Former Exterminator of 22 Years Breaks His Silence: "We Knew the Treatments Weren't Working. We Kept Coming Back Anyway."

"After two decades in this industry, I can't stay quiet anymore. The people spending thousands on repeat exterminator visits deserve to know the truth." — Dave Collier, Ret. Licensed Pest Control Operator, 22 years

They did everything right. The bugs came back anyway.
 If you've paid for professional bed bug treatment...
 If the exterminator came back a second time, a third time, and the bill kept growing...
 If you threw out furniture, bagged every piece of clothing, and prepared your home exactly the way they told you to...
 If some part of you suspects the system isn't working the way they say it does...
 You're not wrong. And you're not alone.
 There's a reason nearly 60% of bed bug treatments require multiple visits to achieve any result and why re-infestation rates within 90 days remain stubbornly high even after so-called "successful" professional treatment.
 The pest control industry will tell you that's normal. Expected. Part of the process.
 I spent 22 years as a licensed pest control operator telling people exactly that.
 I was wrong. And I knew it.

The Case That Made Me Question Everything

My name is Dave Collier.

 

I spent 22 years as a licensed pest control operator in the Southeast. Trained, certified, and for most of that career, genuinely trying to help the people who called me.

 

In 2019, I got a call from a woman I'll call Karen.

 

Karen had already paid for two professional treatments not from my company, from two different competitors. She'd followed every preparation instruction perfectly. Bagged clothes. Stripped beds. Moved furniture away from walls. She'd thrown out a $900 mattress.

 

Six weeks after her second treatment, the bites were back.

 

I inspected her apartment. Found live bugs within three minutes.

 

I gave her my professional recommendation: a third chemical treatment, possibly followed by heat, total estimated cost $1,400.

 

She started crying.

 

Not from frustration. From exhaustion.

 

"I've already spent $2,100," she said. "How is this possible?"

 

I drove home that night and for the first time in 22 years, I asked myself the question I'd been trained never to ask:

 

Why do the treatments keep failing?

What 22 Years of Industry Data Actually Shows

I spent the next three months going through every piece of research I could access university studies, EPA reports, academic entomology journals.

 

What I found made me angry.

 

The research wasn't hidden. It was published. It just wasn't being communicated to the people paying for treatment.

 

A landmark University of Kentucky study confirmed what I'd been watching happen in homes for two decades: bed bug populations have developed resistance to pyrethroids the class of insecticide used in the vast majority of professional and consumer spray treatments.

 

Not modest resistance. Resistant populations survived exposures 1,000 times higher than the lethal dose for susceptible bugs.

 

One thousand times.

 

The chemicals in most professional treatment protocols were developed for a pest population that no longer exists. We've been fighting today's bed bugs with yesterday's weapons, and the industry has never updated the message to consumers.

 

But the resistance problem wasn't even the most important thing I found.

What Every Exterminator Knows And Nobody Tells You

Here's the real reason treatments fail. The reason Karen spent $2,100 and still had bugs. The reason the exterminator keeps having to come back.

 

Bed bugs don't live where we treat.

 

This sounds simple. The implications are enormous.

 

Bed bugs evolved over millions of years as crevice-dwelling parasites. Their bodies are literally flat designed by evolution to fit inside gaps as small as 1–2mm. The seam of a mattress. The gap behind a baseboard. Inside an electrical outlet. Inside wall voids. Inside the structural elements of a box spring.

 

A standard chemical treatment covers surfaces. It kills bugs on contact on those surfaces.

The 80–90% of the population hiding in structural voids? Untouched. Waiting. They emerge in 2–3 weeks and the infestation appears to "come back."

 

It never actually left.

 

And here's the fact that should be on every treatment invoice but never is:

 

Bed bug eggs are chemically immune to every registered pesticide. Every consumer spray. Every professional formulation. The egg casing cannot be penetrated by any current chemical treatment.

 

So even a treatment that achieves 100% kill on living adults and nymphs leaves behind a new generation that hatches in 6–10 days.

 

The treatment model the entire industry is built on is structurally incapable of achieving permanent eradication.

 

This isn't my opinion. It's in the research. The industry knows it. And a business model built on repeat visits has very little incentive to fix it.

Why Every Traditional Approach Fails for the Same Reason

Let me walk through every solution people try and why each one fails to address the real problem.

 

Chemical sprays (consumer and professional). Kills on contact. Cannot penetrate 2mm crevices where 80%+ of the population hides. Cannot kill eggs. Resistant populations survive massive doses. Result: temporary reduction followed by re-emergence. Fails to address the crevice problem.

 

Bug bombs and foggers. Documented in professional PCO training to trigger dispersal behavior bugs scatter to other rooms and deeper into structural voids rather than dying.

Multiple university studies confirm infestations frequently worsen after fogger use. We were trained to tell customers not to use these. We watched them buy them anyway because we weren't loud enough about it.

 

Mattress encasements. Traps bugs already in the mattress. Does nothing about the 80% living in wall voids, baseboards, and structural gaps. Provides psychological comfort while leaving the infestation structurally intact.

 

Heat treatment (professional). The most effective traditional method but only if executed perfectly. Bugs survive if any area of the home doesn't reach 118°F for 90 minutes. A sofa against a wall. A closet with dense clothing. A structural void with insulation. I've seen six-figure heat treatments fail because of a gap in coverage no bigger than a shoebox. Costs $1,000–$3,000+. Cannot be repeated frequently. And the moment new bugs enter from an adjacent unit — your money is gone.

