An annual termite bond is generally worth it for a Polk County home because Lakeland sits in one of the heaviest combined termite-pressure zones in the United States — both eastern subterranean and Formosan subterranean termites are active in the soil, and West Indian and southeastern drywood termites are active in the structural wood. The expected-value math favors maintaining a bond. The question is which bond type, what coverage, and how to evaluate the renewal price. This page walks through the structure of Florida termite bonds, the actual probability of termite activity over a 10-year hold, the difference between retreat-only and retreat-plus-repair coverage, and the specific situations where skipping the bond can be a defensible decision. Call the number below to be connected with an FDACS-licensed Category 8E termite operator serving your Polk County address.
What a Florida termite bond actually is
A termite bond is a contractual obligation by an FDACS-licensed Category 8E pest control operator to a homeowner. It typically covers two things:
- Retreat: if active termites of the covered species are found during the bond period, the operator returns and re-treats at no additional charge.
- Repair (optional, depending on bond format): the operator pays up to a stated dollar cap for new structural damage caused by the covered species during the bond period.
The bond is renewed annually for an inspection and renewal fee. The renewal fee is the price of maintaining the contract; the initial treatment installation is a separate one-time cost. A typical Polk County bond structure looks like this:
| Bond format | Coverage | Annual renewal (Polk County) |
|---|---|---|
| Retreat-only (liquid) | Free re-treatment if termites found; no repair payment | $175 – $300 |
| Retreat-plus-repair (liquid) | Free re-treatment + up to bond cap for damage | $225 – $400 |
| Retreat-plus-repair (Sentricon) | Free monitoring, bait refill, re-treatment + repair cap | $300 – $450 |
| Subterranean + drywood combined | Both species covered + repair cap | $350 – $600 |
What’s the actual probability of termite activity in a Polk County home?
Termite probability is hard to publish at high precision because it depends on the specific structure, soil type, treatment history, and surrounding pressure. But the structural realities of Polk County make the rough probability material:
- The University of Florida IFAS Extension classifies the central Florida ridge (Lakeland, Winter Haven, Bartow, Lake Wales) as a high-pressure zone for both subterranean and drywood termites.
- Polk County records hundreds to thousands of Notice of Termite Treatment filings with FDACS every year.
- A 30-year hold on a Polk County home, untreated, carries a meaningful probability of at least one termite event during the hold.
- Even with an initial treatment, the residual fades over 7–10 years on a liquid barrier; bait systems and bonds extend the coverage window.
Expected-value math: 10-year bond cost vs. 10-year untreated risk
Consider a typical 1,800–2,400 sq ft Polk County single-family home over a 10-year hold. The bond cost side of the ledger is straightforward: $250–$400 per year × 10 years = $2,500–$4,000 total. The untreated risk side is the probability of a termite event times the cost of remediation plus damage repair.
| Untreated event | Cost to remediate | Cost to repair structural damage | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Localized subterranean activity, caught early | $1,400 – $2,800 | $500 – $3,000 | $1,900 – $5,800 |
| Established subterranean activity, structural damage | $1,800 – $3,200 | $5,000 – $25,000 | $6,800 – $28,200 |
| Localized drywood activity | $400 – $1,200 | $1,000 – $4,000 | $1,400 – $5,200 |
| Multi-area drywood activity, fumigation | $1,800 – $3,600 | $3,000 – $15,000 | $4,800 – $18,600 |
| Severe undetected damage (years of activity) | $3,000 – $6,000 | $25,000 – $100,000+ | $28,000 – $106,000+ |
The math: a 10-year bond on a Polk County home pays for itself if a single moderate event would otherwise occur. Even at relatively low estimated probability of a single event over 10 years, the expected value calculation favors maintaining the bond. The bond also produces operational benefits that don’t show up in the dollar math — annual professional inspection, early detection, documented treatment history for resale.
When skipping the bond can be defensible
- Just-treated homes inside the residual window. A home that just received a full Termidor HE treatment in the past 12–18 months has fresh residual protection, and the homeowner can defensibly choose to inspect annually rather than maintain a paid bond for the first 5–7 years.
- Homes being sold within 12 months where the buyer’s lender is not requiring an active bond.
- Homes with a Sentricon AlwaysActive system already installed and being maintained — the system is the bond mechanism; an additional layer is redundant.
- Some new construction with builder-warranted pre-construction treatment, until the builder warranty expires.
All of these defenses depend on the homeowner accepting full annual inspection responsibility and immediate action on any termite evidence (mud tubes, frass piles, swarmers, kickout holes). Skipping the bond without committing to annual inspection is poor risk management for a Polk County home.
Bond structure: what to actually look for in the contract
- Species covered. Subterranean only, drywood only, or both? Most Polk County homes need both. A subterranean-only bond is incomplete in this market.
- Retreat-only vs. retreat-plus-repair. Repair coverage costs more annually but pays out in the event that matters most.
- Dollar cap on repair. Common caps in Polk County run $100K–$1M. Higher cap usually means higher renewal.
- Transferability at sale. Confirm in writing that the bond can transfer to the next buyer (subject to inspection and fee). A non-transferable bond loses material value at sale.
- Renewal price lock vs. annual re-pricing. Some bonds lock the renewal at the initial price; others re-price annually with inflation. Confirm.
- Exclusions. Hidden walls, inaccessible areas, swimming pool decks, certain attic areas. Read the fine print.
- What voids the bond. Common voiding events: homeowner-applied treatments to soil within the treated zone, structural modifications that disturb the treated zone, lapsed renewal payment beyond a grace period.
FAQ — annual termite bonds in Lakeland
What’s the difference between retreat-only and retreat-plus-repair?
Retreat-only obligates the operator to re-treat at no cost if active termites are found, but does not pay anything toward fixing structural damage. Retreat-plus-repair covers both: free re-treatment plus a dollar cap on damage repair. For Polk County’s combined-pressure environment, retreat-plus-repair is usually the better fit.
Will my homeowner’s insurance cover termite damage?
Almost never. Standard Florida homeowner’s policies exclude termite damage as a maintenance issue. The termite bond is effectively the insurance for this specific peril. Confirm with the insurance carrier in writing if any doubt — the language in most policies is explicit.
What happens to the bond if I stop paying the renewal?
The bond lapses, typically after a 30–60 day grace period. Once lapsed, restoration usually requires a new inspection and a new treatment (especially on liquid-treated homes), not just a back-payment. Maintain renewal payments to keep the bond alive.
How do I shop a termite bond renewal?
Compare on five variables: species covered, retreat-only vs. retreat-plus-repair, dollar cap on repair, transferability, renewal price lock. Headline price alone is not enough. See the broader termite treatment guide for the full evaluation framework.
How do I find a Lakeland termite operator to quote a new bond?
Call the number on this page. Calls are routed to FDACS-licensed Category 8E termite control operators serving Polk County.
Call (XXX) XXX-XXXX — routed to FDACS-licensed Category 8E termite control operators serving Polk County, FL.