How to Choose a Pest Control Company in Malaysia (Without Getting Scammed)

The short answer to choosing pest control in Malaysia: ask for four things before paying a single ringgit — a clear written quotation (the pest, the scope, the number of visits, the warranty and the price), the product name and Safety Data Sheet if you ask for them, a willingness to inspect when the job is complex, and a warranty clause with a clear retreatment trigger. A fixed quote over WhatsApp for a standard residential job is completely normal — most operators price a terrace-house general treatment without a site visit, and that’s fine. The warning sign is a company that won’t answer these questions when you ask, or wants the full amount upfront. The rest of this guide is the longer version — red flags, real prices, the questions to ask, and a section telling you when not to hire anyone at all.
The Two-Minute Version
There are roughly 300 registered pest control operators in Malaysia and somewhere between several hundred and “lost count” unregistered ones — guys with a sprayer in the boot of a Saga and a Facebook page. Most are fine. A few are excellent. A small but persistent minority will quote you RM150, show up for nine minutes, mist your front porch with something that smells like a swimming pool, and disappear with your number blocked.
The whole job of choosing a pest control company is sorting which of those three you’re talking to before the money leaves your account.
The good news: it’s not hard. The bad news: nobody teaches you how. So here we are.
The 10-second filter. Before reading the rest of this post — if a company can’t tell you what pest you’re dealing with, won’t tell you which product they’ll use even after you ask, and wants the full amount upfront before any work, you can stop there. That’s not pest control. That’s a sprayer with a Facebook page. (A fixed price quoted over WhatsApp for a standard job, on the other hand, is completely normal — that’s just an efficient operator who knows what a terrace house costs.)
Red Flags: When to Walk Away

Most of these are not specific to pest control. They’re the same red flags that show up whenever someone wants money for a service you can’t physically inspect afterwards.
1. A blind fix-quote on a complex, high-value job
For a standard residential general treatment, a fixed quote over the phone or WhatsApp is normal — a terrace house is a known quantity and a good operator can price it in one message without a site visit. The red flag is a company that fix-quotes a complex, high-value job — termites, a recurring infestation, bed bugs across rooms — without asking a single follow-up and without offering to inspect when you ask. The ones who quote RM199 the second you say “anai-anai” are quoting an average, not a treatment. Proper termite work in Malaysia runs into the thousands; anyone promising RM200 to RM300 for anai-anai is either selling a single spray that won’t touch the colony, or running a scam. A good operator will happily do a pre-inspection on request for anything that warrants one.
2. “Don’t worry about the chemical, it’s safe one”
You can imagine the same sentence at a roadside satay stall. It is, broadly, a reason to worry. Not every residential quote prints the specific product name on it — many operators don’t, and that’s normal. What matters is what happens when you ask: a good company will tell you the product, its registration number with the Malaysian Pesticides Board, and hand over the Safety Data Sheet on request. A technician who gets cagey — “don’t worry, it’s safe one”, “cannot show you that” — is either using something they shouldn’t, or doesn’t actually know. You don’t want either standing in your kitchen with a sprayer.
3. Unmarked vehicles, no uniform, no receipt
Lots of small operators are perfectly legitimate without a fleet of branded vans. But a complete absence of identifying anything — no shirt with a logo, no business card, no proper invoice, payment to a personal Maybank account in an unrelated name — is its own signal. If something goes wrong with the treatment, you need to be able to find them again. “The guy with the bike, you remember” is not findable.
The Four Questions Every Customer Should Ask

