Pest Control Leads — Scrape Google Maps for Pest Control Businesses
This page turns a single Google Maps search into a clean CSV of pest control businesses in any city. Run a search like "pest control in Orlando" or "exterminator in Dallas" and every matching company comes back as one row — name, full address, phone, website, category, star rating, and review count — with a flag on the ones that have no website at all. No code, no API: fill in the search, watch it run live, and download the file.
It is built for two audiences. Agencies, web designers, and marketers who sell to pest control firms get a pre-qualified prospect list — the no-website flag points at seasonal, recurring-revenue businesses that go invisible right when demand spikes, plus the number to reach them. Pest control owners use it to scout the market: pull every exterminator and pest-control service nearby, sort by reviews, and see who is capturing the local search and who never got online.
What's in every row
Each pest control company lands as its own row with consistent columns, so the local field becomes a list you can qualify and work in order.
Business name & category
The company name and Google's label — pest control service or exterminator.
Full address
Street, city, state, and zip, ready for territory mapping or a mailed offer.
Phone number
The listing's public number — the direct line to owners who field urgent calls all day.
Website, or the no-website flag
The site URL when there is one, and a clear flag on the companies with none — your prime web-design prospects.
Rating & review count
Stars and review volume, so a well-reviewed exterminator with no web presence is easy to spot and prioritize.
How to turn it into clients
Pest control runs on two engines: urgent one-off calls — bed bugs, a wasp nest, termites — and the recurring quarterly plans that are the real profit center. Both reward a website. The urgent searcher wants a click-to-call and reviews right now; the plan customer wants to sign up online. A well-reviewed exterminator with no site captures neither. Build a demo with an emergency call button, service pages by pest, their real reviews, and a recurring-plan signup form, and lead with the link already built.
Time outreach a few weeks before your region's spring and summer bug season, when "exterminator near me" searches spike and the missed-calls story is about to come true. Like HVAC, the recurring-plan angle gives your pitch a growth story, not just a visibility one: sell the build flat and the hosting monthly, and frame the signup form as the subscription engine that turns one-time customers into quarterly revenue.
Filter to the best-fit prospects
Sort by rating and review count and start at the top — a well-reviewed pest control company with no website is a durable, growing business that is only missing the plan-signup engine, which is exactly what you are selling. Skip zero-review listings that may be dormant, and if you can, time the batch so you are calling right as seasonal demand ramps and the pitch lands hardest.
How it works
Search your city
"pest control in Orlando", "exterminator in Dallas", "termite inspection in Tampa" — or sweep the category city-wide.
Set your cap
Choose how many businesses to pull. The run holds only its worst-case cost, never more than your balance.
Watch it run live
Pest control companies stream in with a live counter — flip on the no-website filter first to keep only prospects.
Download your CSV
Billed per place scraped, the unused hold refunded, and the file opens straight in Excel or Google Sheets.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get pest control companies without a website?
Yes. Every row flags whether the business has a website, and a filter can keep only the exterminators with none — the pre-qualified list for a plan-signup site or marketing pitch. Name, phone, address, rating, and reviews come with each one, so you can start with the best-reviewed prospects.
How current is the data?
It is as current as Google Maps itself. Each run pulls live listings the moment you start it, so phone numbers, ratings, and review counts reflect what is on Google that day — not a stale list sold and resold for months.
How much does it cost?
Runs are $8 per 1,000 results, and every new account starts with $5.00 in free credits — enough to pull every exterminator in a metro before you pay anything. You are billed per result scraped, never for your cap, failed runs are refunded in full, and contact columns are included at no extra cost.