Rodent Activity Reported in Newark

Rodent Removal
Newark, NJ

Where 420 Miles of Aging Sewers Meet 200+ Ironbound Restaurants -- Newark's Rats Have It Made

With over 317,000 residents packed into 26 square miles at a density of 13,334 people per square mile, Newark is New Jersey's largest city and its most fertile ground for rodent populations. The combination of aging infrastructure, a massive transit hub at Penn Station, and one of the densest restaurant corridors in the state creates a year-round buffet for Norway rats and house mice alike.

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The Sewer Rat Capital of Essex County

Newark's rodent situation is dominated by one unavoidable fact: the city sits atop 420 miles of sewer collection mains, half of which are made of crumbling vitrified clay and another 20 percent of century-old brick. These deteriorating pipes, some dating to the late 1800s, are a highway system for Norway rats, which travel freely beneath the city and emerge through cracked laterals, broken cleanout caps, and compromised foundation joints. The city has 17 combined sewer overflow structures and 12 CSO outfalls along the Passaic River, meaning storm events flush rats from their underground burrows and push them toward residential properties. The Ironbound district, with over 200 restaurants, bakeries, and markets concentrated along Ferry Street alone, generates enormous volumes of food waste nightly. Dumpsters behind Portuguese steakhouses, Brazilian churrascarias, and Spanish tapas bars provide a dependable food source that sustains dense rat colonies in the adjacent rowhouse blocks. Meanwhile, house mice thrive inside the tightly packed two- and three-family homes that make up 60 percent of Ironbound housing stock, exploiting shared walls and aging utility penetrations to move between units unseen. Newark is one of the few municipalities in New Jersey with a dedicated Rodent Control Bureau, which conducts block-by-block surveys to assess infestation levels and sanitation conditions. That this bureau exists at all tells you something about the scale of the problem. Port Newark and Newark Liberty International Airport to the south add another dimension, with cargo containers and warehouse districts providing additional harborage for both rats and mice.

Why Newark?

Newark's 420-mile combined sewer system, much of it built from crumbling vitrified clay and brick, provides Norway rats with an unrivaled underground transit network connecting every neighborhood in the city

Rodent Species in Newark

norway-rats

Most common rodent pest in Newark

house mice
deer mice

How to Know You Have Rodents in Newark

Spot these warning signs before the problem gets worse

01

Greasy rub marks along basement foundation walls near sewer cleanouts, indicating Norway rat travel routes from the sewer system

02

Burrow holes with fresh soil displacement along exterior foundation walls in alley-facing sides of Ironbound rowhouses

03

Gnaw marks on wooden floor joists in basements of pre-war North Ward homes where rats access crawlspaces above

04

Droppings concentrated near water heaters and utility connections in basements, where warmth and pipe penetrations attract rodents during cold months

Noticed any of these signs?

Rodents reproduce fast. A small problem today becomes a full infestation within weeks.

Call for Same-Day Inspection

Century-Old Rowhouses and Shared Walls: Newark's Rodent Entry Problem

Newark's housing stock tells the story of a city built in waves: Victorian-era homes in Forest Hill and Roseville, early 1900s rowhouses throughout the Ironbound and Central Ward, post-war multi-family buildings in the South and West Wards. Across all eras, the dominant construction features tight lot lines, shared party walls, and minimal setbacks from sidewalks -- meaning rats foraging along streets and alleys are never far from a potential entry point. The Ironbound's characteristic two- and three-family rowhouses, many clad in aluminum siding over original wood, develop gaps at the siding-to-foundation junction that go unnoticed for years. In the North Ward, older single-family homes with fieldstone and rubble foundations offer gaps that even a juvenile Norway rat can squeeze through.

