How to Choose a Pest Control Company: What to Look For
Short answer: Verify QLD Pest Management Licence on the QBCC register, confirm $10-20M public liability insurance, check Google reviews (4.5+ stars, recent activity), get written warranty terms before booking, and demand itemised pricing. If an operator cannot provide any of these on request, look elsewhere.
Pest control is a licensed trade in Queensland. The person treating your home is applying regulated pesticides under conditions that affect your family, pets, and property. Choosing the right operator matters beyond just price. This guide gives you 10 specific checks you can complete before booking, the red flags that eliminate an operator immediately, and the exact questions to ask before committing.
10 Essential Checks Before Booking
Verify the QLD Pest Management Licence
Any person applying pesticides commercially in Queensland must hold a current Pest Management Licence issued under the Health (Drugs and Poisons) Regulation 1996. Search the operator's name on the QBCC licence register at qbcc.qld.gov.au. A current licence is displayed with the category, expiry date, and any conditions. Licence categories cover different pest types: confirm the licence covers the pest you need treated. An operator who cannot provide their licence number immediately on request should not be booked.
Confirm public liability insurance
Ask for a current certificate of currency showing public liability insurance of at least $10 million, and preferably $20 million. This covers you if the operator causes damage to your property, contents, or adjoining properties during treatment. An operator without current insurance is exposing you to uninsured risk if something goes wrong. This is not an optional check.
Check Google reviews: volume, recency, and responses
Google Business Profile reviews cannot be deleted by the business and require a verified account to post. Look for: 4.5+ star average; at least 20 reviews; review activity within the last 6 months; and how the operator responds to negative reviews. An operator with 4.8 stars on 200 reviews over 3 years is demonstrably more reliable than 5 stars on 4 reviews posted last week. Testimonials on the operator's own website cannot be independently verified. See our own Response Pest Control reviews.
Confirm written warranty terms before booking
Ask specifically: how long is the warranty, which pest types are covered, what triggers a free re-treatment, and are there any conditions that void it. Get this in writing (email is fine) before booking. A verbal "we guarantee our work" is not a warranty. A written 90-day warranty covering re-treatment at no charge if the same pest returns is a meaningful commitment. Be cautious of warranties shorter than 60 days for general pest treatment.
Request itemised, property-specific pricing
A reputable operator can give you a specific price for your specific property and service scope. Be cautious of "from $X" prices that are not tied to a specific property and service list. When you receive a quote, confirm exactly what is included: does it cover internal treatment, subfloor, roof void, and external perimeter? Or is it an external spray only? Ask for the scope in writing alongside the price. Comparing "from" prices across operators is not a meaningful comparison.
Confirm a physical Brisbane address
An operator with a physical Brisbane address and an established local presence is accountable to the local market in a way that national franchises or operators based outside the service area are not. Check that the address is a real office or depot, not a virtual mailbox. Local operators also have a direct incentive to protect their local reputation, which shapes service quality.
Check AEPMA membership
The Australian Environmental Pest Managers Association (AEPMA) requires members to maintain current licensing, complete continuing professional education, and adhere to a code of practice. AEPMA membership is not a substitute for verifying licence and insurance directly, but it is a positive indicator of professional commitment and ongoing education. You can verify membership at aepma.com.au.
Confirm product names and application rates on request
A professional operator can tell you the name of the products they use and the application areas. Termidor SC, Cislin 25, Altriset, Demand CS are examples of professional-grade products with known label rates and residual durations. An operator who cannot name their products or refuses to do so may be using retail-grade products at non-label rates. The product used directly determines how long the treatment lasts and how effective it is.
Ask about child and pet safe options
APVMA-approved professional products are safe for children and pets after re-entry times (typically 2-4 hours after surfaces dry). A reputable operator can explain which products they use, the re-entry period for your specific situation, and whether eco-friendly or low-odour alternatives are available if you have specific sensitivities. If an operator cannot answer safety questions specifically, that is a concern.
