Tiny Towns, Big Problem: Why Bed Bug Infestations Are Surging in Small Michigan Communities
When most people think about bed bugs, they picture crowded big-city apartments or budget hotel rooms. But if you live in a small Michigan town, you may be surprised to learn that these blood-sucking pests are no longer just an urban problem. Across the Mitten State, bed bug activity is climbing at an alarming rate — and rural and suburban communities are increasingly in the crosshairs.
Michigan Has a Serious Bed Bug Problem Right Now
The numbers are hard to ignore. According to Orkin’s 2025 Top 50 Bed Bug Cities List, Detroit ranked third in the nation for bed bug issues, while Grand Rapids came in at No. 7, Flint at No. 16, and Lansing at No. 48. That’s four Michigan cities on a national list of the most infested places in the entire country.
Even more concerning is the trajectory. Grand Rapids jumped an impressive seven spots in the 2025 rankings. Flint also climbed seven spots to land at No. 16. These aren’t minor fluctuations — they represent a rapidly worsening situation across the state.
But here’s the thing about bed bugs: they don’t stay within city limits. As infestations grow in urban centers, they inevitably radiate outward into the surrounding smaller towns and townships that feed into those metro areas.
Why Small Towns Are No Longer Safe From Bed Bugs
Many residents of small Michigan communities assume they’re insulated from bed bug problems. That assumption is dangerous. Here’s why bed bugs are making their way into smaller towns:
- Travel and commuting: Bed bugs are usually transported from place to place as people travel, and their slim, flat bodies allow them to fit into the smallest of spaces and stay there for long periods of time, even without a blood meal. Residents who commute to larger cities for work or travel for leisure can unknowingly bring them home.
- Secondhand furniture and thrift shopping: Bed bugs are hitchhikers — they travel to new places by hiding in furniture, suitcases, or other objects that get moved around. Before bringing new items into your home, especially used or antique furniture, mattresses, or bedding, you should inspect them for signs of bed bugs. In small towns where thrift stores, estate sales, and Facebook Marketplace furniture deals are popular, this risk is especially high.
- Multi-unit housing: In multi-unit housing, bed bugs can also spread from one infested home to other neighboring homes by crawling through walls, ceilings, and hallways. Small-town apartment complexes and rental homes are just as vulnerable as big-city buildings.
- Their resilience: “Bed bugs are some of the most resilient pests in the world, making them extremely difficult to control if brought into a home or hotel,” according to Ben Hottel, an Orkin entomologist. Once they’re in, they don’t leave on their own.
- Rapid reproduction: Once bed bugs can regularly feed, they start producing eggs, and their ability to lay a significant number of eggs daily helps populations double in just over two weeks. A small, overlooked problem can become a full-blown infestation very quickly.
How to Know If You Have Bed Bugs
One of the most frustrating things about bed bugs is how easy they are to miss. Bed bugs are small, flat, wingless insects that are reddish-brown in color and approximately one-quarter inch long before feeding. They hide during the day on beds — including mattress seams, box springs, bed frames, and headboards — and in cracks and crevices of walls, floors, and furniture, only coming out at night.
Other signs of a bed bug problem can include finding small wingless bugs in cracks and crevices around the bed, seeing small blood spots or bed bug fecal matter on bedding, or finding bed bug eggs and/or cast skins.
It’s also important to understand that a bed bug problem is not a reflection of cleanliness. Bed bugs are not a sign of a dirty home or poor personal hygiene. They can infest the most immaculate homes and the finest hotels. Anyone is at risk.
What You Can Do to Prevent Bed Bugs
Prevention is your first and best line of defense. Here are practical steps every Michigan homeowner and renter should take:
- Inspect hotel beds and furniture before unpacking, keep luggage elevated and away from beds or upholstered furniture, and wash clothing and vacuum suitcases after traveling.
- Avoid bringing in secondhand furniture without inspecting it carefully, and use mattress and box spring encasements to eliminate hiding spots.
- Reduce clutter where bed bugs could hide, especially in bedrooms, and check regularly for signs of infestation — small reddish-brown bugs, tiny rust-colored or black spots, or shed skins.
- If you think you may have bed bugs, it’s very important to do a thorough inspection and begin treatment as soon as possible — treating a bed bug infestation early will save much time and expense.
Why DIY Treatments Usually Fail
When small-town Michigan residents discover bed bugs, the instinct is often to handle it themselves. Unfortunately, that approach rarely works. Most store-bought pesticides just don’t work anymore, because bed bugs have evolved and are now tougher than ever. Moving infested items or trying heat treatments with your household dryer can also backfire — if not done properly, you risk driving bugs deeper into walls or into other rooms.
Professional detection is especially critical. Canine-assisted inspections, for example, can locate live bed bugs and viable eggs with dramatically higher accuracy than the human eye alone — a key advantage in older homes where bugs hide inside wall voids, behind outlet covers, and under baseboards.
Call a Local Michigan Expert You Can Trust
If you’re dealing with bed bugs — or simply want peace of mind — it pays to work with a pest control company that truly knows Michigan. First Choice Pest Control is a local expert serving Genesee and Shiawassee County, MI, providing trusted pest management services to keep homes pest-free. Since 2005, they’ve built their reputation on consistency, expertise, and personalized pest control programs.
Roger Chinault leads the company with 26 years of hands-on pest management experience. This isn’t a franchise with rotating staff and a call center two states away — it’s a family-owned operation where the same trained technician comes back to your property year after year. They hold Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development Pesticide Application Business License #250081, have completed Integrated Pest Management training, and have earned recognition from both Angie’s List and HomeAdvisor.
First Choice specializes in general pest control, rodent control, bed bug treatments, and canine bed bug detection. Whether you’re in Swartz Creek, Clyde Township, or anywhere across the surrounding region, don’t wait for a small problem to become an expensive nightmare. Reach out to the local professionals who know your community. For trusted, proven bed bug control clyde area residents rely on, First Choice Pest Control is ready to help you take back your home — for good.