Chirping at dusk? Droppings on the siding? Trespasser Trapping evicts the colony humanely, seals your roofline so they can't sneak back, and cleans up the mess they left behind.
Why Fayetteville homes get bats
Drive around Fayetteville, Peachtree City, or Tyrone and you'll notice two things bats love: mature hardwoods and rooflines with a few years on them. Our warm, humid Georgia nights fill the air with the moths and beetles bats feed on, and every wooded cul-de-sac and lakeside lot doubles as a hunting ground. When a colony needs a warm, dry place to raise young, an attic just off the tree line is exactly what it's shopping for.
Bats don't chew their way in — they don't have to. They squeeze through gaps a pencil could fit: a lifted shingle at the ridge, a warped gable vent, the seam where a dormer meets the roof, or the little triangle behind loose fascia board. Once a female finds a spot she likes, she treats it as home base and comes back year after year, often bringing the colony with her. That's why a "few bats" in June can become a stained ceiling and a wall full of droppings by the next spring if it isn't handled.
What we handle
We only do bats, and we do the whole job: find them, remove them, seal the house, and clean up the aftermath.
We climb the attic and walk the exterior to confirm it's bats, locate every entry gap, and gauge how long the colony has been there — at no cost to you.
We fit the exit holes with one-way doors so bats crawl out to feed at night and simply can't get back in — no trapping, no harm to the animals.
We bag and remove the guano, then treat the roost area to knock down odor and the bacteria that can make droppings a health hazard.
Waste-soaked insulation gets pulled and replaced so your attic is clean, sanitary, and back to holding in your heating and cooling.
We close the gap they used plus every other pencil-width opening nearby — ridge caps, vents, fascia, dormers — so the house is genuinely bat-tight.
The sealed areas are guaranteed. We check back to confirm the colony is gone and stand behind every spot we closed.
Do you have bats?
Any of these worth a call for a free look:
Why not to wait
Bats matter outdoors — indoors they're a liability:
Bat season in Georgia
Timing changes everything with bats. Here's the Fayetteville calendar — and why the month matters for getting them out legally.
Bats wake up and hunt for a maternity roost. This is the best window to exclude before pups arrive — catch it early and the whole job is simpler.
Georgia restricts exclusion now — sealing the roost would strand flightless young inside your walls. We inspect and plan, then finish the moment it's legal.
Pups are flying and the colony is active but not nesting. This is the ideal stretch to exclude, seal, and clean before winter sets in.
Bats go dormant and stay put in the attic. They're quiet, but the damage keeps piling up — a great time to inspect and seal ahead of spring.
Our process
We pinpoint every entry gap and size up the colony — free.
One-way doors let the bats leave for good, humanely.
We close every gap, then remove and sanitize the mess.
We follow up and warranty every spot we sealed.
You can't legally poison or trap bats in Georgia, and exclusion is off-limits during the summer pup-rearing window (roughly the start of May through the end of July), when young bats can't fly yet and would die trapped in your walls. Handled wrong, that's an illegal job and a rotting-odor nightmare. We do it by the book: the right method, at the right time, every time. Not sure where the calendar stands? Call and we'll tell you straight.
Know your neighbor
A few species do almost all the roosting in local homes:
The one we pull out of Fayetteville attics most often. Hardy, sticks around through cold snaps, and happily roosts in both older and newer homes.
Forms bigger, noisier colonies and loves warm roof cavities — the usual culprit when the smell and dropping pile grow fast.
Smaller species that slip into gable vents and behind fascia on wooded lots around Peachtree City and Tyrone.
Where we work
Local crews covering Fayetteville and every community around it:
Common questions
Free inspection, humane removal, a sealed-up house, and a clean attic — from Fayette County's bat specialists at Trespasser Trapping.
📞 Call (470) 619-2387