Corvallis.

Population 60,000 at the confluence of the Marys and the Willamette. Oregon State University doubles the daytime weight of the place. The city is ringed by grass-seed and ryegrass production — every neighborhood on the city limits has a field edge within walking distance, and every field edge is producing voles. The October ramp here is mostly mice and voles, not Norway rats.

Corvallis dispatch · (541) 422-4462
County
Benton · also parts of Linn
Climate
Temperate marine · Cfb · 43 in/yr rain
Dominant species
House mouse · field mouse / vole
Peak pressure window
September — November
§ 01 / Local Pressure

How rodents pressure Corvallis specifically.

A field reading of the city's geography, building stock, and the patterns we observe in our dispatch data.

Corvallis is a small city with a large daytime population. Oregon State adds 33,000 students and roughly 14,000 employees to a residential base of about 60,000. That ratio matters: the rental ring around campus follows a Eugene-like turnover pattern, but compressed onto a smaller footprint. South Town, Avery-Helm, and the College Hill rentals all share the same August move-out / September move-in window where most fall colonies establish.

The agricultural edge.

Corvallis is unusual among Oregon cities in how abruptly it ends. Cross 53rd Street to the west or Highland Drive to the north and you are in farmland within a block. The surrounding Linn–Benton ryegrass and clover fields are some of the densest vole habitat in the state. Each fall, when fields are harvested, voles and field mice push outward to find cover. The fence line of your subdivision is the first structured cover they encounter.

Most of what Corvallis residents call "mice in the garage" in October is actually field-edge vole pressure displaced by the ryegrass harvest.

The Marys River corridor.

The Marys joins the Willamette at the south end of downtown, and the woody-debris banks along it host a steady Norway rat population. The corridor is short enough that pressure stays concentrated — South Town, Bruce Starker Arts Park, and the Avery Park edges field most of the riparian-side calls.

Building stock notes.

The Witham Hill and Timberhill subdivisions, built between 1975 and 2005, are generally tight buildings — most ingress in those neighborhoods is at the garage-to-house pass-through and at the crawl-space access door. The downtown grid (Avery-Helm, the Monroe corridor, College Hill) is pre-1940 housing with the standard rim-joist and crawl-vent leakage pattern. OSU-area rentals carry years of compounded exclusion debt.

What to do before an operator arrives.

For most Corvallis homes the highest-value action is not interior bait but exterior buffer management: an 18-inch gravel strip against the foundation, no stored firewood within six feet of the house, and a wildlife-grade screen on every crawl-space and gable vent. Field-edge properties should add a perimeter mow-line maintained tight from August through November.


§ 02 / Seasonal Pressure

When each species peaks in Corvallis, by month.

Based on operator call-volume data across the area, 2022 – 2026.

Corvallis · monthly pressure index

LOW
HIGH
Species
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
House mouseM. musculus
Field mouse / voleMicrotus spp.
Norway ratR. norvegicus
Deer mouseP. maniculatus

§ 03 / Neighborhoods

Where Corvallis calls us from most.

Sorted by relative pressure based on three years of dispatch data.

Downtown / Avery-HelmHigh
South TownHigh
College HillHigh
Witham HillMed
NW HillsMed
Country Club EstatesLow
TimberhillLow
PlateauMed
Crescent ValleyMed
Marys Park edgesHigh
West Hills / 53rdMed
Indian Hill / OSU rentalsHigh

ALSO COVERED: PHILOMATH · ADAIR VILLAGE · MONROE · ALBANY (LINN) · LEBANON


§ 04 / Directory

The three local operators Corvallis residents call most.

Ranked by community signal — Google Maps review volume and rating across the Corvallis area as of May 2026. We do not accept payment for placement. Verify each operator's current license, insurance, and pricing before authorizing work.