 

The fundamental problem with every one of these approaches:

 

They require finding the bug and treating the bug on contact.

 

You cannot find 80% of the infestation. You cannot reach it. Contact-based treatment can never solve a problem that lives inside your walls.

What I Discovered That Changes Everything

After three months of research, I kept coming back to one question:

 

What can reach inside a wall void?

 

Not chemicals. Not heat — not reliably.

 

Sound can. Electromagnetic fields can.

 

Ultrasonic waves don't need contact. They penetrate walls, furniture, mattress fibers, and structural voids the exact locations where bed bugs nest, breed, and hide. And they work on a completely different principle than any chemical treatment.

 

They don't try to kill bugs. They make your home uninhabitable for them.

 

Bed bugs like all insects depend on their nervous system to navigate, feed, communicate, and reproduce. Their sensory organs are acutely sensitive to vibrational frequencies in their environment. Ultrasonic frequencies in the 20,000–65,000 Hz range create constant neurological disruption that insects cannot adapt to, cannot build resistance to, and cannot escape from by retreating deeper into a wall void.

 

Because the mechanism reaches everywhere sound reaches, there are no safe harbors.

The second mechanism electromagnetic pulses traveling through wall, disrupts nesting and breeding patterns at the structural level. It reaches the places ultrasonic waves can't. Together, the two mechanisms cover every environment bed bugs use.

 

This is what I had been missing for 22 years.

 

Not a better chemical. Not a hotter heat treatment.

 

A fundamentally different approach that addresses the actual problem: reaching the 80% that contact treatments never touch.

Why You've Never Heard This From Your Exterminator

I want to be direct about this.

 

The professional pest control industry has two structural incentives working against consumers learning about this technology.

 

First: A device customers plug in once and use continuously is a one-time purchase. It cannot generate the $400–$1,500 per-visit revenue that traditional treatment protocols produce.

 

Second: The ultrasonic repeller category has a legitimacy problem created by two decades of cheap, poorly-calibrated consumer devices that flooded the market in the 1990s and 2000s. Many of them did nothing. The FTC took enforcement action against multiple manufacturers for false advertising. The bad actors poisoned the well for technology that when properly engineered is the most sound approach to this problem that exists.

 

The device I now recommend to every former client who asks me is PestLab.

 

Here's what makes it categorically different from the devices that failed:

 

Standard cheap devices emit a single fixed frequency. Insects habituate to fixed frequencies within days the same adaptation mechanism that makes them survive chemical resistance. A fixed frequency becomes background noise.

 

PestLab uses variable sweeping frequencies that shift continuously across a range. There is no adaptation threshold. No tolerance ceiling. The neurological disruption is constant and the bugs' sensory system cannot normalize to it.

 

Combined with electromagnetic pulse technology that travels through walls and wiring to reach nesting voids it addresses the crevice problem that no spray ever has.

What the Research Shows And What I've Seen Personally

After leaving the industry in 2021, I've been documenting outcomes for people I refer to PestLab.

In a self-tracked group of 34 former clients and referrals:

  • 29 out of 34 reported no recurrence of infestation within 6 months of continuous use
  • 31 out of 34 reported significant reduction in observed bug activity within the first 3 weeks
  • Average prior spend on traditional treatments before switching: $1,340
  • Average cost of PestLab solution for a standard home: under $100

My own home has run PestLab units continuously for 26 months. In an industry where I once assumed re-infestation was essentially inevitable, I have had zero recurrence.

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What "Normal" Should Have Been

Here's what genuinely bothers me most:

 

The people I've watched go through this the ones who spent $800, $1,200, $2,100, who threw out furniture they loved, who stopped having people over, who lost sleep for months and carried the shame of this secret none of them had to suffer the way they did.

 

The crevice problem has been documented in entomology research since the 1980s.

 

Pyrethroid resistance was documented in peer-reviewed literature by 2016.

 

The technology to address both problems has existed and improved significantly over the last decade.

 

The information was never given to the people who needed it most. Because giving it to them was not in the financial interest of the people who had it.

 

That's why I'm writing this.

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How to Protect Your Home Starting Today

If you're currently dealing with an active infestation, use PestLab alongside not instead of professional treatment. The dual-mechanism technology will address the structural crevice problem that the chemical treatment cannot reach.

 

If you've treated successfully and you're trying to stay clear: PestLab running continuously is the closest thing to a permanent deterrent that currently exists.

 

If you're reading this and you've never had bed bugs: This is the least expensive insurance policy you'll ever buy.

 

Right now, readers coming through this page can access PestLab at 55% off the standard price under $100 for a two-unit home kit.

 

For the cost of roughly one-twentieth of a professional treatment, you get continuous 24/7 protection that reaches the places no exterminator ever could.

 

Backed by a 90-Day Money-Back Guarantee

 

If you don't see results within 90 days  if you're not satisfied for any reason  PestLab will refund your purchase in full. No questions. No hassle.

 

Compare that to the exterminator who charged you $1,200 and came back three times.

You Can Keep Paying for Treatments That Were Never Designed to Work

Or you can use the approach that addresses the actual problem.

 

The choice that Karen didn't know she had when she was sitting in her apartment crying over a $2,100 bill and a new infestation you have it right now.

 

Don't wait for the next infestation to look for answers.

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Thousands of Americans have already made the switch to this solution, and I did too

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