"Phil is not only a great guy, but he genuinely knows how to solve any problem you throw at him, and we've certainly had a few over the years."
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"Had an amazing experience. They were very quick and efficient, I couldn't have asked for anything more. Phil and his team did an amazing job and couldn't recommend more."
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"Phil and Cooper did a fantastic job cleaning our carpet, rugs and furniture."
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Short answer: fire ants are a declared pest with biosecurity significance in Queensland, distinct from general household ants, and South East Queensland including the Gold Coast sits within the fire ant biosecurity zone. A suspected sighting should be reported to Biosecurity Queensland rather than treated as a normal ant problem or sprayed with home pesticide.
Written by Phil, CPH Services Gold Coast. Carpet cleaning technician and licensed pest control technician, working Gold Coast properties since 2011. IICRC accredited. Three Best Rated Best Business, 2016 to 2026.
How fire ants differ from general ants
Fire ants are a specific, reddish brown species, roughly 2 to 6mm and noticeably variable in size within the same nest, unlike the more uniform ants most Gold Coast households deal with. Their nests typically form as dome shaped mounds of loose soil, without the clear single entry hole many other ant species leave.
Why fire ants are a biosecurity matter, not just a pest problem
Fire ants are a declared pest under a national eradication program, and South East Queensland, including the Gold Coast, sits within the fire ant biosecurity zone. This is a different category entirely to general household ants, general pest control and a government biosecurity response are not the same thing, and treating a suspected fire ant sighting like an ordinary ant problem misses the point of why reporting matters.
What to do if you find a suspected fire ant nest
Avoid disturbing the nest, keep people and pets away from it, and report it to Biosecurity Queensland rather than treating it yourself with home pesticide or waiting for a routine pest visit. Early, accurate reporting is what the eradication program actually depends on.
General ant control vs fire ant reporting
For ordinary ants around the kitchen, garden or outdoor areas, our standard general pest control applies as normal. Fire ants specifically are outside that scope, similar in principle to why termites get referred to a specialist rather than treated as general pest work, this is a declared biosecurity matter, not a routine callout.
Got a pest problem and not sure where it fits? Call 1300 85 48 28 and describe what you are seeing, we will tell you honestly whether it is something we treat.
Got questions? Straight answers below. Or skip ahead:
Fire ants are reddish brown, roughly 2 to 6mm and vary in size within the same nest, and their nests typically appear as dome shaped mounds of loose soil without a clear entry hole in the middle, unlike many other ant species. If you suspect fire ants, treat identification as uncertain and report it rather than guessing.
Do I need to report fire ants in Queensland?
Yes. Fire ants are a declared pest under a national biosecurity eradication program, and South East Queensland, including the Gold Coast, sits within the fire ant biosecurity zone. Suspected sightings should be reported to Biosecurity Queensland rather than treated as an ordinary ant problem.
Does CPH treat fire ants?
No. Fire ants fall under a government biosecurity eradication program rather than standard general pest control, similar in principle to why we refer termite issues to a specialist. If you have a suspected fire ant sighting, report it to Biosecurity Queensland rather than treating it yourself or waiting for a general pest visit.
What happens after a fire ant sighting is reported?
Biosecurity Queensland's program handles suspected fire ant reports directly, including confirming identification and coordinating treatment where needed. This sits outside general pest control and is managed as its own dedicated process.
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