Honey bees need the right approach.
Honey bees can move into walls, roofs, soffits, sheds, and other protected spaces. We look at the situation, explain the options, and work carefully to remove the bees while protecting the property as much as possible.
Removal Options
Swarms
Clustered honey bees on trees, fences, posts, or structures.
Established Colonies
Bees living inside walls, sheds, outbuildings, soffits, or roof lines.
Relocation
When possible, honey bees are handled with live removal and relocation in mind.
Before, During & After
These photos are organized to show the normal order of a structural honey bee job: finding the bees, exposing the comb, removing the colony, and cleaning the area.

1. Bees Located
Honey bees clustered inside a structure.

2. Entry Point
Bees using a small opening to access a wall cavity.

3. Comb Exposed
Honeycomb and bees found inside the structure.

4. Large Comb
Established comb carefully exposed during removal.

5. Wall Cavity
Comb and bees inside a vertical wall space.

6. After Removal
The same type of space after removal work.
Structure work matters.
Honey bee colonies can hide behind siding, soffits, roof lines, and wall cavities. Construction experience helps us understand where bees are going and how to approach the removal carefully.