Rodent Pressure Profile
Mexia — Limestone County Seat on US-84 East
Mexia is the Limestone County seat approximately 40 miles east of Waco on US-84. The town has a historic residential base — pre-war construction in the older neighborhoods, mid-century residential expansion in the post-war era, and modern suburban development along the town's growth corridors. Rodent pressure in Mexia reflects Limestone County's agricultural character: Norway rats from surrounding cotton and grain operations sustain perimeter populations adjacent to residential areas, house mice intrude through standard construction gaps on the October cold-snap timeline, and the town's commercial zones along US-84 create the food-adjacent Norway rat pressure typical of highway-corridor commercial development. Same-day service is available for most Mexia calls placed before noon on weekdays — the US-84 East drive from Waco is approximately 45 minutes and Mexia-area calls can typically be incorporated into eastern routing same-day with confirmation on the call.
Limestone County Agricultural Properties
Limestone County's agricultural operations — cotton, hay, and cattle — generate consistent demand for agricultural rodent control programs. We service Limestone County farm and ranch properties with the same livestock-safe bait-station and feed-storage program we run throughout our Central Texas agricultural coverage area. For Mexia-area agricultural properties, call (254) 343-1352 to discuss the specific operation type and we'll scope appropriately on the call.
Frequently Asked Questions — Mexia
What types of rodent pressure are most common in Mexia?
Mexia sees a mix of house mouse intrusion in historic downtown residential and Norway rat pressure in agricultural properties. Pre-war construction in the residential core — older wood-frame homes with multiple renovation gaps — provides typical mouse entry. Agricultural operations outside the city limits generate Norway rat populations that can move into storage structures and residential margins during harvest season.
How long does a Mexia area service call take from Waco?
Mexia is approximately 40 miles east of Waco on US-84, a 40–45 minute drive. We schedule Mexia calls with sufficient travel time and typically complete an inspection the same day for calls placed before noon. The full-service menu — inspection, treatment, exclusion, and cleanup — is available in Mexia at the same rates as McLennan County.
Are there rodent control services specific to Limestone County agricultural properties?
Yes. Limestone County cotton and hay operations generate consistent Norway rat demand — grain storage, hay bales, and feed areas are primary harborage. Our agricultural program for Mexia-area farms uses livestock-safe tamper-resistant bait stations at perimeter locations, avoiding treatment zones that contact feed or water sources. Written service records are included for operations with documentation requirements. We serve Mexia with the same same-day inspection availability and full service menu as McLennan County — free inspection, written findings, and treatment scoped before any work begins.
We Serve Mexia and Limestone County — Call (254) 343-1352
Free inspection, licensed and insured. McLennan County and 25 nearby Central Texas towns.
Call (254) 343-1352