Buying a Second-Hand House in Malaysia? Check for Termites Before You Sign
Quick answer: Before you sign for a second-hand house in Malaysia, walk the perimeter and foundation for pencil-width mud tubes, tap skirting, door and window frames for a hollow sound, and look for discarded wings on window sills, bubbling paint and doors that stick. The hidden culprit is the subterranean termite Coptotermes gestroi, which eats timber from the inside out and stays out of sight for years. Do your own walk-through, then get a professional pre-purchase inspection before you commit — treating an inherited colony costs from RM2,800. See Nomobug’s termite treatment →
You’ve found the house, the price is right, and you’re ready to sign. Before you do, spend twenty minutes on one thing most buyers skip: a termite check. Subterranean termites eat timber from the inside out and hide for years, so a house can look flawless at a viewing while a colony quietly works through the door frames — and once you own it, the treatment and repair bill is yours. The good news is that a lot of the warning signs are visible to anyone who knows where to look. Here’s the pre-purchase checklist: what to spot yourself, what needs a pro, and what to do if you find them before the deal is done.
Why do second-hand houses need a termite check?
A new build has (or should have) a fresh soil barrier under it. A second-hand house has history you can’t see — and in Malaysia, three parts of that history matter. Many older homes sit on land that was rubber or oil palm estate a generation ago, where termite colonies were established long before the house was. The previous owner may never have treated preventively, or let a warranty lapse decades back. And by the time a house goes on the market, any damage has often been quietly patched and painted over.
That last point is the one that catches buyers. A seller isn’t always hiding something on purpose — sometimes they genuinely don’t know — but a hollow door frame filled and repainted looks fine at a viewing and becomes your problem after completion. Termites don’t show up on the valuation report. The only way they get found before you sign is if someone actually looks.
A couple in Puchong moved into a lovely renovated terrace and called us three months later — mud tubes had appeared behind the TV console on a freshly painted wall. The colony had been active before they bought; the renovation just covered the evidence. A RM40 tap-test on the skirting at the viewing would have flagged it before they signed.
— Job notes, Nomobug field team
What signs can you spot yourself?
You don’t need equipment for the first pass — just your eyes, your ears and a knuckle. Run through this list at the viewing:
- Mud tubes. Pencil-width tunnels of dried mud running up foundations, walls, or the outside of the house. This is the clearest sign of subterranean termites — they build tubes to travel from the soil to the timber without drying out.
- Hollow-sounding timber. Tap along skirting boards, door frames and window frames with a knuckle or a coin. Termites hollow wood from the inside, so a solid-looking frame can sound papery and empty.
- Discarded wings. Small piles of equal-length wings on window sills, near doors or under lights — left behind when winged termites (alates) swarm, usually after rain. Wings inside the house mean they’ve already been in.
- Bubbling or rippled paint. Paint that looks blistered or uneven over skirting or a frame can be termites tunnelling just beneath the surface.
- Frass. Fine, sawdust-like droppings collecting below a skirting board or window frame.
- Doors and windows that stick. Frames warped by termite damage or the moisture that comes with it stop closing cleanly.
One extra thing to watch for on a house that’s been done up to sell: fresh paint on the skirting only, a single newly filled crack near the floor, or a run of new timber trim. It might be nothing. It might be a patch job over the evidence. It earns a closer look.
Where should you look?
Termites follow moisture and soil contact, so head for those spots first:
- The foundation and perimeter. Walk the whole way around the outside, low down, looking for mud tubes where the wall meets the ground, on the porch columns and along the boundary drain.
- Skirting, door and window frames. Especially at ground level and in rooms against an external wall. Tap as you go.
- Wet areas. Under the kitchen sink, around bathroom door frames, the base of walls near plumbing — damp timber is a magnet.
- The roof void and ceiling. If you can get a look, check for tubes on the timber and any sagging or staining in the ceiling below.
- The garden. Old tree stumps, a timber fence touching the house, firewood or offcuts stacked against a wall — these are colonies-in-waiting right next to the structure.
