How to Get Rid Of

How to Get Rid of Ants Brisbane: Complete Guide

Updated May 2026 11 min read Response Pest Control

Quick answer: Identify species first. Track the trail back to the entry point before doing anything else. Apply sugar bait for black house ants, protein bait for carpenter and bull ants. Do not spray trails before bait is placed. After bait runs 1-2 weeks, apply perimeter spray. Carpenter ants in timber walls need professional void treatment.

The most common mistake when dealing with ants is reaching for the spray bottle immediately. Spraying an active ant trail kills foragers but leaves the colony intact and causes the remaining ants to relocate their foraging routes. This leads to ants appearing in new locations and the cycle repeating. The correct approach starts with identification and trail tracking before any product is applied.

Step 1: Identify the Ant Species

Brisbane has a significant variety of ant species requiring different treatment approaches. The four species most commonly encountered in Brisbane homes and gardens are:

Most common indoor pest
DIY manageable

Black house ant (Ochetellus glaber)

2-3mm, jet black, shiny. The most frequent indoor ant in Brisbane kitchens, bathrooms, and laundries. Trails on sweet and greasy food sources. Nests in garden soil, under pavers, and in wall cavities. Responds well to sugar-based gel bait placed at trail entry points. Perimeter spray effective for ongoing prevention. Full guide at black ant page.

Timber damage risk
Professional if in walls

Carpenter ant (Camponotus spp.)

6-12mm, black or black and red, large. Does not eat timber but excavates it for nesting. Found in moist or decaying timber, roof voids, wall cavities, and tree hollows. Seeing carpenter ants indoors, especially winged swarmers, indicates an established colony in or near the structure. Nest treatment with protein bait and void injection. See carpenter ant guide.

Garden pest
Caution: painful sting

Bull ant (Myrmecia spp.)

15-25mm, red and black, distinctive eyes and mandibles. Nests in garden soil with a single large entry mound. Aggressive when disturbed; sting is immediately and intensely painful. Locate the nest mound carefully. Treat with nest drench or granule bait placed at the mound entrance. Do not disturb the mound during treatment. Professional treatment recommended for nests near children's play areas.

Green-head ant
Common in lawns

Green-head ant (Rhytidoponera metallica)

5-7mm, iridescent green-black. Nests in lawn and garden soil. Common cause of ant stings in Brisbane backyards. Treats lawns and garden areas; less common indoors. Nest drench with bifenthrin or fipronil solution at nest entry points. Multiple nests often present across a large lawn area. Granule bait broadcast across the lawn surface is the most efficient treatment for widespread lawn infestations.

Notifiable pest
Report immediately

Fire ant (Solenopsis invicta)

2-6mm, reddish-brown, polymorphic (varied sizes within one colony). Builds large irregular mounds in lawns and open soil. Sting produces intense burning pain and can cause anaphylaxis. Fire ants are a notifiable biosecurity pest in Queensland. Do not treat yourself. Report immediately to Biosecurity Queensland (13 25 23). Treatment is free through the national eradication program.

Coastal/garden species
Standard perimeter management

Coastal brown ant (Pheidole megacephala)

1.5-2mm, yellow-brown, two-castes (workers and large-headed soldiers). Forms extensive shallow underground colonies in lawns, garden beds, and under pavers. Trails into kitchens for protein and sweet food. Responds well to protein bait and perimeter spray. One of the most common ant species in Brisbane bayside and coastal suburbs.

Step 2: Track the Trail Before Treating

Before applying any product, follow the ant trail from the food source back to its entry point into the building. Mark the entry point. If possible, follow the external trail to the approximate nest location in the garden or under pavers.

This step matters because treatment effectiveness depends entirely on where the bait is placed relative to the trail and nest. Bait placed away from the active trail will not be found by foragers. Perimeter spray applied before bait placement disrupts the trail and prevents foragers from carrying bait back to the colony. The sequence is: track first, bait second, spray third.