These four questions filter out most bad operators in under five minutes. Save them to your phone. Use them every time. A good company answers all four without flinching.
- “What product will you use, and is it registered with the Malaysian Pesticides Board?” A registered product name and active ingredient is a basic fact a technician should know. The Pesticides Board, under the Department of Agriculture, maintains the registry of legal pest products in Malaysia. If the answer is “we use professional chemical” — that’s not an answer.
- “Can I see the Safety Data Sheet before treatment?” The SDS lists the active ingredient, dilution rate, safety precautions, and first-aid measures. Every reputable operator has these on hand. Reading it doesn’t mean you don’t trust them — it means you have a baby and a dog and a right to know.
- “How many visits are included for this pest, and what’s the gap between visits?” One spray is rarely a treatment. Cockroaches need a 2 to 3 week follow-up to break the egg cycle. Bed bugs need 2 to 3 visits across a month. Termites are a months-long campaign. A package that promises “one visit, problem solved” is selling a feeling, not a result.
- “What does the warranty cover, and what do I need to show to trigger a free retreatment?” A warranty without a clear retreatment trigger is a marketing line. The good version says: “If you see live activity within 60 days of treatment, send us photos by WhatsApp, we come back free.” The bad version is a sentence on a quotation that nobody can quote back to you when you call.
“Best service, the technician was very helpful and friendly. They did a wonderful job and gave me reassurance that the cockroaches will not come back anymore. Most importantly they used chemicals that are not dangerous to children. Would recommend this service especially for families.”
— Yong Han, Google Review (Dec 2023). The chemical question is the first one a parent thinks of. Asking it openly — and getting a real answer — is how you tell a good operator from a guy with a sprayer.
What a Real Inspection Looks Like

First, the honest part most guides skip: for a standard residential general treatment, you usually don’t need an inspection before booking at all. Most reputable operators give a fixed quote over the phone or WhatsApp — often without even asking for a photo — because a terrace-house general treatment is a standardised job. A pre-inspection is something they’ll arrange on request, or do as standard for the jobs that actually warrant it: termites, a recurring infestation that won’t die, bed bugs, anything structural, or commercial premises. So don’t read “no site visit” as a red flag on a simple job — it’s just efficiency.
Where an inspection does happen, here’s what good looks like. A pre-treatment inspection should take 20 to 40 minutes for a typical terrace house. The technician should walk both floors, look behind the fridge, open the kitchen cabinet at the bottom, lift the rubbish bin, check the bathroom drains, walk the perimeter outside, look at the gutter line, and ask whether you have a TNB box outside that the tikus might be using as a hotel.
If the “inspection” consists of a man standing in your hallway, nodding, and announcing “yes can do” within four minutes — and then quoting you thousands for termite work off the back of it — that is not an inspection. That is a man standing in your hallway. The thing to insist on for any big-ticket job is a genuine diagnosis of the species and the entry points, whether that’s done from photos and a video over WhatsApp or with someone physically in your kitchen.
A homeowner in Setia Alam called us after a year of quarterly visits from another company. Cockroaches kept coming back. We did one proper inspection and found the German cockroach nest behind a microwave bracket the previous technician had never moved. One round of targeted gel baiting, gone for good. The issue was never the chemical. It was that nobody actually looked.
— Job notes, Nomobug field team
What to ask the technician on inspection day
- “Which species do you think this is?” — A real tech identifies American vs. German cockroach, subterranean vs. drywood termite. Treatment depends on the species.
- “Where are the entry points?” — They should physically point at them. Gap under the kitchen door. Crack at the drain trap. Roof eave.
- “Which areas will you treat?” — Confirmed before the sprayer comes out. So you know what’s covered if the warranty kicks in later.
- “Will I need to leave the house at all?” — With a gel-bait-first method you shouldn’t; only heavy fogging or blanket spraying needs you out, and a good operator avoids that inside kitchens.
Reading the Quotation Like a Contract

Whatever the company emails you after the inspection — even if it’s a WhatsApp screenshot of a quote written in Microsoft Word — is the contract. If something isn’t on it, it doesn’t exist. Verbal promises from the man at your door do not survive the moment he leaves your gate.
A complete quotation has, at minimum:
- Pest covered (named species — not “general pests”)
- Service type (residual spray, gel baiting, soil treatment, baiting system, fogging)
- Areas treated (room by room or a sketch)
- Number of visits and gap between visits
- Warranty period and what triggers a free retreatment
- Payment terms (deposit, balance, when each is due)
- Company name, registration number, contact
You’ll notice the product name isn’t on that list. That’s deliberate — many operators don’t print the specific product on a standard residential quotation, and its absence is not a red flag. What you should expect is that they’ll name the product and share its Safety Data Sheet the moment you ask. Treat that as a separate request, not something the quote has to spell out by default.
Missing any of the items above isn’t a deal-breaker on its own, but it’s a conversation. “Where in this is the warranty clause?” is a question you should be comfortable asking before signing anything.
Warranties: What Counts, What’s Decorative

