
As temperatures start to drop across South East Queensland and Northern NSW, most of us are thinking about digging out the extra blankets and stocking up on soup. But there’s something else quietly preparing for winter — and it’s looking straight at your home as its next warm hiding spot.
Rats, mice, cockroaches, spiders, and silverfish all share one thing in common as the cooler months arrive: they want to be inside just as much as you do. The difference is, you’re invited. They’re not.
The good news is that a few simple steps taken now — in April and May — can make a significant difference to whether your home becomes a winter pest haven or stays pest-free all season long. Here’s exactly what to do.
Before we get into the checklist, it helps to understand what’s actually driving pests inside during winter. It comes down to three things: warmth, food, and shelter.
Rodents in particular are highly motivated by temperature. As nights cool down, rats and mice begin actively searching for warm entry points — roof cavities, wall voids, subfloor spaces, and garages all become prime real estate. Once inside, a single pair of mice can produce dozens of offspring in just a few months, turning a small problem into a full infestation before you’ve even noticed.
Cockroaches, while often associated with summer, are equally problematic in winter. They don’t hibernate — they simply move into the warmer parts of your home, clustering behind appliances like fridges, dishwashers, and ovens where heat is constant. Spiders follow their food source (other insects) indoors. And silverfish thrive in the warm, slightly humid conditions found in laundries, bathrooms, and linen cupboards during the cooler months when these rooms are more enclosed.
Queensland and Northern NSW winters are mild compared to southern states, which actually makes the pest problem worse — our climate never gets cold enough to kill off pest populations the way a hard frost would. That means populations stay active all year, they just relocate indoors.
1. Seal Every Entry Point You Can Find
This is the single most effective thing you can do. A mouse can squeeze through a gap the size of a 5-cent coin, and a rat needs only slightly more room. Walk around the outside of your home and check for:
Use steel wool, caulk, or expandable foam to seal smaller gaps. For larger openings under doors, fit a proper door sweep. It sounds basic, but blocking entry points is far more effective than trying to deal with pests once they’re already inside.
2. Check Your Roof Cavity and Subfloor
Roof cavities are the number one destination for rats and mice in winter. Possum activity also increases as they seek shelter. Signs to look out for include scratching or scurrying sounds at night, droppings in the roof space, and gnaw marks on timber or cables.
If you have subfloor access, check for signs of activity there too. Subfloors offer the perfect combination of shelter, darkness, and proximity to the warm interior of the home. Make sure subfloor vents are intact and covered with fine mesh.
3. Tidy Up Around the Outside of Your Home
Pests don’t appear from nowhere — they typically work their way in from the garden and yard. Before winter arrives, remove anything that provides harborage close to the house:
4. Sort Out Your Kitchen and Food Storage
With everyone cooking more hearty meals indoors during winter, crumbs and food scraps become a much bigger attractant. Cockroaches and rodents are opportunistic feeders — even small amounts of accessible food will sustain a growing population.
Make sure all dry goods are stored in sealed containers rather than original packaging, which rodents can chew through easily. Don’t leave pet food out overnight. Empty kitchen bins daily or use bins with tight-fitting lids. Wipe down stovetops and benches after cooking, and pull out the oven and fridge periodically to clean behind and underneath them.
5. Address Moisture Issues
Many pests are drawn to moisture as much as warmth. Fix any dripping taps, leaking pipes, or drainage issues before winter arrives. Check under bathroom and kitchen sinks for signs of slow leaks — these damp environments are perfect for cockroaches and silverfish. Ensure your gutters are clear so water doesn’t pool near the home’s foundation.
6. Book a Pre-Winter Pest Inspection
Even the most thorough DIY pest-proofing effort has limits. A professional pest inspection before winter sets in gives you a clear picture of any existing activity, hidden entry points you might have missed, and any structural vulnerabilities that could become problems over the cooler months.
At Pest-Ex, our technicians use thermal imaging and radar detection technology to identify pest activity that isn’t visible to the naked eye — including termites in wall cavities and rodents in roof spaces. Catching a problem early, before winter drives pest populations deeper into your home, is almost always faster and more affordable to resolve than dealing with an established infestation in July.
The most common thing homeowners say when they call us in the middle of winter is “I thought it would just go away on its own.” It rarely does. Pests that move in for winter are looking to stay, breed, and establish — and by the time you’re hearing noise in the walls or finding droppings in the pantry, the problem is already well underway.
A few hours of preparation in autumn is worth far more than weeks of treatment later. Start with the checklist above, and if you’d like a professional set of eyes on your property before the season changes, our team is available across the Gold Coast, Brisbane, Logan, and Tweed Heads.
Call Pest-Ex on 1300 915 743 or book online.