01Common Entry Points

Cracked vitrified clay sewer laterals beneath foundations that allow rats direct underground access into basements
Gaps at aluminum siding-to-foundation junctions on Ironbound rowhouses where original wood cladding has been covered over
Deteriorated mortar joints in century-old brick foundations throughout the North Ward and Central Ward
Shared party wall utility penetrations in multi-family rowhouses where plumbing and electrical chases connect units

02How Rodents Get Established

Restaurant grease and food waste in Ironbound alley dumpsters draw Norway rats that burrow under adjacent rowhouse foundations and enter basements through cracked sewer laterals
Heavy rainstorms overwhelm combined sewers, flushing rats from underground burrows into South Ward basements through floor drains and broken cleanout caps
House mice enter Forest Hill Victorians through gaps around original gas line penetrations that were never properly sealed when homes converted to modern heating
Multi-family homes in the Central Ward experience mice moving between units through shared plumbing chases and unsealed party wall penetrations
Newark Rodent Case Study

The Ferry Street Rat Highway

01 The Problem

A homeowner in a three-family rowhouse on a side street off Ferry Street reported scratching sounds in the basement ceiling and droppings near the water heater. The tenant in the ground-floor unit had also seen a large rat in the backyard near the trash enclosure. The property shared a rear alley with three restaurants.

Location: North Ironbound

02 What We Discovered

Inspection revealed a classic Ironbound scenario: the alley behind the property was flanked by restaurant dumpsters with grease residue on the pavement. Norway rat burrows were visible along the foundation wall facing the alley, with fresh soil displacement and rub marks at the entry holes. In the basement, the cast-iron sewer cleanout cap was cracked, providing direct access from the sewer lateral. Approximately 40 droppings were found along the basement perimeter walls, concentrated near the water heater and a stored bag of birdseed. Gnaw marks were visible on the wooden joists above the basement ceiling.

03 The Solution

A combination of snap traps and bait stations was deployed in the basement and along the exterior foundation wall. The cracked sewer cleanout was replaced with a sealed brass cap. Three foundation-level burrow entries were excavated and packed with copper mesh before being sealed with hydraulic cement. The gap between the aluminum siding and the concrete foundation was closed with galvanized steel flashing along the full rear wall. The homeowner was advised on proper trash enclosure protocols for the shared alley.

The Result

Trapping removed seven Norway rats over two weeks. Post-exclusion monitoring over 60 days showed no new activity. The sealed sewer cleanout and foundation repairs eliminated the underground access route, and the steel flashing closed the siding gap that had been the primary above-ground entry point.

Rodent Challenges Specific to Newark

01

420 miles of aging combined sewers -- half vitrified clay, 20% brick -- give Norway rats an underground highway system connecting every neighborhood

02

Over 200 restaurants and food establishments along Ferry Street in the Ironbound create a concentrated, year-round food source for rat colonies

03

Newark's Rodent Control Bureau conducts block-by-block surveys, but enforcement relies on property owner compliance with ratproofing ordinances

04

Combined sewer overflow events during heavy rain flush rats from underground burrows into basements and ground-floor units across the city

05

Port Newark and airport-adjacent warehouse districts in the South Ward provide large-scale harborage that seeds rat populations into neighboring residential areas

06

Dense multi-family rowhouse construction with shared party walls allows mice to spread between units through common plumbing and electrical chases

Rodent Removal Service Areas in Newark

We serve all Newark neighborhoods and surrounding areas

Newark Neighborhoods We Serve

IronboundForest HillRosevilleWeequahicClinton HillUniversity HeightsNorth WardCentral WardDaytonVailsburg

ZIP Codes Served

071020710307104071050710607107071080711207114

Rodent Removal in Nearby Cities

We Don't Use Poison

Most pest control companies will lay bait and leave. The rodents eat the poison, crawl into your walls, and die. Then you get the smell. That rotting-animal stench that seeps through drywall and can last for weeks.

Worse, poison doesn't fix the entry points. New rodents follow the same scent trails right back in. You end up on an endless cycle of baiting, dying, and stinking.

No Dead Rodents in Walls

Poison means carcasses you can't reach. We remove them alive.

No Recurring Bait Contracts

We seal entry points permanently. One visit, lasting results.

Exclusion-First Method

Find the gaps, seal the gaps, guarantee the gaps stay sealed.

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