The cost of a free pest playbook.
The methods aren't secret. The know-how just usually arrives with an invoice.
What the pros actually do
Gel bait placed in the right cracks. Snap traps set in numbers along runways. Dump every bit of standing water weekly. Caulk the gaps a pencil could fit through. Treat the pet and the home at the same time, not just one.
That's the work. A good exterminator does it efficiently because they've seen it a hundred times. The reason they're worth calling for the hard cases is real — bed-bug spreads, in-wall wasp nests, whole-house drywood termite fumigation that legally needs a license — and Pest-X says so on the page.
The rest of it, though? The ant trail in the kitchen, the roach behind the fridge, the rodent on the runway, the mosquito breed-pond in the dog dish? That's identify, confirm, treat, prevent — and none of it requires a truck.
What Pest-X does
One page. Every common household pest — ants, cockroaches, mice, rats, bed bugs, fleas, ticks, spiders, wasps, mosquitos, silverfish, termites — laid out the same way: Identify. Signs to confirm. What you'll need. How to do it. Prevent it coming back.
The voice is "same priorities a good pro should have — minus the invoice." Pet-and-family safety leads. Light-footprint methods first — bait, traps, exclusion — before anything heavy. Plain English. No fear-selling.
And when the job is bigger than DIY, the page says so plainly and points you to a licensed pro. Bed bugs spreading past one room. A large or in-wall wasp nest. Rodents you can't get ahead of. A serious sting allergy. There's even a Terminix link at the bottom of the page for exactly those calls.
No signup. No premium tier. No email captured.
The receipt
One static web page. The hosting cost rounds to nothing. The work was the part nobody else bothers with — sitting down and writing out, in one place, the actual steps for the actual pests, in the order someone competent works in.
If we vanish tomorrow, anyone who bookmarked the page has the whole playbook on their screen. The pros they get sent to when DIY isn't enough are still in the phone book.
Why this one matters
The knowledge isn't scarce. It's in books, in extension offices, in the heads of every decent pest tech. What's scarce is having it written down somewhere you can find it at 11pm with a roach on the counter, without a signup or an upsell or a contract attached.
Pest-X isn't trying to put pros out of business. It's just trying to make sure nobody's first thought has to be "who do I have to pay to find out what to do about this." For most household pests, that's the wrong first thought. For the ones where it's right, the page says so and tells you where to go.
Free here means free to read, free to use, free to bookmark, and honest about its own edges.


