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How to Get Rid of Spiders (and Which Ones to Worry About)

Most spiders are harmless and even helpful, and the secret to controlling them is not spraying spiders at all. This guide covers the real approach, reducing what they hunt, plus the two genuinely dangerous species and when a spider problem warrants a professional.

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The Counterintuitive Truth About Spider Control

The most useful thing to know about getting rid of spiders is that spraying spiders barely works, and it misses the point entirely. Spiders are predators, and they go where their food is. A home with lots of spiders is, almost by definition, a home with lots of the small insects spiders eat. Kill the spiders you see and more move in to the same insect-rich territory; reduce the insects, and the spiders leave for lack of prey.

This reframes spider control from a chase into a strategy. The real levers are reducing the insect population spiders feed on, eliminating the harborage where they build webs and shelter, and sealing the entry points they use to get inside. Do those three things and spider numbers fall on their own, far more durably than any amount of spraying individual spiders.

It also helps to keep perspective: the overwhelming majority of spiders are harmless and actually beneficial, quietly eating the flies, mosquitoes, and other pests you like even less. The goal for most homes is simply to keep their numbers low and manage the two species that genuinely warrant caution, not to wage war on a helpful predator.

Know Your Spiders

Most are harmless house spiders. Two are not. Knowing the difference is the whole of what matters for safety.

Common house spiders

Cellar spiders ("daddy longlegs"), house spiders, and their kin build webs in corners, basements, and garages. Harmless, and they eat other pests. A nuisance in numbers, not a danger.

Wolf spiders

Large, fast, ground-hunting spiders that do not build webs and sometimes wander indoors. Startling but not dangerous; their bite is comparable to a bee sting at worst.

Black widow

Glossy black with a red hourglass on the underside. Reclusive, favoring woodpiles, window wells, garages, and outbuildings. A bite is medically significant, intense pain and cramping, and warrants care.

Brown recluse

Light brown with a faint violin shape behind the head, found in parts of the central and southern U.S. Hides in undisturbed storage and closets. A bite can cause a slow-healing wound and warrants medical attention.

Where they hide

Spiders favor quiet, undisturbed spots: corners and ceilings, basements and crawlspaces, garages, closets, storage boxes, and outdoor woodpiles and clutter, wherever insects gather and they are left alone.

The insects behind them

If spiders are abundant, look for their food supply: flies, gnats, mosquitoes, and moths drawn to lights and moisture. Reduce those and the spiders lose their reason to stay.

How to Actually Reduce Spiders

Because spiders follow their prey, the most effective spider control looks a lot like general pest and clutter management. Start by cutting the insect supply: manage moisture, and reduce the outdoor lighting near doors and windows that draws the flying insects spiders feed on, or switch to less attractive yellow or LED bulbs. Fewer insects means fewer spiders, reliably.

Next, remove harborage and webs. Regularly knocking down webs and egg sacs with a vacuum or broom, indoors and around the eaves and foundation outside, both reduces the current population and discourages rebuilding. Declutter basements, garages, and closets, and store items in sealed bins rather than open boxes, so spiders have fewer quiet places to shelter.

Finally, seal the entry points, gaps around doors and windows, utility penetrations, and foundation cracks, that let spiders (and the insects they hunt) inside. For the two venomous species, this same approach applies but with more caution and, often, professional help: targeted treatment of harborage in woodpiles, garages, and storage areas where widows and recluses shelter. Our spider control combines harborage treatment with reducing the prey that draws spiders in the first place.

Your Spider-Reduction Plan

1
Reduce the insects they eat. Address moisture, manage other pests, and change or reposition exterior lighting away from doors and windows to draw fewer flying insects. This is the root-cause step.
2
Knock down webs and egg sacs. Vacuum or sweep webs, spiders, and egg sacs regularly, indoors in corners and outdoors along eaves and the foundation. Removing egg sacs prevents the next generation.
3
Declutter and seal storage. Clear clutter in basements, garages, and closets, and store belongings in sealed plastic bins. Undisturbed clutter is prime spider (and recluse) harborage.
4
Seal entry points. Caulk gaps around windows and doors, add door sweeps, and seal foundation and utility penetrations to keep spiders and their prey out.
5
Manage the exterior. Move woodpiles away from the house, clear yard debris, and trim vegetation off the foundation, all favorite outdoor spider harborage, especially for black widows.
6
Use caution with the venomous two. For suspected black widow or brown recluse activity, wear gloves in storage areas, shake out shoes and clothing, and consider professional treatment rather than hands-on removal.

