Raccoon removal: what actually happens, step by step
Raccoons are the heavyweight of attic wildlife: strong enough to tear open soffits, smart enough to defeat cheap fixes, and - critically - a rabies-vector species whose handling is tightly regulated in every state we cover. Here is what a competent removal job looks like and what the law allows.
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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
- Heavy walking, thumping, or dragging sounds in the attic, mostly at night
- A torn soffit panel, ripped shingles, or a bent gable vent
- Droppings concentrated in one attic spot (raccoons use a shared "latrine")
- Chittering or crying sounds in spring - almost always a litter of kits
- Trash cans repeatedly knocked over or a fire pit raided
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.Inspection
A technician typically checks the roofline, soffits, and chimney for entry points, and looks inside the attic for latrine sites and nesting evidence.
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2.Kit check
From roughly February through June, any raccoon in an attic is assumed to be a mother until proven otherwise. Removing her without the kits leaves them to die in your walls.
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3.Removal or eviction
Live trapping, one-way doors, or eviction techniques, depending on the situation and what state law permits for the animal afterward.
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4.Exclusion and cleanup
Sealing the entry point with metal, capping the chimney, and removing droppings - raccoon feces can carry roundworm eggs, so cleanup is a health task, not a cosmetic one.
Seasonal timing
Female raccoons den in attics and chimneys from late winter into early summer to raise kits. That is when most attic calls happen and when removal is most delicate.
Legal notes
Raccoons are a rabies-vector species. Ohio and Virginia prohibit relocating them off the property; Florida imposes a 24-hour and same-county rule. What happens to a trapped raccoon depends on your state, not on marketing language. See wildlife removal laws by state.
What it typically costs
Typical trapping jobs run roughly $300-$700. Attic cleanup and entry repairs can push a full job to $1,500 or more.
What moves the price:
- • Number of animals, and whether kits are present
- • Roof height and how hard the entry point is to reach
- • Latrine cleanup and insulation contamination
- • Structural repairs (soffit, fascia, chimney cap)
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
How long does raccoon removal take?
Trapping typically takes 3 to 7 days. Eviction with a one-way door can be faster, but jobs involving a mother with kits take longer because the kits must be handled together with her.
Can I just trap the raccoon myself?
It is usually a bad idea. Raccoons are rabies-vector animals, their droppings can carry roundworm, and most states restrict what an unlicensed person may do with a trapped raccoon. In Ohio and Virginia you could not legally relocate it anyway.
Will homeowners insurance cover raccoon damage?
Often, yes - many policies treat raccoons differently from rodents and cover the damage they cause, though usually not removal itself. Check your specific policy and document damage with photos before repairs.
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