01
4.9★ · 700+ reviews

Good Earth Pest Company

Corvallis-headquartered · Family-owned since 1989 · Dedicated rodent-exclusion crew

The editorial pick of the three — and the operator we'd call ourselves for a hard Corvallis rodent job. Headquartered at 29030 Hwy 34 just outside town, Good Earth has been serving Benton, Linn, Lane, and Marion counties since 1989. Uniquely, they run a dedicated Home Services Team whose only job is structural rodent exclusion — sealing the building, not just baiting the perimeter. Flat-fee $199 inspection includes a written map of findings.

  • Dedicated Home Services Team for rodent structural exclusion
  • Flat-fee $199 rodent inspection with mapped findings + estimate
  • No long-term contracts or cancellation fees on ongoing programs
  • Premier Rodent + Insect plan with emergency re-entry callbacks
Address
29030 Hwy 34
Corvallis, OR 97333
Coverage
Corvallis · Albany · Philomath · Salem · Eugene · coast
Specialties
Rodent exclusion · Carpenter ants · No-contract
02
4.94★ · 111 reviews

Corvallis Pest Pros

Locally owned · Rapid-response model · Sustainable-methods focus

A small, locally owned Corvallis-only operator with one of the highest star averages in the area and a working knowledge of the ag-edge vole pressure that defines fall in Benton County. Their model leans on speed (an "available now, 0–2 minute wait time" promise) and tailored treatment plans rather than scripted commodity service.

  • Comprehensive on-site inspection of property + nesting sites
  • Customized treatment plans rather than one-size-fits-all
  • Same-day response model with rapid scheduling
  • Local focus — Corvallis, Albany, Philomath
Service model
Same-day · Customized per-property
Coverage
Corvallis · Albany · Philomath
Specialties
Local rodent · Field-edge pressure
03
4.8★ · 500+ reviews (Corvallis branch)

Insight Pest Solutions — Corvallis

Regional eco-operator · Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

The Corvallis branch of an Oregon-wide eco-focused operator. Their stated rodent protocol is the inspect → identify-entry → seal → trap approach we'd advise. Strong on the OSU-ring rental stock and properties that need a between-tenant exclusion turnaround. Free retreatments between scheduled visits if pests return.

  • Integrated Pest Management approach — least-toxic, targeted
  • Bait + trap deployment safe for kids and pets
  • Eco-friendly product line across all services
  • Free retreatments between visits if pests return
Coverage
Corvallis · Philomath · OSU area · north Benton
Service model
Quarterly contracts · Free retreatment
Specialties
IPM · OSU rentals · Eco-pest

§ 05 / Local FAQ

Questions Corvallis residents ask us most.

Answered plainly.

I find sunflower-seed shells in my garage every spring. Mice?
Yes — almost always deer mice or house mice caching from a bird feeder. The fix is the feeder, not the garage. Pull the feeder for two weeks, sweep and disinfect the garage, then either resite the feeder twenty feet from any structure or switch to a no-shell hulled-seed blend.
We back up to a ryegrass field. Should we mow the strip closest to us?
Yes. A tight, regularly mowed perimeter (six to ten feet, less than three inches tall) is the single most effective vole-pressure intervention for ag-adjacent Corvallis properties. Maintain it from August through November.
Is there anything about OSU-area rentals that residents should know specifically?
Document everything in writing the day you find evidence. Oregon habitability law (ORS 90.320) treats verified rodent infestation as a landlord obligation, but the standard of evidence is dated written notice plus reasonable cure time. Photographs of droppings, gnawed packaging, and ingress points all qualify.
I keep chickens. Will I attract rats?
You will if the feed is accessible. Galvanized steel bin with a tight lid, hardware-cloth coop skirt buried six inches down, no free-feeding overnight, no spilled feed left to ferment. Handled correctly, urban chickens contribute very little rat pressure.
What about the river — should I worry about being right on the Willamette?
River-adjacent properties carry a meaningfully higher Norway-rat pressure than two blocks inland. The intervention is the same exclusion and buffer work as elsewhere; the difference is response time. Get on it earlier in the season.
Corvallis dispatch

Active infestation in Corvallis? One call.

We'll route you to the Corvallis-area operator nearest you. Get rid of your rodents fast!

(541) 422-4462