Long Island

Attic & Wildlife Remediation Cost on Long Island

By Ian Ginsberg, COO · Last updated 2026-06-05

On Long Island, wildlife remediation starts around $2,800 and runs to $8,500 or more for a full restoration with new insulation. Nassau and Suffolk run above the national average, with higher labor costs and older coastal housing both pushing the number up.

Why isn't there a "$200 mouse" on this page?

Because there's no such job. A single trap with no sealing is a subscription, not a fix. The next mouse uses the same opening within weeks, and the homeowner pays again.

What homeowners actually need, and what we do, is remediation: get the animals out, clean what they left behind, and seal the building envelope so it doesn't recur. That work starts at $2,800. If someone quotes you $200 for "mouse removal," ask them what happens in month two. The honest answer is the mice come back, because nothing was sealed.

This is the part most homeowners don't know going in. You search "mice removal" because those are the words you have. But removal alone isn't the job. Remediation is.

What kind of work are we talking about?

Three things get bundled together in most homeowners' heads: getting the animal out, cleaning what it left, and putting the attic back together. On a real remediation job they happen together, in sequence. The inspection shows how much of each your attic needs.

Wildlife removal and exclusion is the eviction plus sealing the openings. Trapping without sealing is a subscription, not a fix.

Attic cleanup and decontamination is the part most homeowners skip until they regret it. Droppings, urine, and nesting material don't ventilate out. They sit in the insulation, and the air you breathe runs through them.

Attic restoration and new insulation is the rebuild: old contaminated insulation removed, the attic floor sanitized, openings sealed permanently, new insulation installed to a real R-value.

What it costs (Long Island, 2026)

Every number below assumes the full job: removal, decontamination, and whole-envelope sealing. These are starting points, not quotes.

ServiceTypical Long Island job (2026)Link
Mice remediation (removal + decon + whole-envelope sealing)$2,800 to $4,500/mice-removal
Rat remediation + whole-envelope sealing$2,800 to $5,000/rat-removal
Squirrel remediation + exclusion$2,800 to $5,000/squirrel-removal
Raccoon remediation + cleanup + repair$3,500 to $7,000/raccoon-removal
Bat eviction + exclusion + guano decon$3,500 to $7,000/bat-removal
Bird removal + roost cleanupCall for inspection/bird-removal
Attic rodent decontamination$2,800 to $9,000/attic-rodent-cleanup
Attic restoration (four-phase rebuild)$5,000 to $8,500 typical/attic-restoration
Crawl space encapsulation$3,500 to $16,000+/crawl-space

Insulation, priced as line items within a job (not sold standalone): removal $1.25 to $5.00 / sq ft, and new blown-in cellulose (R-38) $1.60 to $2.10 / sq ft installed. The Long Island labor premium lifts these above the NJ rates.

We don't sell light attic cleanouts or preventive sealing as standalone services. Both are part of a remediation job, not a job on their own. If your attic is clean and you just want it sealed before anything gets in, that work still runs through a full inspection and proposal.

What drives the price on Long Island

  • Nassau and Suffolk labor and disposal costs run above the national median, which lifts the whole band versus NJ.
  • Coastal salt air degrades exterior sealing materials faster, so Long Island exclusion work specs heavier-gauge galvanized or stainless hardware cloth, a real cost difference, not an upsell.
  • Suffolk's older shingle-style and Cape housing stock has high opening counts along soffits and rooflines.

What this kind of work doesn't cover

An attic remediation contractor's lane is narrower than most homeowners realize. Three jobs fall outside it:

  • HVAC ductwork repair. Different trade, different license, different insurance. If a cost quote a homeowner is comparing includes ductwork, it's coming from a different category of company.
  • Ongoing pesticide service. Remediation companies handle one-time wildlife exclusion and rodent-proofing. Monthly pest control is a separate, recurring service with different licensing (a state pesticide-applicator license).
  • Vermiculite removal. Pre-1990 homes occasionally have it, and a significant share contains asbestos. Vermiculite is a licensed asbestos abatement job, not an attic-remediation job. Any contractor offering to "just vacuum it out" on a cost call should be treated as a flag.

What a real job includes (regardless of price)

If you get a quote that doesn't include these items, you're looking at a partial fix:

  • Inspection findings with photos of every potential opening on the roofline
  • Specific removal method named (one-way device, hand-removal of kits, mechanical traps inside)
  • Sealing materials specified (quarter-inch galvanized steel hardware cloth, screwed and sealed. Foam alone fails on raccoons, squirrels, and rats)
  • PPE listed for the crew if contamination is biohazard (Tyvek suits, P100 respirators)
  • HEPA-vacuum disposal for contaminated insulation, not a shop vac
  • Drywall, fascia (the trim board behind the gutter), soffit (the underside of a roof overhang) repair where wildlife damaged them
  • Written warranty
  • The contractor's state license or registration number on the proposal

What not to do

  • Don't sign a flat one-line quote with no breakdown.
  • Don't accept "trap-and-go" without permanent sealing. New animals rotate through the same opening.
  • Don't accept foam-only or caulk-only sealing. Raccoons rip foam. Squirrels chew through it in days. Rats grind through caulk.
  • Don't blow new insulation on top of contaminated old. The smell comes back, the bacteria stay, the homeowner pays again in six months.
  • Don't pay 100% upfront. A 10% to 50% deposit is the norm.

Comparing regions?

See the national cost guide for U.S. context, or the New Jersey cost guide for NJ figures.

Attic Fanatics offers a free in-attic inspection across Nassau and Suffolk County. Schedule an inspection or call (516) 363-4326.