Pest control for empty Greek properties.
The Mediterranean climate brings a specific set of pests; empty properties are uniquely vulnerable. The six common species, when each peaks, what each does to a property, and the scheduled prevention routine that handles 90% of incidents before they become problems.
The pests that show up in Greek properties are different from the ones diaspora owners are accustomed to in their home countries. Athens cockroaches are bigger, summer mosquitos are more aggressive, the building-system shared spaces (drains, ventilation shafts, common areas) create transmission paths that don't exist in single-family Anglo-Saxon housing. And empty properties — no one to notice the first signs, no one to vacuum the eggs, no movement to deter rodents — are uniquely vulnerable.
This is the operational guide. None of it requires being an entomologist; most of it requires a calendar and a treatment provider you trust.
The six pests that matter
1. Cockroaches (κατσαρίδες)
Greek apartments deal with two species:
- German cockroach (γερμανική κατσαρίδα): small (10-15mm), light brown. Lives in kitchens. Spreads through shared kitchen drains in apartment buildings. The most common Athens infestation
- Oriental cockroach (anatolian, ασιατική κατσαρίδα): larger (20-30mm), darker. Lives in drains, basements, and damp common areas. Comes up through drains particularly in summer humidity
Peak season: May through October. Empty-property vulnerability: high during summer, especially if dishwasher and kitchen sink drains haven't been run in 3+ months. Sitting drain traps dry out, allowing cockroaches to come up from the building's shared drainage.
Prevention: drain traps maintained (pour water into all drains during monthly inspections), kitchen completely cleaned during closure routines, gel-bait stations in cabinets and behind appliances (Combat Max Gel, similar). Cost: €5-€15 of bait products per property per year.
Active treatment: professional spray and gel treatment by a licensed pest-control firm. €80-€180 for an apartment. Effective for 3-6 months.
2. Mosquitos (κουνούπια)
Greek summer mosquitos include several species, including some that bite during daylight and the more aggressive Asian tiger mosquito (κουνούπι τίγρης) which is now established in most of mainland Greece since 2010s.
Empty-property concern: less about the property condition, more about the property when you arrive. Stagnant water on balconies, in flowerpots, in gutters becomes breeding ground. Properties next to mosquito-friendly common-areas (untended gardens, neighbouring balconies with stagnant water) are particularly affected.
Prevention: empty all standing water during monthly visits, mosquito screens (σήτες) installed on windows, professional mosquito treatment (μυκόντος) for properties with gardens. Cost: €150-€400/visit for property + garden, ideally 2-3 visits per summer season.
3. Mice and rats (ποντίκια / αρουραίοι)
Lower base rate than cockroach problems but higher individual incident impact when it happens. Mice enter through small openings; rats through larger ones (building drains, courtyard openings, gaps near pipes).
Peak season: autumn (rodents seek warm interior space) and winter. Empty properties are particularly vulnerable to colonisation because the absence of human activity makes them attractive.
Prevention: seal all penetrations (especially around plumbing, electrical conduits, ventilation grilles), bait stations in basement / storage area, building-level rodent control if your building has it.
Active treatment: professional rodent removal — €120-€350 for typical apartment treatment, repeat visits if infestation established. Mainland and provincial properties (and islands) more vulnerable than central Athens flats.
4. Ants (μυρμήγκια)
Spring and summer. Generally not destructive but appear in kitchens and bathrooms following moisture and food residues. More nuisance than serious threat.
Prevention: thorough cleaning before vacancy, sealed food containers, bait stations placed at common entry points. Cost: under €20/year in bait.
Active treatment: typically self-treatable with consumer products; professional treatment if infestation persistent — €60-€120 for apartment.
5. Clothes moths and pantry moths (σκόροι)
Empty properties especially vulnerable because no one is wearing clothes / cooking through the inventory. Moths attack wool, silk, cashmere, leather, and dried pantry goods.
Prevention: vacuum-pack or sealed-box storage for wool and natural fibres, cedar blocks or lavender sachets in wardrobes (modestly effective), pheromone traps in pantry to detect early presence, removal of all dried foods before extended vacancy.
Active treatment: thorough cleaning, freezing of affected items, sometimes professional treatment for persistent infestations. €80-€250 depending on scale.