Confirm same-day availability and response time
For pest situations that need urgent attention (active termites, rodents in food preparation areas, wasp nests near children), the operator's response time matters. Confirm whether same-day service is genuinely available and what the actual response time is for your suburb. A 4-hour response window is meaningfully different from "we'll call you back to schedule."
Red Flags to Eliminate an Operator Immediately
Questions to Ask Before Booking
These five questions give you the most information about an operator in the shortest conversation.
Can you give me your QLD Pest Management Licence number right now?
Does your quote include subfloor and roof void treatment, or external perimeter only?
What products do you use for cockroaches and ants, and what is the residual duration?
What exactly does your warranty cover and for how long?
Can you send the quote and warranty terms by email before I book?
Do you carry public liability insurance and can you email the certificate of currency?
Comparison Checklist
Use this table when comparing two or more operators side by side.
| Check | What to look for | Red flag |
|---|---|---|
| QLD licence | Current, on QBCC register, correct category | Cannot provide number; not on register |
| Insurance | $10M+ public liability, current CoC | No insurance or refuses to provide CoC |
| Google reviews | 4.5+ stars, 20+ reviews, recent activity | Few reviews, all recent, no negatives |
| Written warranty | 90 days, specific pest types, written | Verbal only, under 30 days, vague scope |
| Treatment scope | Internal, subfloor, roof void, external | External only at a "full treatment" price |
| Products named | Professional-grade products named on request | Cannot or refuses to name products used |
| Service report | Provided same day, itemises what was applied | No report, or report provided only on request |
| AEPMA membership | Active member, verifiable at aepma.com.au | Claims membership not listed on register |
How to Verify the QLD Licence Yourself
The QBCC pest management licence register is publicly accessible at qbcc.qld.gov.au/find-a-licensed-contractor. Search by contractor name or licence number. The register shows: the licence holder's full name, the licence category (Pest Management Licence covers cockroaches, rodents, general pests, and subterranean termites; separate endorsements are required for fumigation and specialty treatments), the current status (active, suspended, or expired), and the expiry date.
Licence categories matter. A technician with a General Pest licence but no Termite endorsement cannot legally treat active termites. Confirm the licence category covers the pest you need treated before booking any specialist service. If the licence has been suspended at any point in the last 12 months, ask why before proceeding.
Print or screenshot the register entry before your appointment. If the technician who arrives on the day cannot produce a licence when asked, or if the name does not match the register entry, do not allow treatment to proceed. An unlicensed person applying pesticides in your home is applying regulated chemicals without the training, insurance, or accountability framework that licensing provides.
Why Local Brisbane Operators Often Outperform National Franchises
National pest control franchise networks operate in Brisbane but carry structural differences from locally-owned operators that affect service quality and accountability. Franchise technicians may be on fixed commission structures that incentivise speed over thoroughness. Complaints go through a national call centre rather than directly to the operator who performed the service. Product selection may be standardised nationally rather than adapted to Brisbane's subtropical pest profile and climate.
A locally-owned Brisbane operator with their own name on the licence is directly accountable for every job they perform. Their Google reviews affect their local business directly. Their product selection is driven by what works in Brisbane conditions rather than what is supplied through a national distribution chain. For termite inspections and treatment specifically, local experience with the specific termite species, soil conditions, and construction types in Brisbane suburbs is a genuine advantage over a standardised national program.
This does not mean all franchises perform poorly or all independent operators perform well. The 10-point checklist applies equally to both. But when a locally-owned operator and a national franchise quote the same price for the same scope, the local operator's direct accountability is a meaningful tie-breaker.
Choosing a pest control company: key points
Response Pest Control: all 10 checks met
Licensed, insured, 90-day warranty, named products, written service report same day. Brisbane and Gold Coast.
Frequently Asked Questions
More guides: About Response Pest Control • Our reviews • Get a quote
Related: Is pest control worth it? • Pest control cost Brisbane • How does pest control work?