Attic cleanup and exclusion: the half of the job most people skip
Getting the animal out is half the job. What remains in the attic - droppings, urine-soaked insulation, nesting material, and the pheromone trail that advertises "vacancy" to the next animal - is the other half. Exclusion and decontamination are what decide whether you make this call again next year.
Get connected about attic cleanup & exclusion now
Call (833) 555-0100Calls answered 24/7. No obligation.
EmergencyAnimalRemoval.com is an independent connection service. We are not a government animal control agency and do not directly perform wildlife removal. When you call, you may be connected with an independent, third-party wildlife removal provider or a partner call center. We may be compensated when callers are connected with a partner provider. Availability, services, pricing, and licensing vary by location.
Signs of the problem
- A resolved animal problem, with droppings and tunneled insulation left behind
- Ammonia or musk odor from the attic hatch
- Insulation visibly compressed, tunneled, or stained
- Recurring animal problems year after year - the signature of missing exclusion
What the process typically involves
Providers vary; this describes the industry-standard approach, not a guarantee of any specific provider\u2019s method.
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1.Contamination assessment
Technicians typically grade the attic: spot cleanup, partial insulation replacement, or full remediation. Raccoon latrines and bat guano get special handling for roundworm and histoplasmosis risk.
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2.Removal and decontamination
HEPA-filtered vacuuming of droppings, removal of contaminated insulation, and antimicrobial fogging.
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3.Air-seal and re-insulate
Replacing insulation to current code depth - often an energy-bill upgrade over what was there.
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4.Whole-house exclusion
Every vulnerable point gets metal: gable and ridge vents screened, chimney capped, roof-soffit intersections and gaps sealed with flashing or hardware cloth.
Seasonal timing
Exclusion is best done immediately after removal, in any season - with one caveat: bat-related timing windows (see the bat exclusion page) control when that piece can happen.
Legal notes
Cleanup itself is not wildlife-permit work, but any exclusion involving active animals falls under state operator rules, and bat exclusion timing is legally restricted in Florida, Ohio, and Georgia. See wildlife removal laws by state.
What it typically costs
Spot cleanup starts around $500. Full attic remediation with insulation replacement commonly runs $1,500-$10,000 depending on attic size and contamination.
What moves the price:
- • Attic square footage and insulation depth
- • Contamination grade (spot versus full remediation)
- • Species involved (raccoon latrine and bat guano cost more to handle safely)
- • Number of exclusion points across the roofline
Ranges reflect typical figures from national cost guides — not quotes. Actual pricing comes from the provider after an inspection. Full breakdown in the cost guide.
Frequently asked questions
Is old animal contamination in the attic actually dangerous?
It can be. Raccoon droppings can carry roundworm eggs that remain viable for years, and disturbed bat guano can release histoplasmosis spores. This is why remediation uses HEPA equipment and respirators rather than a broom.
Do I really need to replace the insulation?
Only the contaminated portion - but urine saturation spreads further than it looks, and compressed, tunneled insulation has lost its R-value anyway. Many homeowners find the energy savings offset part of the cost.
What does "exclusion" actually include?
A whole-roofline pass: screened gable and ridge vents, chimney cap, sealed roof-soffit intersections, and metal over every gap larger than a quarter. Done properly, it addresses the entry points for every species at once - which is why it is the best money in this entire industry.
Available in these states
Talk to someone about your animal problem now
Call (833) 555-0100Calls answered 24/7. No obligation.
EmergencyAnimalRemoval.com is an independent connection service. We are not a government animal control agency and do not directly perform wildlife removal. When you call, you may be connected with an independent, third-party wildlife removal provider or a partner call center. We may be compensated when callers are connected with a partner provider. Availability, services, pricing, and licensing vary by location.
Last reviewed: 2026-07-04