Rodent Activity Reported in Toms River

Rodent Removal
Toms River, NJ

Shore Town Rodent Control Where Sandy Rebuilds Meet Seasonal Vacancy

Toms River is the Ocean County seat with approximately 95,000 residents spread across mainland neighborhoods and barrier peninsula communities like Ortley Beach. As a Jersey Shore bedroom suburb, the township's mix of year-round residents and seasonal rental properties creates a pattern where vacant winter homes become rodent harborage sites, and post-Hurricane Sandy elevated foundations have introduced thousands of new crawl space entry points across the township.

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Where Barnegat Bay Waterfront Meets Post-Sandy Crawl Spaces

Toms River's rodent pressure comes from two directions: the waterfront and the woods. Norway rats thrive along the Barnegat Bay shoreline, the Toms River waterway, and in the storm sewer systems that drain the township's dense residential neighborhoods. The barrier peninsula sections -- Ortley Beach, Normandy Beach, Ocean Beach -- concentrate rats near dumpsters, restaurants, and marina areas where food waste is abundant. House mice are the most common interior invader across Toms River's residential neighborhoods, nesting in wall voids, attic insulation, and behind kitchen appliances in the ranch homes, split-levels, and Cape Cods built primarily in the 1960s and 1970s. These aging homes often have gaps at sill plates, deteriorated weatherstripping, and utility penetrations that were never properly sealed. White-footed mice enter the picture in Toms River's western neighborhoods closer to the wooded interior of Ocean County. These woodland rodents are the most common wild mammal in New Jersey's forested areas, and they readily move into suburban homes when temperatures drop below 50 degrees, seeking warmth and nesting material in attics and garages.

Why Toms River?

Toms River's geography spans from the Barnegat Bay waterfront to inland wooded areas, creating habitat for both Norway rats along the shoreline and sewer systems, and house mice and white-footed mice in the residential and wooded interior sections.

Rodent Species in Toms River

mixed

Most common rodent pest in Toms River

roof rats (occasional, barrier peninsula sections)
deer mice (western wooded neighborhoods)
meadow voles (undeveloped parcels and field edges)

How to Know You Have Rodents in Toms River

Spot these warning signs before the problem gets worse

01

Scratching sounds from beneath floors in post-Sandy elevated homes, especially during cold snaps when bay-area temperatures drop below freezing

02

Droppings along garage walls and near exterior doors in ranch-style homes throughout mainland neighborhoods like Pleasant Plains and East Dover

03

Gnaw marks on PVC plumbing stubs visible in crawl spaces of elevated homes, particularly on the bay-facing side of the structure

04

Burrow holes along foundation walls where landscaping mulch meets the house in waterfront neighborhoods like Silverton and Gilford Park

Noticed any of these signs?

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

Call for Same-Day Inspection

1960s Ranches, Sandy Elevations, and Salt-Corroded Exclusion Materials

Toms River's housing stock presents a layered rodent vulnerability problem. The original 1960s and 1970s ranch homes, split-levels, and Cape Cods have decades of settling that creates gaps at foundation-to-framing junctions. Many of these homes have attached garages with interior doors that lack proper door sweeps -- a classic mouse highway into the living space. Post-Hurricane Sandy, thousands of homes were elevated above flood levels, creating new crawl spaces underneath that were never designed as living spaces and often lack proper screening at foundation vents and utility penetrations. Salt air from the Barnegat Bay and Atlantic Ocean corrodes galvanized metal screening and hardware cloth within a few years, meaning even properly installed exclusion materials degrade faster than in inland communities.

01Common Entry Points

Post-Sandy elevated foundation vents and crawl space access doors with inadequate or salt-corroded screening
Deteriorated sill plates and rim joist gaps on 1960s-1970s ranch homes and Cape Cods with fifty-plus years of settling
Salt-corroded galvanized mesh on soffit vents and gable vents within the coastal corrosion zone east of Route 9
Garage-to-house interior door gaps on attached-garage split-level homes common throughout mainland neighborhoods

02How Rodents Get Established

Summer rental home on Ortley Beach sits vacant October through April; mice establish nesting colony in wall insulation before owner returns in May
Post-Sandy elevated ranch in Gilford Park has open gaps around PVC plumbing stubs passing through the new crawl space floor, allowing Norway rats access underneath the home
Holiday City retirement community home with original 1960s construction has settled foundation creating quarter-inch gap along the entire sill plate, admitting house mice
Silverton waterfront property near Silver Bay finds Norway rats burrowing along the foundation where landscaping mulch meets the house, following the storm drain system from the bay
Toms River Rodent Case Study

Post-Sandy Elevated Ranch with Crawl Space Colony

01 The Problem

Homeowner in a post-Sandy elevated ranch heard scratching beneath the floor every night starting in November. The home had been raised eight feet after the 2012 storm, and the new crawl space was enclosed with concrete block and foundation vents. By December, the smell of rodent urine was noticeable in the first-floor bedrooms, and droppings were found in the HVAC ductwork that ran through the crawl space.

Location: Gilford Park

02 What We Discovered

Inspection revealed that three of the eight foundation vent screens had corroded through from salt air exposure in just four years. Norway rats had established burrows in the soil beneath the crawl space and were using the HVAC duct runs as highways throughout the underside of the home. Twelve active burrow openings were found along the exterior foundation, concentrated on the bay-facing side where storm drain outflow provided a water source.

03 The Solution

All foundation vent screens were replaced with stainless steel hardware cloth rated for coastal environments. Burrow openings were excavated and packed with concrete. HVAC duct connections were sealed with sheet metal and high-temperature silicone. A concrete apron was poured along the foundation perimeter to eliminate burrowing access. Snap traps and bait stations were deployed inside the crawl space during the active removal phase.

The Result

All rodent activity ceased within three weeks of exclusion completion. Follow-up inspection at 90 days confirmed no new entry attempts. Homeowner was advised on annual screening inspections due to the accelerated corrosion rate in the coastal environment.

Rodent Challenges Specific to Toms River

01

Post-Hurricane Sandy home elevations created thousands of new crawl spaces across the township that were never part of the original home design

02

Salt air from Barnegat Bay and the Atlantic corrodes galvanized metal exclusion materials in two to four years, requiring stainless steel alternatives

03

Seasonal vacancy of barrier peninsula rental properties from October to April allows rodent colonies to establish without detection

04

Storm sewer system draining to Barnegat Bay provides Norway rat highway from waterfront into residential neighborhoods

05

Holiday City and other 55-plus communities have original 1960s construction with fifty-plus years of settling and gap formation

06

Barrier peninsula sections like Ortley Beach have high-density housing with shared walls and utility chases that let rodents move between units

Rodent Removal Service Areas in Toms River

We serve all Toms River neighborhoods and surrounding areas

Toms River Neighborhoods We Serve

Ortley BeachSilvertonGilford ParkHoliday CityPleasant PlainsEast DoverNorth DoverBay ShoreNormandy BeachShelter Cove

ZIP Codes Served

0875308754087550875608757

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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Wildlife Removal Services in Toms River

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