Confirm mouse evidence
We separate mouse signs from larger rodent activity by droppings, rub marks, gnawing, nesting material, and where activity repeats.
Stop house mice before one gap becomes a repeat route. Envexa inspects kitchens, garages, basements, utility lines, and exterior openings, then builds the control plan around the way mice are actually moving through your home.
Tell us where you are seeing droppings, noises, or damage.
House mice usually show up as a pattern: droppings along edges, noises in walls, nesting in stored items, and repeated movement between food, shelter, and tiny entry gaps. Envexa maps that pattern before recommending the service path.

We separate mouse signs from larger rodent activity by droppings, rub marks, gnawing, nesting material, and where activity repeats.
Mice prefer walls, corners, cabinets, utility lines, garage edges, basement ledges, and protected clutter instead of open rooms.
Monitoring and trapping are positioned around active runways so the program responds to how mice are actually moving.
Choose the service that fits. Check your price to unlock address-based pricing, then confirm home and lot size before checkout.
Mouse monitoring and mouse control are included with residential recurring plans when plan terms apply. Rats and specialty pests stay separate so the scope is clear before service begins.
Covered with scheduled service and free callbacks between regular visits.
Both residential plans include mouse coverage when the issue fits plan terms. 365+ adds seasonal mosquito service.
Mouse problems can look small until they repeat. We keep the service focused on evidence, routes, and prevention so the plan is easier to understand and easier to follow up on.
Droppings, gnawing, nesting, rub marks, and noises guide where control belongs.
A mouse program is stronger when the garage, foundation, utility lines, and storage areas are reviewed.
Covered plan customers have a clear callback path when mouse activity returns between scheduled visits.
Short answers for homeowners comparing service options before scheduling.
Yes. Envexa provides mouse control for Cincinnati homes, including activity inspection, trapping or monitoring guidance, and entry-point notes.
The inspection checks fresh droppings, noise reports, garage seals, utility gaps, foundation edges, stored food, basement routes, and likely nesting areas.
Basic entry-point notes are part of the inspection mindset. Larger sealing or repair work is scoped separately so the recommendation stays clear.
Envexa can inspect the activity, explain the plan, and connect mouse control with exclusion where the structure needs it.
Use the mouse profiles to compare droppings, nesting areas, food pressure, and entry points around the home.
Rodents · Jan through DecHouse Mouse guideSmall mice that fit through dime-sized gaps. Mice are the rodent covered by Envexa365 and Envexa365+ when plan terms apply.
Rodents · Jan through DecDeer Mouse guideWhite-footed field mice common near woods, fields, and outbuildings. They can carry hantavirus risk, so droppings should be handled car...
Rodents · Jan through DecWhite-Footed Mouse guideA common woodland mouse around Southwest Ohio properties. It often enters garages, basements, and sheds from wooded or field-edge lots.
Rodents · Year-roundMeadow Vole guideShort-tailed rodents that damage turf, beds, and ground cover with surface runways. Voles are usually an exterior lawn and landscape is...Yes. Mouse monitoring and mouse control are included with Envexa 365 and Envexa 365+ residential plans when plan terms apply. Rats are not included and are quoted separately.
Mouse droppings are smaller and rice-shaped. Rat signs are usually larger, heavier, and may include burrows, larger gnawing, exterior routes, or stronger rub marks. If evidence points to rats, we scope that separately.
We identify likely entry points during service. Minor notes may be part of the inspection, while larger exclusion or sealing work is scoped separately so the materials and access are clear.
Common entry areas include garage door seals, foundation gaps, utility penetrations, vents, siding transitions, basement openings, and cluttered storage areas near exterior walls.