Spider Myths, Cleared Up

Spiders inspire more myths than almost any pest. A few worth correcting.

"You swallow spiders in your sleep"

A persistent myth with no basis. Spiders have no interest in a moving, breathing sleeper and actively avoid people.

"All spider bites are dangerous"

Only the black widow and brown recluse are medically significant in the U.S., and even their bites are uncommon. Most spiders cannot meaningfully harm a person.

"Every skin sore is a spider bite"

Many wounds blamed on "spider bites" are actually infections or other insect bites. Genuine venomous-spider bites are far rarer than the diagnosis suggests.

"Spraying the baseboards fixes it"

Perimeter spraying does little for spiders, which are not reliably killed by surface residue and simply return to the insect-rich area. Reducing prey and harborage works; spraying alone does not.

"Conkers or repellents keep spiders away"

Horse chestnuts, essential oils, and similar home remedies show no reliable spider-repelling effect. Sealing, cleaning, and reducing prey do the actual work.

"Killing spiders reduces spiders"

Counterintuitively, no, more move into the same prey-rich space. Removing the food and shelter is what lowers the population.

When to Call a Professional

For ordinary house spiders, the reduce-prey-and-harborage approach is well within a homeowner's reach, and a professional pest program helps mainly by keeping the underlying insect population down. The clear case for professional help is the venomous species. If you are finding black widows around the property or suspect brown recluse activity in the home, especially in regions where recluses are established, professional treatment of their harborage is both safer and more thorough than hands-on removal.

The other trigger is persistent abundance despite your efforts, which usually signals an insect problem feeding them that is worth addressing at the source. In both cases, the professional advantage is treating the harborage where spiders actually shelter and cutting off the prey supply that draws them, the two things that reduce spiders durably, while handling the dangerous species without putting you in reach of a bite.

Spider Questions

What is the best way to get rid of spiders?

Reduce what draws them: cut the insect population they feed on (manage moisture and exterior lighting), remove webs and egg sacs, declutter and seal storage areas, and seal entry points. Spraying individual spiders does little, because more move into the same prey-rich space. Control the food and shelter and the spiders leave.

Which spiders are actually dangerous?

In the U.S., only the black widow and brown recluse are medically significant, and both are reclusive, so bites are uncommon. Common house spiders, cellar spiders, and wolf spiders are harmless and even beneficial. If you find widows or recluses, treat their harborage with caution or professionally.

Why do I suddenly have so many spiders?

A spike in spiders almost always means a spike in the insects they eat, often drawn by moisture or exterior lighting, or seasonal movement indoors as weather changes. Addressing the insect supply and sealing entry points resolves the surge more effectively than removing the spiders one by one.

Are house spiders good to have around?

Ecologically, yes, they prey on flies, mosquitoes, and other pests, so a few spiders quietly reduce other problems. The goal for most homes is keeping their numbers low and comfortable rather than eliminating a beneficial predator entirely; the exception is the two venomous species, which warrant real caution.

Spiders Taking Over, or Found a Dangerous One?

Whether it is too many webs or a black widow in the garage, we treat the harborage and cut off the insects that draw spiders in. Tell us what you are seeing and we will schedule a free inspection, with caution built in for the venomous species.

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About LegendaryWays Pest Control

LegendaryWays Pest Control is an award-winning, locally owned company with over 20 years of experience protecting homes and businesses nationwide. These guides are written by the technicians who do the work, not a content mill, so the advice reflects what actually solves the problem in the field. When a pest problem is past the DIY stage, our free inspection carries no obligation, and every plan is month-to-month with free re-service between visits.

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