If any of that turns something up, our guides on what mud tubes on a wall mean and where termites hide will help you read what you’re looking at.
What needs a professional eye?
Your walk-through catches the obvious. What it can’t do is see inside a wall. A technician looks where you can’t — inside wall voids and the subfloor, up close in the roof space, behind built-in cabinetry — and reads the difference between a live colony and an old, treated one. The extent and the species matter too: a job that’s reached the structural timber is a very different quote from a couple of tubes on a garden wall, and the treatment for Coptotermes curvignathus, the aggressive one, needs to be planned properly.
This is where a pre-purchase inspection earns its keep — it turns “the skirting sounded a bit odd” into a clear answer you can act on before you sign. It’s cheap next to discovering a structural colony after completion, when the cost is entirely yours.
“Its good to hear after all their inspection around the house and outside that they found my house to be at the top for being clean and hygienic.”
— Chef Wan, celebrity chef. A proper inspection covers the whole house inside and out — which is exactly the reassurance you want in writing before you commit to buying one.
Viewing a house? Get a second opinion before you sign.
Send us photos of anything that looks off — mud tubes, hollow skirting, wings on the sill — for a quick WhatsApp read, or book a pre-purchase termite inspection on request. Treatment quotes fixed over WhatsApp; deposit 50% or pay via ATOME.
Tell us the area and what you’re seeing. Same-day reply Mon-Sat.
WhatsApp usYou found termites — what now?
Finding termites before you sign is good news, not bad — you found them while you still have leverage. You have three sensible moves:
- Negotiate the price down. Get the extent assessed, then knock the treatment and any repair cost off your offer. A documented finding is hard for a seller to argue with.
- Make it a condition of sale. Ask the seller to treat it first with a proper, warranted job — and get the warranty transferred or documented before completion.
- Budget it in and proceed. If the house is otherwise right, factor the cost and treat it yourself after moving in.
Either way, know the ballpark. Treating an active colony by baiting starts from around RM2,800 and soil treatment from RM3,600 — full figures in our guide to termite treatment cost in Selangor. Which method suits depends on whether the colony is active: for a house that already has termites, baiting is what Nomobug recommends, because it eliminates the colony rather than just building a barrier around it. We break down the choice in termite baiting vs soil treatment.
Is it always a dealbreaker?
No — and it’s worth keeping perspective before you pull out of a house you love. Not every mud tube means an active colony chewing through the joists right now. Tubes that are dry, grey and crumble to powder when you break them open are often from an old infestation that was treated years ago. A single scatter of wings on the porch after a heavy rain might just be alates that flew in from a neighbour’s tree, not a nest in the walls.
The catch is that you usually can’t tell active from inactive, or surface from structural, by eye alone — a dry tube can sit next to a live one. So the honest advice is neither “panic and walk” nor “ignore it,” but “get it checked.” A clear inspection turns a scary unknown into a number you can plan around. Plenty of houses with a past termite history are perfectly good buys once they’ve been properly treated and warranted.
Related reading
- What mud tubes on a wall mean — how to tell an active tube from an old one.
- Termite treatment cost in Selangor — the numbers to factor into your offer.
- Termite baiting vs soil treatment — which method fits a house you’ve just bought.
- Nomobug termite treatment — inspection, baiting and soil treatment with warranty.
References
- Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM) — subterranean termite research and identification — frim.gov.my
- Jabatan Pertanian Malaysia (Department of Agriculture) — registered termiticide database — doa.gov.my
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
How do I check a second-hand house for termites before buying?
What are the signs of termites in a house?
Can I see termite damage during a house viewing?
Should I get a termite inspection before buying a house in Malaysia?
What should I do if I find termites before signing?
Are old mud tubes a dealbreaker?
Viewing a house? Get a second opinion before you sign.
Send us photos of anything that looks off — mud tubes, hollow skirting, wings on the sill — for a quick WhatsApp read, or book a pre-purchase termite inspection on request. Treatment quotes fixed over WhatsApp; deposit 50% or pay via ATOME.
Tell us the area and what you’re seeing. Same-day reply Mon-Sat.
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