Healing by nature
What to Do When You Find a Tick at Home (and How to Prevent Health Risks and Infestations)

Short answer: remove safely, clean up, monitor symptoms, and tighten prevention for pets, home, and yard.
Immediate Steps
- Protect yourself: wear gloves if available; avoid bare-hand contact.
- Remove correctly: use fine-tipped tweezers, grip close to the skin, pull straight up—no twisting or crushing.
- Clean: wash bite area and hands with soap and water or 70% alcohol.
- Save or discard safely: seal in a small container/bag (note the date) or seal in tape/flush. Never crush.
- Disinfect the spot: wipe the floor/surface and check nearby crevices.
If the Tick Is Attached to Skin
- Remove immediately with the same tweezer method.
- For 14 days, watch for expanding redness, fever, headache, body aches, fatigue, or joint pain.
- Seek medical care if symptoms appear; early treatment matters.
Prevent an Infestation
- Pets: check ears/neck/armpits/toes after walks; use vet-recommended preventives (dogs and cats differ); wash bedding on hot.
- Home: vacuum baseboards/corners/cracks; hot-wash or 10 min in hot dryer for outdoor clothing; seal gaps and reduce clutter.
- Yard: keep grass short; remove leaf litter/brush; add a gravel/wood-chip border; store wood neatly and deter rodents/wildlife.
Personal Protection Outdoors
- Wear long sleeves/pants tucked into socks; closed shoes; light colors help you spot ticks.
- Use tick repellents on skin (DEET, picaridin, IR3535, or oil of lemon eucalyptus) as directed.
- Consider permethrin-treated clothing/gear (never on skin).
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Crushing a tick with fingers.
- Using heat, oil, nail polish, or alcohol to “make it detach.”
- Ignoring symptoms after a bite.
FAQ
- Is it dangerous to find a tick at home? Yes—there’s disease risk and the chance more ticks came in. Clean and inspect everyone.
- Do I need a doctor every time? Not always. If there was a bite or symptoms develop, seek care.
- Can I crush the tick? No. Remove with tweezers and discard safely.
- Are pets always to blame? No. Ticks can also hitchhike on clothing, shoes, or gear.
14-Day Watchlist
- Expanding redness/rash
- Fever or chills
- Headache, body aches, unusual fatigue
- Joint pain or swelling