1
Follow the trail from the food source backwards. Ants trail in both directions; follow the loaded foragers (carrying food fragments) back toward the entry point rather than the empty foragers heading toward the food.
2
Mark the building entry point. Entry points are typically gaps around pipes, expansion joints in paths, weep holes, or cracks in the building base. Mark them before applying bait so you can seal them after the colony has been baited.
3
Locate the nest if possible. A nest in a garden bed or lawn can be drenched directly after bait has been taken for 1-2 weeks. A nest in a wall cavity or subfloor cannot be reached without professional void injection. Do not excavate the nest yourself.
4
Do not spray the trail yet. Spraying the active trail before bait placement breaks down the pheromone trail and prevents foragers from finding and returning bait to the colony. Place bait first; spray perimeter 1-2 weeks later.

Gel Bait and Granule Bait Application

Ant bait placement guide for Brisbane species
Bait type and placement location differ by species. Using the wrong bait type or placing it away from the active trail produces no result.
Black house ants
Sugar-based gel bait (fipronil or borax-based) placed at the building entry point and along the indoor trail. Small dots every 30cm along the trail.
Carpenter ants
Protein-based gel bait near identified nest entrance or trail route. Carpenter ants forage for protein, not sugar. Sugar bait will not be taken.
Bull ants
Granule bait (hydramethylnon) placed around the mound entrance during morning or evening activity. Apply at a distance from the mound to avoid disturbing guards.
Lawn ants (coastal brown, green-head)
Granule bait broadcast over the affected lawn area at label rate. Water lightly after application to activate. Most effective applied in morning.

What Works vs What Doesn't

Works for Brisbane ant control
Sugar bait on black house ant trails
Protein bait for carpenter and bull ants
Nest drench with bifenthrin solution
Perimeter spray after bait program
Sealing entry points after treatment
Granule bait for lawn species
Does NOT work reliably
Spraying the trail before bait
Sugar bait for carpenter or bull ants
Bait placed away from active trail
Boiling water on nest (only kills surface ants)
Vinegar or essential oils (repels, doesn't eliminate)
DIY for fire ants (reportable pest, do not treat)

Perimeter Spray for Ongoing Prevention

After a bait program has run for 1-2 weeks and ant activity has reduced, apply a residual pyrethroid perimeter spray to the building base, path edges, and garden borders. This creates a contact barrier that slows re-colonisation from garden nests and adjacent properties.

Application zones: the full building perimeter to 30cm height, around all path edges adjacent to garden beds, expansion joints in concrete where trails enter, and under garden edging where soil meets concrete. Retreat every 8-12 weeks in Brisbane conditions. For creek-corridor or bushland-adjacent properties where ant pressure rebuilds rapidly from adjacent habitat, quarterly professional programs maintain a more consistent barrier than DIY retreatment intervals.

Brisbane-Specific Ant Pressure

Several Brisbane locations have consistently higher ant pressure than standard suburban properties due to adjacent habitat. Bulimba Creek corridor properties (Belmont, Holland Park, Eight Mile Plains), Toohey Forest Park boundary suburbs (Sunnybank, Nathan), and creek-front properties throughout the Logan and Springfield corridors experience year-round ant pressure from native species in adjacent vegetation. These properties typically need quarterly professional programs rather than annual treatment to manage ongoing ant activity effectively. See the ant treatment cost guide for program pricing.

When to Call a Professional

SituationDIY approachWhen to call professional
Black house ants, kitchen onlySugar gel bait at entry pointIf not resolved after 2-3 weeks of bait
Carpenter ants, garden timberProtein bait + nest drenchIf in wall cavities or structural timber
Bull ants, garden nestGranule bait at mound entranceNear children's play areas or multiple nests
Fire ants (any situation)Do not treatReport to Biosecurity QLD 13 25 23 immediately
Creek-adjacent, recurring pressureRetail retreatment too frequentQuarterly professional program
Multiple species simultaneouslyDifferent bait types neededProfessional species assessment

Ant Prevention After Treatment

After a successful bait and spray program, four ongoing measures reduce how quickly ants re-establish from external colonies.

