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Ants · 6 min read

Why Argentine Ants Invade Citrus Heights Homes Every Summer

A trail of Argentine ants along a kitchen surface seeking water

In Citrus Heights, the summer ant invasion is really a water hunt. When the Valley dries out, the colony trails indoors, and spraying the trail only makes it worse.

It's a water problem, not a food problem

If you live in Citrus Heights, you know the pattern: the first stretch of triple-digit summer heat arrives, and within days there's a thin dark line of ants running across the kitchen counter to the sink, or around the base of the bathtub, or circling the pet's water bowl. That's the Argentine ant, the small dark ant that dominates the Sacramento Valley, and the reason it shows up in summer is simple. Its colonies live outdoors in the soil, mulch, and irrigation, and through the mild, wet winter they have all the water they need out there. When the Valley bakes and the outdoor moisture disappears, the ants follow it indoors.

That is why the invasion feels so sudden and so seasonal. The ants aren't hungry so much as thirsty, and your kitchen and bathroom are the most reliable water sources for a hundred yards. Understanding that changes how you deal with them, because it means the fix is about the colony and the water, not the trail you can see.

One trail, a colony of thousands

The Argentine ant is unusual. Most ant species have competing colonies that fight at the borders, but Argentine ants cooperate, forming enormous supercolonies with many queens that can stretch across an entire neighborhood. The trail on your counter is a tiny visible slice of a colony that may run tens of thousands of workers nesting under the slab edge, in the landscaping, along the fence line, and beneath the mulch.

That scale is exactly why the problem is so persistent. Even if you wipe out every ant you can see, the colony outside is barely dented, and it simply sends a new trail along the same scent path to the same water the next day.

Why the store-bought spray backfires

The instinct is to hit the trail with a spray, and it feels satisfying because the ants you can see die. But a repellent spray does two things that make Argentine ants worse. First, it only kills foragers, a replaceable fraction of the colony. Second, and more damaging, it stresses the colony and can cause it to split into multiple new nests, a process called budding, so a week later you have more trails coming from more directions.

The reliable approach is the opposite of a repellent. A non-repellent bait is carried back to the nest by the workers and shared with the colony, including the queens, so the colony is reduced from the inside. Paired with a treated exterior perimeter at the slab edge and stucco weep screed where the ants cross, that's what actually brings the numbers down.

What keeps them out

Because the colony re-invades from the surrounding supercolony, lasting control combines colony baiting, exterior treatment, and cutting off the reasons they come inside. The single most useful thing a Citrus Heights homeowner can do is remove the indoor water draw: fix dripping faucets and hose bibs, wipe down wet sinks at night, address condensation under sinks, and manage irrigation overspray that keeps the foundation damp.

Then close the doors they use: seal the reachable gaps at the slab edge, weep screed, and plumbing penetrations, move mulch and landscape rock back off the foundation, and trim plants touching the house. A local pro combines the baiting and exterior barrier with those fixes and keeps the barrier fresh through the long Valley summer, which is what holds the ants off season after season.

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FAQ

Questions on this topic

Why do the ants keep coming back after I clean the trail?

Because the colony is outdoors and huge. Wiping the trail removes the scent and the visible foragers, but the supercolony in the yard just sends a new trail to the same water the next day. Baiting the colony, treating the exterior slab edge and weep screed, and removing the indoor water draw is what actually stops the cycle.

Are Argentine ants dangerous?

They don't sting or damage the structure the way some pests do, but they contaminate food surfaces, drive out other insects, and are extremely persistent once a trail is established. The bigger issue is that spraying them can split the colony and make the problem worse, which is why a bait-led approach matters.

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