Sentricon® Always Active™ bait stations protect your home from subterranean termites — with up to $1,000,000 in damage repair coverage. No drilling, no tank trucks, no concrete cutting.
For termite control in Alabama, EnviroCare installs the Sentricon® Always Active™ bait system — a method that eliminates the entire subterranean termite colony rather than only treating the soil you can see. Most liquid termite control services create a chemical barrier that requires drilling through your slab, patio, and driveway, then loses strength and needs retreatment every five to seven years. Sentricon® stations sit in the ground around your home perimeter, so there is no drilling, no concrete cutting, and no tank trucks in the yard.
Termites cause damage quietly, and an active infestation can go unnoticed until it reaches structural wood. With Sentricon®, foraging termites carry the bait back to the colony, collapsing it from the inside — which stops both an existing infestation and future ones. Every protected home includes annual monitoring and one Wood-Destroying Organism (WDO) inspection letter per year, the document lenders require for refinancing or selling.
Behind it stands EnviroCare-backed coverage: up to $1,000,000 in damage repair coverage while we maintain your Sentricon® protection. That coverage is backed by EnviroCare directly. Installation takes most homes one to two hours, and you do not need to be an existing pest control customer to start.
Alabama's humidity, mild winters, and clay-heavy soil make it one of the most active subterranean termite regions in the country. A single colony can number in the hundreds of thousands and forage silently through floor joists, sills, and framing for years before any sign shows. By the time you notice mud tubes, hollow-sounding wood, or discarded wings on a windowsill, the damage is often already done — which is why protection has to be continuous rather than a one-time treatment you hope holds.
Watch for the early warning signs of termites: mud tubes running up your foundation, piers, or crawlspace walls; wood that sounds hollow when tapped or paint that looks rippled or bubbled; discarded wings near windows and doors after a spring swarm; doors or windows that suddenly stick from subtle warping; and frass or visible galleries in damaged wood. If you spot any of these, schedule a free WDO inspection — early action is the difference between a monitoring plan and a repair bill.