Seal building entry points

Fill gaps around pipes entering the building base with gap filler or silicone sealant. Seal expansion joints in concrete paths adjacent to the building with flexible sealant. Apply door weather strips where ant trails have used the gap under external doors. These sealing measures slow the re-establishment of indoor trails from garden colonies.

Eliminate food and water sources

Store sugar, honey, and sweet foods in sealed containers or in the fridge. Wipe benchtops after food preparation. Empty and wash pet food bowls each evening. Fix dripping taps in kitchen and bathroom areas. Ant colonies can sustain themselves on very small food sources; eliminating access reduces the incentive for trail establishment.

Remove garden nest sites near the building

Flat stones, pavers lifted by tree roots, and loose timber on soil provide ready nesting sites for black house ants and coastal brown ants. Remove or relocate objects in contact with garden soil within 1-2 metres of the building perimeter. Replace organic mulch adjacent to the building with crushed rock, which is less attractive for ant nesting than composting wood chip mulch.

Schedule perimeter retreatment before peak season

Ant pressure in Brisbane peaks from October through April during the warm wet season. A perimeter spray treatment in September, before the season peak, maintains the barrier through the highest-pressure period. Quarterly professional programs timed to this calendar maintain consistent coverage and are the most cost-effective approach for properties with recurring ant pressure. See the Brisbane seasonal pest guide for month-by-month timing.

Getting rid of ants in Brisbane: key points

Identify species before treating. Sugar bait for black house ants; protein bait for carpenter ants. Wrong bait type produces no result.
Track the trail back to the entry point before applying anything. Do not spray the trail before bait is placed.
Apply bait first. Wait 1-2 weeks. Then apply perimeter spray. Reversing this order breaks the trail and prevents bait uptake.
Fire ants: do not treat. Report to Biosecurity Queensland on 13 25 23. Treatment is free under the national eradication program.
Creek-corridor and bushland-boundary Brisbane properties need quarterly professional programs; DIY retreatment intervals are too slow for the reinfestation rate.

Persistent ants? Professional perimeter program

Species identification included. 90-day warranty. Same-day across Brisbane and Gold Coast.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not before bait is placed. Spraying disrupts the trail pheromone and causes the colony to split into multiple new foraging routes. Place bait on active trails first, allow 1-2 weeks for uptake, then apply perimeter spray.
Depends on species. Sugar-based (fipronil or borax) for black house ants. Protein-based for carpenter and bull ants. Amdro and Advion Ant Gel are effective consumer options. Place at active trail entry points, not in open areas.
Garden timber: protein bait and nest drench treatment. Carpenter ants in wall cavities or structural timber need professional void injection. Seeing winged swarmers indoors indicates an established colony inside the structure; call a professional. See the carpenter ant guide.
Drench with bifenthrin or fipronil solution at label rate, applied into and around the nest entrance. Apply morning or evening when ants are most active. 2-3 litres per mound to reach underground colony chambers. For lawn nests, broadcast granule bait and water lightly.
Satellite colonies not reached, perimeter spray breakdown, or ongoing pressure from creek-corridor or bushland-adjacent habitat. Creek-adjacent Brisbane properties see reinfestation faster than inland properties. Quarterly professional programs are more effective than annual DIY for these locations.
DIY is sufficient for black house ants in a kitchen with no garden nest access. Professional treatment is more effective for carpenter ants in structures, recurring creek-adjacent pressure, multiple species simultaneously, or bull ant nests near children's areas. See our ant treatment cost guide.
R
Response Pest Control
Licensed pest control operators, Brisbane and Gold Coast. ABN 45 433 415 022.

More guides: Ant pest guideCarpenter ant guideAnt treatment costGet a quote

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