Most reputable companies in Malaysia offer 30 to 90 days for general pest treatment and 1 to 5 years for termite work. The number itself doesn’t matter much. What matters is what the warranty does.
One expectation to set straight first: a warranty in this trade means free additional service — the company comes back and re-treats at no charge if the pest returns within the period. It does not mean money back. Refund guarantees are rare and, frankly, easy to promise and hard to collect on. What you actually want is a company that returns and finishes the job, not one that dangles a refund it has no intention of paying. So when you read a warranty, read it as “will they come back for free?” — not “will I get my ringgit back?”
Three warranty patterns you’ll see
The real warranty. Free retreatment if live activity returns within the period. You photograph or video what you’re seeing, send by WhatsApp, technician returns. No extra charge. No “we’ll send someone if you book another package.”
The reinspection warranty. The company does a free check-up at month 1 and month 3. If they find activity, they retreat. This is honest because it puts the work on them, not you — but it requires them to actually turn up.
The decorative warranty. “Six months warranty included” written on the invoice. No clause about what triggers retreatment, no number to call, no documentation of the visit. When you ring six weeks later they say “ya we’ll come — RM150 callout.” That isn’t a warranty. That’s a sentence on a piece of paper.
For termite work specifically. Termite warranties typically run 1 to 5 years. The two questions that decide whether yours is worth anything: does it require a written annual inspection (so the company stays on the hook), and does it cover both treatment and any structural damage within the warranty period? Most warranties cover only retreatment. That’s normal — but you should know it before you assume the company will pay to rebuild your skirting.
What Pest Control Actually Costs in Malaysia

The table below is honest market range for a typical residential terrace house in Klang Valley. Commercial and F&B premises are priced by square footage and visit frequency, not by the figures below.
| Service | What’s Included | Typical Market Price (RM) |
|---|---|---|
| 1x general pest control | Single visit, terrace house | 330 |
| 3-visit plan (with warranty) | 3 visits to break the breeding cycle, with warranty | 550 |
| 4x yearly | 4 visits across the year | 880 |
| Buy 6 Free 6 (year-long) | 12 visits across the year | 1,650 |
| Monthly subscription | Per month, recurring | 275 |
| Additional pest | Per extra pest covered | +110 |
| Additional floor | Per extra floor | +110 |
| Urgent service (24–48 hrs) | Add-on | +110 |
| Termite corrective soil treatment | Terrace house, 3-yr warranty | 3,960 |
| Termite baiting (until colony destroyed) | Terrace house | 3,080 |
| Bed bug treatment (chemical) | Per room | 200 – 400 |
| Fogging / mosquito misting | Residential compound | 150 – 300 |
For reference — Nomobug’s actual prices (using the low-toxicity Provecta (BASF) range) sit consistently around 10% below the typical market range: RM299 for 1x, RM499 for the 3x-within-14-days plan, RM799 for 4x yearly, RM1,500 for Buy 6 Free 6, and RM250/month for the subscription. Termite baiting starts from RM2,800 and corrective soil treatment from RM3,600. Quotes that come in well below these — RM99 specials, RM150 “promos” — almost always mean diluted chemicals, skipped entry points, or no follow-up. The cheap job is the expensive job six weeks later.
Not sure if your quote is fair?
WhatsApp us and we’ll quote you a fixed price with the warranty terms in writing on chat — no site visit needed for most residential jobs. Want the product name or its safety sheet? Just ask. 50% booking deposit or ATOME holds your slot. From RM299.
Send us a WhatsApp with a photo of what you’re seeing — and any quotes you’ve already received. Same-day reply Mon–Sat.
WhatsApp usWhy the cheap quote is almost never the cheap job
Pest control costs are dominated by two things: the chemical and the time on site. The chemical at correct dilution costs roughly the same for everyone. Time on site is what gets compressed when someone undercuts by 40%. A nine-minute visit, half the dilution, no inspection, no follow-up. You save RM200. The cockroaches come back in six weeks. You pay another RM330. Net result: you’ve spent more, the German cockroaches have multiplied for an extra six weeks, and you’ve gained a new appreciation for sleeping with the lights on.
When NOT to Hire Anyone
Most pest control companies will not tell you this. We will. Skip the professional, save your money, and handle it yourself if:
- Fewer than 5 cockroaches and no egg cases. A RM8 gel bait from Mr DIY placed at the back of the cabinet near the hinge will sort it out in two weeks.
- One ant trail, one visible entry point. Silicone the gap. The trail goes home. Nothing else to do.
- Mosquitoes after heavy rain. Empty the pot trays, clear the gutter, move the old tyres in the back yard. Standing water is the entire problem.
- One rat, one snap trap, success. Watch for activity for two weeks. One rat is not a colony. If nothing else turns up, you’re done.
- A solitary cicak. The cicak is on your side. Leave the cicak alone.
Call a pro when the problem is structural (termites in the joists), hidden (rats in a roof void you can’t reach), persistent (cockroaches back within 30 days of DIY treatment), or spreading (bed bugs in more than one room). Anything else, save the money for kopi.
How to Vet a Company in Ten Minutes
If you’ve already shortlisted two or three companies, here is the quick-pass filter:
- Google their business name + “review”, read the 3-star reviews specifically. The 1-stars are usually outliers; the 5-stars are sometimes self-written. The 3-stars are where the real story sits — punctuality issues, scope creep, follow-up reliability.
- Check if they pick up the phone on the first try. A company that takes 48 hours to reply to a quote request will take 48 hours to reply when you have live cockroaches at week 4 of the warranty.
- Ask them which species you have, from the photo you sent. A real operator answers. A guesser tells you “ya looks like the common one.” Common one isn’t a species.
- Ask them which areas they don’t cover. Operators who claim “we cover everywhere all over Malaysia” usually subcontract to whichever stranger is closest to your address. You want someone who can name the suburbs they actually work in.
For location-specific guides, see our breakdowns of pest control in Selangor, plus area pages for Shah Alam, Subang Jaya, Puchong, Klang, Petaling Jaya, Kajang, Cheras, and Ampang. If your problem is termites specifically, the termite pest control guide has the longer version.
CUSTOMER REVIEWS


