Follow-Up and Recheck: the full procedure
Verify the treatment worked, evaluate results against the IPM plan, and decide the next action.
- Applies to: Service technicians, crew leads
- Frequency: As scheduled per plan; typically the visit after a treatment
- Scope: Covers the evaluation step of IPM — checking monitors, confirming reduction, and escalating if thresholds remain exceeded. Any additional treatment defers to the label and a certified applicator.
What you need
- Customer service history
- Monitoring traps/data
- Flashlight
- Recheck form
- IPM plan
The procedure, step by step
- Review the prior visit — Read the last service record and IPM plan so you know the target pest, what was done, and the expected outcome.
- Check monitoring devices — Inspect and count traps and monitors placed previously to measure whether activity has dropped.
- Re-inspect the problem areas — Return to the original harborage and entry points and look for live activity, new signs, or new conducive conditions.
- Evaluate against the threshold — Compare current activity to the action threshold. Decide whether the problem is resolved, improving, or still exceeding the threshold.
- Adjust the plan if needed — If activity persists, identify why (missed harborage, untreated source, conducive condition) and revise the IPM plan rather than simply re-applying.
- Confirm customer follow-through — Verify the customer completed their exclusion or sanitation tasks; reinforce any that were missed.
- Communicate the result — Tell the customer plainly whether the issue is resolved and what happens next; reset expectations if more time or visits are needed.
- Document the recheck — Record monitor counts, current status, plan changes, and the next scheduled action.
Quality check before you finish
- Prior visit and plan reviewed first
- Monitoring devices checked and counted
- Original problem areas re-inspected
- Result evaluated against the action threshold
- Plan revised when activity persists (not just re-treated)
- Customer follow-through confirmed
- Recheck documented with next action
This is a free, source-anchored standard operating procedure (SOP) you can print and hand to staff. It documents the work sequence for a Pest Control business — not safety or regulatory rulings, which defer to the cited authorities, the applicable code, and your own health-and-safety plan. Open the tool above to print it, toggle ink-saver, or (with a free ToolFluency Business account) edit it to match your own workflow.
Sources
- EPA IPM Principles (evaluation step) (epa.gov)
- University Extension IPM (monitoring & evaluation) (extension.org)
- NPMA / PestWorld (pestworld.org)
About Free Pest Follow-Up & Recheck SOP (Printable)
Free printable SOP for pest control follow-up and recheck — evaluate results, check monitors, adjust the IPM plan. Source-anchored, no signup.
How to use
- Read the full procedure top to bottom before the work — the SOP runs in order and each step builds on the last.
- Toggle Ink-saver (black & white) for a cheaper mono print for the binder; leave it off for the full-color version.
- Click Print SOP to print or save as PDF. Print one per crew, laminate it for the binder, or attach it to the job in your scheduling system.
- Train new hires on it and have staff sign off. Found something out of date? Use the feedback link — flagged SOPs are re-researched against the source list.
Frequently asked questions
Why is evaluation a required step in IPM and not optional?
Evaluation is the closing step of the IPM cycle — EPA and extension programs include it so you confirm the method actually worked and learn from each cycle. Skipping it means you never know if you solved the problem or just suppressed it. The recheck data drives whether you adjust prevention, monitoring, or any further label-directed treatment.
If pests are still present, should I just re-spray?
Not automatically. IPM says diagnose why activity persists — a missed harborage, an untreated source, or a conducive condition — and revise the plan. Any additional product application still follows the label and a certified applicator; re-applying without diagnosis wastes product and may breach label limits.
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