Commercial Bat Removal Millcreek, UT
Commercial bat removal for Utah businesses: warehouses, schools, churches, offices, multifamily, and retail. Inspection, phased exclusion, guano remediation, and documentation your insurer and tenants can rely on.
Millcreek at a glance
- County
- Salt Lake County
- Population
- 63,380 (2020 census)
- Elevation
- 4,285 ft
- Settled
- 2016
Local data from the U.S. Census and Wikidata.
Commercial Bat Removal in Millcreek
A bat colony in a commercial building is a liability and a health exposure, not just a nuisance. Utah Wildlife Specialists provides commercial-scale bat work across the Wasatch Front: a documented inspection of the full building envelope, one-way exclusion timed to Utah Division of Wildlife Resources guidance, guano remediation under containment, and permanent sealing with commercial-grade materials. Bats are protected in Utah, and the DWR says not to seal or exclude them from May through August while flightless pups are in the roost, so we plan the work around the legal calendar and keep your operations running while we do it.
Utah Wildlife Specialists serves businesses, property managers, and facility teams in Millcreek, Salt Lake County, and across all of Utah. Call (801) 675-8829 to schedule an inspection and request a phone consultation. Same-day appointments are available.
Why Commercial Bat Removal Matters in Millcreek, Utah
Commercial properties in the Millcreek corridor of Salt Lake County face bat pressure from Millcreek Canyon's natural roost populations combined with the insect-generating irrigation systems of adjacent residential and commercial landscaping. Large flat-roofed retail and office buildings on Millcreek's commercial strips have parapet walls, rooftop mechanical penetrations, and HVAC curbs that are common bat colony entry points. Guano on commercial HVAC equipment accelerates corrosion and creates maintenance and liability issues. Utah Wildlife Specialists provides commercial bat inspections for Millcreek office, retail, and medical properties, develops UDWR-compliant large-scale exclusion plans, and seals all identified bat entry points to protect building equipment and meet building health standards.
What is included
- Commercial inspection. We survey the full structure, inside and out: roofline, parapets, expansion joints, rooftop units, soffits, and loading areas. You get a map of active entry points, an estimate of colony size, and a measured read on guano accumulation.
- Exclusion at scale. One-way devices go up at every active entry point once the season allows, letting bats leave to feed and blocking re-entry. On a large building the devices stay up longer, and we monitor until the colony is confirmed out.
- Guano remediation. Accumulated guano can harbor the fungus that causes histoplasmosis, so we contain the area, suppress dust, remove the material under controlled conditions, and decontaminate surfaces, scheduled around your operating hours.
- Documentation and prevention. Every job produces a written record: inspection report, scope of work, methods used, and warranty terms, the paperwork owners, insurers, and tenants ask for. Permanent sealing and optional maintenance inspections keep the next colony out.
Common questions
Do we have to close the building during bat removal?
Usually no. Exclusion happens at the roost entry points on the building exterior, so the business stays open while the work runs. Guano remediation inside occupied space is contained, ventilated, and scheduled around your hours, often evenings or weekends.
Is bat guano in a workplace an OSHA or health issue?
It can be. Accumulated guano can harbor Histoplasma capsulatum, the fungus that causes histoplasmosis, and the CDC and NIOSH publish workplace guidance for occupational exposure to bat droppings. Professional remediation with proper containment and respiratory protection is the documented way to handle it.
Can a business remove bats during maternity season?
No. The Utah Division of Wildlife Resources says not to seal or exclude bats from May through August, and does not permit colony removal from June through August except for a genuine human health and safety issue. During that window we inspect, assess guano, write the remediation plan, and schedule exclusion for the day the season ends.
What documentation do we get for insurance or tenants?
A written inspection report, a scope of work, the exclusion and remediation methods used, before-and-after documentation, and the warranty terms. Property managers use this for insurance claims, tenant communication, and compliance records.
Other Utah cities we serve
We serve all of Utah. Here are nearby service areas.
Millcreek commercial bat removal, done right.
Call for a phone consultation. Written warranty. UDWR licensed. Same-day available. Call to schedule an inspection.
