Commercial sector
Multifamily Pest Control in Gilbert and the Phoenix metro.
Firehouse builds pest programs for apartments, townhomes, build-to-rent communities, and large residential properties. The goal is simple: prevent pest issues before customers, residents, guests, inspectors, or owners ever have to notice them.
Built around real operating risk.
Commercial pest control has to protect reputation, compliance, comfort, and continuity. Firehouse keeps communication direct and service practical.
Unit-to-unit pest movement
Tenant work orders
Bed bug and roach protocols
Recurring exterior prevention
Property-specific service
What multifamily pest control should cover.
Multifamily pest control has to handle pest movement that house-by-house service does not. Bed bugs, German roaches, and rodents can move through shared walls, plumbing chases, attics, and trash chutes, so service has to think in terms of buildings and unit clusters, not just individual apartments. Firehouse builds multifamily programs that combine scheduled exterior prevention with on-demand interior response when a tenant work order comes in.
The most useful information for a multifamily request is the building number, unit number, the pest involved, when it was reported, and whether neighboring units need to be checked. Bed bug and roach calls often need adjacent-unit inspection because activity rarely stops at a wall. Firehouse coordinates with maintenance or property staff so tenants get a clear appointment window and the property gets documented service.
Recurring exterior prevention is the foundation of multifamily pest control. Trash compactors, dumpsters, landscape edges, perimeter walls, irrigation, and exterior building lines all carry pressure that, left alone, becomes an interior problem in occupied units. Firehouse keeps the exterior plan consistent so reactive work orders stay rare and predictable.
Documentation matters for build-to-rent communities, large apartment portfolios, and townhome HOAs. Property owners, regional managers, and corporate maintenance teams need a record of what was treated, where, and when. Firehouse provides notes that travel cleanly through a work-order system, an asset manager review, or a quarterly portfolio report.
How service works
How a multifamily pest control program runs week to week
Walkthrough
A licensed technician walks the property with the manager or owner to map the high-pressure zones and existing conditions before service starts.
Recurring schedule
Visit frequency is matched to the property: weekly or biweekly for high-pressure operations, monthly or quarterly for lighter-traffic properties. Discreet timing is the default.
Written notes
Every visit comes with documented notes the property contact can forward to ownership, a board, an inspector, or a corporate office. Documentation is part of the program.
Fast response
Between scheduled visits, urgent issues get prioritized. Firehouse coordinates timing by text and confirms each appointment so the property is never surprised by a service truck.
Why local
Why a Gilbert-based pest company matters for multifamily pest control
National pest companies often default to a Southeast or Northeast pest playbook with a generic Southwest overlay. That works for some properties; it does not work well for Arizona commercial operations dealing with bark scorpions in block walls, subterranean termites in slab edges, monsoon roach pressure, and roof rats traveling along citrus and palms. Firehouse is built around those specific Arizona conditions because the team lives and works inside them.
Being local also changes response time. A multifamily pest control property with an urgent pest issue does not have time to wait for a corporate scheduling system to slot it in. Firehouse is based at 1090 South Gilbert Road and serves East Valley, Phoenix, Scottsdale, and West Valley commercial properties on a turn-around schedule that fits how Arizona operators actually run.
For an overview of how Firehouse approaches commercial work across every property type, see the commercial pest control hub.
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Get a plan for this property type.
Mention the property type, pest concern, and urgency so Firehouse can follow up with a practical plan.
