Baiting, drilling, or soil treatment? It depends on what you need.
There isn’t one universal answer. The right method depends on whether you need to eliminate existing termites, prevent future ones, or both. Here’s how the three approaches actually compare.
Corrective or preventive?
This is the framework most homeowners aren’t told about. Treatments either fix an existing problem (corrective) or stop one before it starts (preventive). Some methods do both.
You already have termites. The goal is to wipe out the active colony and stop ongoing damage.
You may not have termites yet, or you’ve just had them treated. The goal is to keep them out for years to come.
Each method has a different role.
Side-by-side: what each treatment actually does, and what it doesn’t. The recommended choice depends on whether you’re treating an active problem, preventing a future one, or both.
Bait stations placed around your premise contain a slow-acting compound that disrupts termite molting. Workers carry it back to the colony, eliminating the queen and colony from within.
- Eliminates the entire colony at source
- Minimal disruption to your property
- Continuous monitoring of termite activity
- Does not prevent new colonies from arriving
- Slower than drilling — weeks to months
Liquid termiticide is injected into soil around the structure’s perimeter, creating a chemical barrier. Termites die on contact with the treated zone — and the barrier blocks future entries.
- Immediate barrier protection
- Kills nearby colonies on contact
- Prevents re-infestation for 3–5+ years
- Faster results than baiting
- More disruptive — drilling required
A chemical termite barrier applied to the soil before a building’s foundation is laid. The most cost-effective long-term protection — the building is termite-proofed from the start.
- Strongest preventive method available
- Termite-proofing built into the structure
- Protects the foundation from below
- Long-lasting, full-coverage barrier
- Only possible during construction phase
Detailed comparison at a glance.
The full picture across the dimensions that matter most when choosing a termite treatment.
| Factor | الاصطياد | Drilling (Barrier) | Pre-Construction Soil |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nature | Corrective only | Corrective + Preventive | Preventive only |
| How it works | Bait carried back to colony, killing it from within | Chemical barrier in soil kills termites on contact | Soil termite-proofed before foundation laid |
| Disruption | Minimal — outdoor stations | Moderate — drilling required | None — done before building |
| Time to effect | Weeks to months | Immediate barrier | Active from day 1 |
| Lifespan | Continuous (with monitoring) | 3–5+ years | Long-term, full coverage |
| Pesticide volume | Very small, sealed in stations | Larger, injected into soil | Larger, applied before flooring |
| Re-infestation prevention | No — only colony elimination | Yes — barrier blocks entry | Yes — strongest prevention |
| Best for | Active infestation, ongoing monitoring | Existing structures, urgent treatment | New construction, long-term planning |
| Pricing reference | From RM 1,500 | From RM 2,500 | RM 4–6 per m² |
Pick the scenario that sounds like you.
Three common situations — and the methods we’d recommend for each.
Active infestation needs corrective action. Drilling provides immediate barrier protection. Baiting can be added to ensure colony elimination at source — and provide ongoing monitoring afterwards.
This is the cheapest, longest-lasting protection — but only possible before flooring is laid. Don’t miss this window. After construction, options are limited to drilling, which costs more for less coverage.
Bait stations placed around the perimeter act as monitoring sentinels. If termites arrive, they’re intercepted before reaching your structure — and you get early warning during routine inspections.
What termite baiting looks like.
A short video showing how the baiting system works on site. Bait stations are installed strategically, termites are intercepted, and the active ingredient travels back through the colony.
Effective baiting isn’t just about placing stations — it’s about placement, timing, and monitoring. That’s where 58 years of termite work makes the difference.
Are “organic” termite baits the answer?
We’re often asked. Here’s our honest position — based on real-world results, not marketing.
Our baits are safe and effective — but not “organic.”
While our baits aren’t labelled “organic,” they are rigorously tested for safety and effectiveness. Our team is professionally trained in their proper use. We prioritise client and environmental safety in every termite control practice.
Many products in the market claim “organic” but lack official organic certification. We approach such claims with healthy skepticism — particularly around efficacy, palatability to termites, and long-term effectiveness.
In our experience, some “organic” baits (often containing boric acid) have shown limited results — raising real concerns about incomplete colony elimination and quick re-infestation. We’d rather use a proven, registered product that actually works than a label that sounds reassuring.
How much does termite treatment cost?
Reference rates for the three methods. Final quotation depends on premise size, infestation severity, and chemical preference — confirmed after free inspection.
Termite Treatment Costs
Common questions on treatment choice.
The questions we hear most when customers are weighing their options.
If I do baiting, will I still get termites again later?
Possibly. Baiting eliminates the existing colony but doesn’t create a barrier — so a new colony from elsewhere could reach your property in future. This is why baiting is best paired with ongoing monitoring (which our service includes), or combined with drilling for both elimination and prevention.
If you want both, ask us about combining baiting and drilling — common in long-term termite management.
Why is pre-construction soil treatment so much cheaper per m²?
Because we’re applying the chemical directly to bare soil before flooring is laid — no drilling, no obstruction, no labour-intensive perimeter work. Application is fast, coverage is full, and the chemical sits exactly where it needs to.
It’s the same reason waterproofing during construction costs less than retrofitting it later. Always plan termite protection at the build stage if you can.
Can I do drilling without baiting, or vice versa?
Yes — both work as standalone treatments. Drilling alone provides corrective + preventive protection for 3–5+ years. Baiting alone provides colony elimination + ongoing monitoring (but no preventive barrier).
The “right” choice depends on your priorities: speed of results, level of disruption, budget, and whether long-term prevention matters to you.
How long does drilling barrier protection last?
Typically 3 to 5 years for the protection to last with full effectiveness. Some properties get more depending on soil conditions, chemical type, and environmental factors. We recommend re-treatment when the barrier reaches the end of its effective life — or sooner if termite activity is detected nearby.
Are these treatments safe for my family and pets?
Yes, when properly applied. Baits are sealed inside tamper-resistant stations. Drilling termiticide is injected into soil at depths and concentrations that don’t expose occupants. Pre-construction soil treatment is applied before flooring, so there’s no contact path to occupants.
All chemicals we use are registered with Malaysian authorities and applied by trained operators following strict safety protocols.
Should I trust “organic” termite bait sellers?
Be cautious. Many “organic” claims lack actual organic certification, and in our experience, products like boric-acid-based baits often show limited effectiveness — risking incomplete colony elimination and quick re-infestation.
We use registered, tested baits proven to work. We’d rather be honest about what’s effective than market a label that sounds reassuring but doesn’t deliver.
Let us look at your specific situation.
Free site inspection. Honest assessment of which method (or combination) is right for your premise. No obligation, no pressure.