Portland.

Population 635,000 across 145 square miles. The Willamette splits it. The combined sewer feeds it. A century of mild winters has made it the largest year-round Norway-rat habitat north of San Francisco — and roof rats are now climbing east from the West Hills into NE quadrant attics. This is what to know.

Portland dispatch · (541) 422-4462
County
Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas
Climate
Temperate marine · Cfb · 43 in/yr rain
Dominant species
Norway rat (R. norvegicus)
Peak pressure window
October — January
§ 01 / Local Pressure

How rodents pressure Portland specifically.

A field reading of the city, its sewer system, its housing stock, and the slow eastward push of Rattus rattus over the last two decades.

Portland's rodent story is a sewer story. The city operates a combined sewer system — one pipe for stormwater and sanitary waste — across most of its older quadrants. That single architectural decision, made in the late 1800s, is the single largest reason Norway rats have a permanent year-round colony beneath Portland and a constant pressure on every ground-floor business and basement east of the river.

A Norway rat does not need a foothold in your house. It needs a foothold in the line that connects your house to the city. The toilet vent stack, the laundry standpipe, the unsealed cleanout in a 1908 basement — these are the doorways. Bait stations on the perimeter of a Sellwood bungalow are theatre. The actual fix is plumbing.

The roof-rat eastward march.

Through the 1990s, roof rats (Rattus rattus) were a southern-Oregon and Bay Area species. They have been moving north steadily, helped by warmer winters and the spread of fruit-bearing landscaping. They reached Portland's West Hills by the early 2000s and are now well established east of I-5 — Alberta, Hawthorne, and Mt. Tabor have all reported active attic colonies in the last three years.

The rat that owns Portland's storm drains is not the rat that's chewing through your attic insulation. Treating both the same is the most common mistake we see.

Roof rats climb. They will live in the soffit, the chimney chase, the void above a kitchen drop ceiling. They follow grape vines, fig trees, plums, and the espaliered apples that have become a signature of east-side gardens. An exclusion plan that ignores landscaping will not work on a roof rat.

Building stock notes.

Roughly half of Portland's housing stock predates 1950. Pre-1950 construction leaks rodent ingress points at the rim joist, around the gas service entry, beneath the basement bulkhead, and at every old coal-chute chase that was never properly filled. Mid-century ranches in Mt. Tabor and Beaumont leak at the crawl-space vent screens, which were often a single layer of quarter-inch hardware cloth — long since corroded.

The post-2000 multifamily stock in the Pearl, Lloyd, and the Central Eastside is generally tighter, but it has a different problem: the trash room. A modern compactor room with a poorly sealed slab penetration is a Norway-rat banquet hall.

What to do before an operator arrives.

Walk the exterior. Note any holes larger than a No. 2 pencil — that is the gauge a young mouse needs. Note any holes larger than your thumb — that is what an adult Norway rat needs. Photograph the gas service entry, the dryer vent, and any spot where a downspout meets the building. Pull anything stored against an exterior wall away by 18 inches. Bring pet food and birdseed indoors.

Then call. We will route you to the operator below who covers your quadrant.


§ 02 / Seasonal Pressure

When each species peaks in Portland, by month.

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

Portland metro · monthly pressure index

LOW
HIGH
Species
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Norway ratR. norvegicus
Roof ratR. rattus
House mouseM. musculus
Deer mouseP. maniculatus

§ 03 / Neighborhoods

Where Portland calls us from most.

A non-exhaustive list of neighborhoods we field reports from, sorted by relative pressure based on three years of dispatch data.

Sellwood-MorelandHigh
BuckmanHigh
Hawthorne / SunnysideHigh
Alberta ArtsHigh
Old Town / ChinatownHigh
Pearl DistrictMed
Mt. TaborMed
Beaumont-WilshireMed
St. JohnsMed
LentsMed
Multnomah VillageMed
HillsdaleMed
Goose HollowMed
NW Industrial / SlabtownHigh
HayhurstLow
Forest Park edgesLow

ALSO COVERED: HILLSBORO · BEAVERTON · TIGARD · LAKE OSWEGO · GRESHAM · MILWAUKIE · WEST LINN · TUALATIN


§ 04 / Directory

The three local operators Portland-metro residents call most.