I’m giving him a 5-star rating.
Overall, from the last two visits, I found many spots/nests. The gel bait and Provcta were very impressive. The effect was very noticeable; the cockroaches were no longer visible in the kitchen. There were fewer in the living room. Today was my last visit for baiting and spraying. Hopefully, there will be no more cockroaches after this, God willing.
Highly recommended!



Nomobug has just completed their second service at my home, and once again I’m extremely impressed. They carried out contingency recurring control twice, especially targeting ants and cockroaches, and I really appreciate how they honor their warranty with such professionalism. The overall appointment scheduling and service management were smooth and reliable, which makes me feel very secure and well taken care of.
I’m very satisfied with the results and would highly recommend Nomobug to anyone looking for thorough pest control. Once my current contract finishes, I will definitely be renewing it.
It’s also worth highlighting that the same technician, Faris, has been consistently handling my house. He is punctual, polite, and highly professional. After completing the treatment, he provided a detailed report outlining his findings and preventive actions, even showing me examples of the control measures implemented. This level of transparency and care is rare, and I truly value it.
Overall, Nomobug continues to exceed my expectations—reliable, professional, and trustworthy.
4 MONTHS AGO:
I recently engaged Nomobug Servis Pest Control for a comprehensive treatment targeting cockroaches, ants, rats, common house geckos, and centipedes. They covered both the interior and exterior of my home—including my car—which was a huge plus.
The first service focused on prevention and control, and I was thoroughly impressed. The technician, Faris, was punctual, polite, and highly professional. He took the time to explain each step of the process—from inspection to recommending suitable control measures—and his work was exceptionally clean and tidy.
After completing the treatment, Faris provided a detailed report outlining his findings and the preventive actions taken and even showed me examples of the control measures implemented. I truly appreciated the transparency and care.
Overall, I’m very satisfied with their service and would confidently recommend Nomobug to anyone looking for reliable and thorough pest control.

Izzat handled it efficiently and professionally. Your quick response and technical skills really made the process smooth. Great teamwork and problem-solving!





Almost all places are sprayed.
Suggestions,
Hopefully the admin will send the same technician to work. Anyway, we are very satisfied with today’s service.
Thank you

We definitely add more services from them






FAQ
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Not sure if your quote is fair?
WhatsApp us and we’ll quote you a fixed price with the warranty terms in writing on chat — no site visit needed for most residential jobs. Want the product name or its safety sheet? Just ask. 50% booking deposit or ATOME holds your slot. From RM299.
Send us a WhatsApp with a photo of what you’re seeing — and any quotes you’ve already received. Same-day reply Mon–Sat.
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