rain and UV degrade product faster than on hard surfaces). The mosquito pest guide covers Brisbane species and behaviour in detail.
What not to spray
Do not spray flowering plants or plants actively visited by bees. Pyrethroid products are broad-spectrum insecticides that affect beneficial insects. Target dense, non-flowering shaded vegetation only. Avoid spraying near ponds or water features; pyrethroids are toxic to aquatic animals.
Personal Protection: Repellents That Work
Brisbane Surge Periods
Mosquito pressure in Brisbane peaks at two predictable times each year. Planning treatment and source inspection around these periods is the most cost-effective approach.
October-April: wet season peak
Brisbane's wet season brings the combination of warm temperatures, high humidity, and repeated rain events that creates peak mosquito breeding conditions. Inspect and eliminate breeding sources within 7 days of every significant rain event. Monthly vegetation spray programs provide ongoing adult population management through this period. Aedes aegypti (dengue vector, container breeder) and Culex quinquefasciatus (night biter, drain water breeder) are the two primary species active across the full Brisbane metro area during this period.
Post-flood events
Following any significant flooding event in the Logan River, Brisbane River, or creek corridor areas, mosquito numbers surge 7-14 days later as flood water accumulation produces a mass emergence of newly adult mosquitoes. The 2022 Brisbane and Logan floods produced the highest post-flood mosquito pressure in the region in decades. Post-flood, inspect the entire property for new standing water accumulation and spray vegetation within 10-14 days of the event.
Coastal and Canal Estate Properties
When Professional Treatment Helps
DIY source elimination and vegetation spray is sufficient for most inland Brisbane properties with standard garden mosquito pressure. Professional monthly programs add meaningful value for three specific situations.
Bayside and canal properties during the wet season: the off-property breeding source (tidal wetlands, canal network) produces continuous pressure that requires monthly retreatment to manage rather than a single annual spray. Properties with large established gardens (1,000m2+): coverage area for residual spray exceeds what a retail pump sprayer can apply effectively. Properties preparing for outdoor events: professional ULV spray provides immediate knockdown for 48-72 hours before outdoor gatherings. See the mosquito treatment cost guide for professional program pricing.
Mosquito Disease Risk in Brisbane
Brisbane and south east Queensland mosquitoes carry several arboviruses that make mosquito management a public health concern as well as a comfort issue.
Ross River virus
The most commonly reported arbovirus in Queensland. Transmitted by multiple Aedes and Culex species active in Brisbane. Symptoms include joint pain, fatigue, and muscle aches that can persist for months. No vaccine or specific treatment. Prevention is avoidance: repellent, screens, and source elimination during peak periods.
Barmah Forest virus
Similar symptoms to Ross River virus. Also transmitted by Aedes and Culex species in south east Queensland. Reported year-round with peaks following wet season events in Brisbane, Logan, and the Redlands.
Dengue fever
Aedes aegypti is the primary dengue vector and is established in far north Queensland. In Brisbane, the risk of locally-acquired dengue is lower but increases during warm wet seasons as Aedes aegypti populations expand southward. Travellers returning to Brisbane from dengue-endemic regions can introduce the virus into the local Aedes aegypti population. Eliminating container breeding sources reduces the Aedes aegypti population that could sustain local transmission.
Japanese encephalitis
Culex species carry Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), which was detected in south east Queensland in 2022. JEV vaccination is recommended for people in high-risk areas with significant exposure to Culex mosquitoes. Consult your GP if you live near wetlands or work outdoors in QLD with regular mosquito exposure. Brisbane Mosquito Control information is available from Queensland Health and the relevant local councils.
Screens, Fans, and Structural Mosquito Control
Chemical and biological control addresses the outdoor mosquito population. Structural measures reduce indoor exposure independently of what happens in the yard.
Install 1mm aperture flywire screens on all windows and external doors if not already fitted. Check screen integrity at the start of each wet season: tears, gaps around conduit penetrations, and worn door seals are common entry points. Ceiling fans and pedestal fans create airflow that significantly reduces mosquito biting activity indoors; mosquitoes are weak fliers and avoid sustained air movement above approximately 1m/s. Outdoor fans on verandas and entertainment areas provide a simple non-chemical control layer that complements repellent use for alfresco dining and entertaining during the wet season.
Getting rid of mosquitoes in Brisbane: key points
Professional mosquito programs for bayside and canal properties
Monthly October-April. Same-day across Brisbane and Gold Coast.
Frequently Asked Questions
More guides: Mosquito pest guide • Mosquito treatment cost • Get a quote
Related: Seasonal pest guide Brisbane • Pest control after floods • How often do you need pest control?