Ranked by community signal — Google Maps review volume and rating across the Portland metro 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★ · 2,500+ reviews

Aspen Pest Control

Founded 2013 · Vancouver WA + Portland metro · Eco-focused

The most-reviewed eco-focused pest control operator in the Portland metro area, recognized with multiple Angie's List Super Service Awards and "People Love Us on Yelp" honors. Same-day service at no additional charge, licensed and insured technicians, free quotes on-site or by phone. Reviewers consistently praise the technicians' professionalism and the no-pressure follow-up cadence.

  • Residential and commercial rodent removal and exclusion
  • Eco-friendly, pet-safe product line across all services
  • Free re-service between scheduled visits if pests return
  • Same-day appointments at standard pricing
Coverage
Portland metro · Vancouver WA · Beaverton
Service model
One-time or quarterly · No long contracts
Specialties
Rodents · Ants · Stinging insects
02
4.8★ · 1,800+ reviews

The Killers Pest Control — Portland

Family-owned since 1982 · Certified Sentricon Specialist on staff

The Portland branch of one of Oregon's longest-running independents — locally owned, family-run, in operation since 1982. Their rodent practice is exclusion-forward ("we do a lot of rodent exclusion works to stop rodents from getting into structures"), and customers cite fair pricing, weekly check-ins on active jobs, and detailed invoicing.

  • Dedicated rodent exclusion — sealing structural ingress points
  • Annual-fee service model with unlimited follow-up visits
  • Free pest inspection with no purchase obligation
  • Certified Sentricon Specialist for termite work
Coverage
Portland metro · Salem · Lincoln County · Clark Co WA
Service model
Annual contracts · Unlimited revisits
Specialties
Rodent exclusion · Termites · Ants
03
4.8★ · 1,200+ reviews

Halt Pest Control

Beaverton-based · Three decades · QualityPro-certified

A Beaverton-headquartered operator with thirty-plus years serving the Portland and Vancouver metropolitan areas. Strong on residential, commercial, and multifamily work. QualityPro certification (the industry's recognized credentialing program) and a 100% satisfaction guarantee on all services.

  • Residential, commercial, and multifamily rodent control
  • Carpenter ant, cockroach, bed bug, and spider work
  • QualityPro-certified technicians
  • 100% satisfaction guarantee on services performed
Coverage
Portland metro · Beaverton · Vancouver WA
Credentials
QualityPro certified · Licensed + insured
Specialties
Multifamily · Commercial · Carpenter ants

§ 05 / Local FAQ

Questions Portland residents ask us most.

Answered plainly, by a publication that does not run extermination crews itself.

I heard scratching above my ceiling at 3 AM. Rats or raccoons?
Scratching and a thud, in a Portland east-side attic, is most often a raccoon or opossum. Skittering — fast, repeated, lighter — is more likely a roof rat. Gnawing — a steady, mechanical sound — is usually a rat working on a joist or wire sheathing. The 3 AM timing favors a rat: raccoons settle by 2 AM, rats are most active 1–4 AM.
Will the city of Portland deal with rats in my sewer line?
The Bureau of Environmental Services maintains the city's portion of the sewer line — the public main and the lateral up to the property line. The lateral on your side of the property line is yours. If your problem is at a cleanout or vent inside your basement, that is a plumbing job, not a city job. A camera inspection of the lateral is the standard first step.
I have a fruit tree. Should I cut it down?
No — but pick it cleanly. Roof rats are drawn to fallen fruit far more than to fruit still on the tree. Harvest weekly during fruiting, compost the windfall well away from the house (or bin it entirely), and trim branches back so nothing overhangs the roof within four feet.
Are the rats in Portland dangerous to my dog?
The bigger risk is secondary rodenticide poisoning if your dog finds a rat that's already eaten bait. This is the single strongest reason we lead with exclusion and mechanical traps rather than bait stations. Direct rat-to-dog disease transmission in an urban Portland yard is rare, but leptospirosis from contaminated standing water is the one to watch for.
How long does an exclusion job take in a typical Portland bungalow?
For a 1,500 sq ft pre-1950 home with a full basement, a thorough exclusion is one full day for inspection and sealing, then two to three follow-up visits over 30 days to confirm the colony is closed off. Trap clear-out and dead-rodent removal happens in those follow-ups.
Is winter a good time to address this, or should I wait for spring?
Winter is the better time. Rodents are concentrated indoors, populations are at their seasonal peak, and ingress points are easiest to find by following an active trail. Spring exclusion works, but you'll be working from cooler signs.
Portland metro dispatch

Active infestation in Portland? One call.

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

(541) 422-4462