6. Woodworm and termites (σκουλήκι ξύλου / τερμίτες)
Older properties especially. Affects wooden floors, doors, furniture, structural timber (in island properties and older mainland homes). Greek climate is generally less termite-favourable than tropical climates, but woodworm is established and progresses slowly through wooden elements.
Signs: small holes in wood, fine sawdust (frass) below holes, soft spots in wooden floors or doors. Often discovered during home-watch inspections rather than initial purchase.
Prevention: maintain humidity below 60% (see our damp guide), inspect wooden elements during quarterly checks.
Active treatment: specialist treatment for affected timber — €400-€2,500 depending on scale. Replacement of seriously affected wooden elements where treatment can't save them. Discovery early saves enormous cost vs late discovery.
The scheduled prevention routine
For an empty mainland Greek property, this is the schedule that handles most pest issues prophylactically:
- Monthly during occupancy season (May-October): visual inspection, drain trap water-refresh, bait station check, signs scan for any infestation
- Spring treatment (April-May): professional spray treatment for cockroach prevention, mosquito treatment if property has outdoor space. Combined visit: €150-€300
- Autumn treatment (October-November): rodent prevention treatment, building-system sealing, second cockroach treatment if needed. €150-€250
- Monthly during vacancy season: physical inspection visit including drain trap maintenance, ventilation cycle, bait station replenishment
- Annual deep clean typically scheduled around your annual visit — ensures any building-up issues are addressed
Annual cost for the full prevention routine: €400-€800. Compare to one significant cockroach infestation that's discovered too late: typically €300-€800 treatment cost plus €1,000-€3,000 of removed/replaced contents that became unsalvageable.
Property-type variations
Athens apartments
Dominant concerns: cockroaches (building-shared drainage), occasional mice. Lower mosquito problem in dense urban setting. Building-level pest control coordination through the διαχειριστής often covers common areas, helping with apartment-level control.
Athens Riviera villas and ground-floor garden apartments
Adds: mosquitos (substantial during summer), occasional rodents, sometimes snakes during specific periods (rare but possible in well-vegetated gardens). Garden maintenance is part of pest control — overgrown gardens are pest infrastructures.
Island properties
Adds: more aggressive mosquito populations (less coordinated treatment infrastructure), variable cockroach pressure depending on island, occasional issues with island-specific pests (geckos which are harmless, occasional snakes which usually aren't problematic but require respect), woodworm in older properties more common.
Northern Greece (Thessaloniki and Macedonia)
Slightly cooler climate reduces some pest pressure. Same prevention routine but at slightly lower intensity. Adds: occasional rural-pest issues at properties near agricultural areas.
Finding a competent pest control firm in 2026
Look for:
- Licensed pest-control company (απεντόμωση/μυοκτονία) with appropriate certification
- VAT-registered with proper invoicing
- Insurance for property damage and any health-related complications from treatments
- Clear documentation of treatments used (active ingredients, application methods, re-entry timeframes)
- Reasonable warranty — re-treatment within 60-90 days if infestation persists at no additional charge
- Pre-treatment briefing if pets, plants, sensitive electronics are at the property
Most reputable Athens-area firms charge similar prices; significant under-quoting suggests corners cut. Recommended firms vary by district — your home-watch service can recommend ones with current track records in your specific area.
When DIY makes sense and when it doesn't
DIY treatment appropriate for:
- Initial ant intrusion (consumer bait stations)
- Occasional individual cockroach sightings (gel bait, sealed cracks)
- Pantry moth prevention (pheromone traps, sealed storage)
- Prophylactic measures during regular maintenance
Professional treatment essential for:
- Established cockroach infestation (more than occasional sighting)
- Any rodent activity confirmed
- Active woodworm or termite signs
- Recurring problem that DIY isn't solving
- Multi-unit issues requiring building coordination
How home watch fits
This is genuinely one of the highest-ROI parts of monthly home-watch service. Standard workflow:
- Monthly inspection includes the pest-detection visual scan and drain maintenance
- Scheduling of spring and autumn professional treatments
- Coordination with the building manager on building-level pest control
- Recommendations for vetted local pest-control firms with appropriate certifications
- Property access for treatment visits — you don't need to be there
- Documentation and photo recording of any pest activity for early-warning intervention
Companion reading: damp, mould and humidity, closing for winter, pre-arrival checklist.
The scheduled prevention routine usually fixes it. Cheaper than reactive treatment, less stressful than discovery at year-end. Talk to us →