Building the IPM Treatment Plan: the full procedure
Translate inspection findings into a least-risk, prevention-first Integrated Pest Management plan before any product is considered.
- Applies to: Service technicians, crew leads
- Frequency: Every service call (after inspection)
- Scope: Covers setting action thresholds, prioritizing non-chemical controls, and sequencing the work. Product selection, rates, and PPE defer to the label, a certified applicator, and the safety plan; this SOP decides the strategy, not the chemistry.
What you need
- Completed inspection form
- IPM decision guide
- Pest threshold reference
- Treatment plan worksheet
- Customer service history
The procedure, step by step
- Confirm the target and threshold — State the identified pest and decide whether activity exceeds the action threshold that justifies intervention. Not every sighting requires a treatment.
- Prioritize prevention and exclusion — List the non-chemical controls first: sealing entry points, removing food and water sources, sanitation, harborage removal, and habitat modification.
- Select the control method by least-risk-effective — Choose the lowest-risk method that will work — mechanical (traps, vacuuming), cultural, then targeted product use. Specific product, rate, and placement defer to the label and a certified applicator.
- Sequence interior vs exterior work — Plan the order of operations: typically address exterior pressure and entry points, then interior harborage, matching the pest's biology.
- Set the monitoring plan — Decide what you will monitor (traps, follow-up inspection) and what would trigger escalation or a different method on the next visit.
- Note customer-specific constraints — Record sensitive occupants (children, pets, allergies, aquariums, gardens), access limits, and any label-required precautions affecting the plan.
- Communicate the plan — Explain to the customer what you will do, what they must do (prep, pet removal, re-entry interval), and the expected outcome and timeline.
- Record the plan — Document the chosen strategy on the treatment plan worksheet so the service record and any follow-up are consistent.
Quality check before you finish
- Target pest and action threshold stated
- Non-chemical controls listed before any product
- Least-risk-effective method selected
- Sensitive occupants and constraints recorded
- Monitoring and escalation triggers defined
- Customer responsibilities communicated
- Plan documented before treatment begins
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 Integrated Pest Management Principles (epa.gov)
- University Extension IPM (UC IPM / land-grant extension) (ucanr.edu)
- NPMA / PestWorld (pestworld.org)
About Free IPM Treatment Plan SOP (Printable)
Free printable SOP for building an Integrated Pest Management plan — thresholds, prevention first, least-risk control. 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
What is the order of controls in an IPM plan?
IPM prioritizes prevention and non-chemical methods first — exclusion, sanitation, and habitat modification — then escalates to the least-risk effective control only when an action threshold is exceeded. EPA and university extension programs emphasize this sequence because it produces longer-lasting results. Any pesticide step still follows the label and a certified applicator.
Can the SOP tell me which pesticide the plan should use?
No. The IPM plan decides the strategy — what to seal, what to monitor, what level of intervention is warranted — but the specific product, rate, and placement come from the label and a licensed applicator. The label is the law; the plan never overrides it.
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