It starts with one or two on the countertop. Then a line along the baseboard. Within a few days, you’ve got dozens of ants marching across your kitchen floor, up the cabinets, and along the windowsill. If you live in Maple Ridge, you know the drill — ant season is here, and your kitchen is their favourite destination.

Ants invading through kitchen doors, sliding glass doors, and window frames is one of the most common pest complaints in Maple Ridge, Coquitlam, and the Lower Mainland from April through September. The good news: once you understand why they’re coming in and how they’re getting in, you can shut them down.

Why Your Kitchen Is the Target

Ants are driven by three things: food, water, and shelter. Your kitchen has all three in abundance.

Food Sources

Ants have an incredible sense of smell — they can detect food residue that’s invisible to the human eye. The crumb that fell behind the toaster, the sticky spot where someone set down a juice glass, the residue inside the recycling bin — all of it registers as a neon “open” sign to foraging ants.

Sugar and grease are the biggest attractants. Ants are particularly drawn to:

Water Sources

Kitchens provide reliable moisture that ants need, especially during dry summer months. Dripping faucets, condensation around the dishwasher, damp sponges left by the sink, and even the water tray under your refrigerator can sustain an ant colony’s water needs.

Easy Access

Kitchen doors — especially sliding patio doors — are the single most common entry point for ants in Maple Ridge homes. The gap beneath a standard exterior door is more than enough for ants. Sliding doors are worse: the track collects debris that prevents a proper seal, and the weatherstripping deteriorates over time, leaving gaps on both sides and bottom.

Other common kitchen entry points include:

Which Ants Are Invading Your Maple Ridge Kitchen?

Not all ants are the same, and knowing which species you’re dealing with determines the best treatment approach.

Pavement Ants

These are the most common kitchen invaders in the Lower Mainland. They’re small (2-3mm), dark brown to black, and form very visible trails. Their colonies are usually outside — under driveways, patios, walkways, and foundation slabs — and they send foragers into your home through cracks in the foundation and gaps under doors.

Pavement ants are a nuisance but don’t cause structural damage. They’re after food and will trail anything sweet or greasy back to the colony.

Odorous House Ants

Similar in size to pavement ants but with a distinctive trait: crush one and it releases a smell often described as rotten coconut. Odorous house ants are common throughout Maple Ridge and are particularly persistent kitchen invaders. They can establish satellite colonies inside wall voids, which means the nest might actually be inside your home — not just outside.

Carpenter Ants

If the ants in your kitchen are large (6-13mm) and black, you may have carpenter ants. While they do forage in kitchens for food, their presence indoors is more concerning because it may indicate a nest inside your home’s wood structure. See our guide to carpenter ant damage for more details.

Pharaoh Ants

Small (2mm), light yellow to reddish, and extremely difficult to control. Pharaoh ants are less common in residential homes but show up occasionally, particularly in apartments and condos. They establish multiple satellite colonies and can spread quickly through a building.

How Ants Find Their Way to Your Kitchen

Understanding ant behaviour helps explain why they seem to appear out of nowhere — and why killing the ones you see doesn’t solve the problem.

Scout Ants

A colony sends out scout ants to explore for food and water. These are the first one or two ants you notice on the counter. When a scout finds a food source, it returns to the colony, laying down a chemical pheromone trail.

Trail Pheromones

Other workers follow the pheromone trail directly to the food source. This is why ants appear to march in a perfect line — they’re literally following a chemical highway. The more workers that travel the trail, the stronger the pheromone becomes, and the more ants follow it.

Why Killing Trail Ants Doesn’t Work

Wiping out a line of ants with a paper towel or spraying them with a kitchen cleaner kills those individual ants but doesn’t address the colony. The scout will return, re-lay the trail, and new workers will follow. The colony itself — which can contain tens of thousands of ants — is untouched.

This is why ant problems seem to keep coming back no matter what you do. You’re addressing the symptom (the trail) without treating the source (the colony).

How to Stop Ants From Getting Into Your Kitchen

Step 1: Cut Off the Trail

Clean the ant trail with a solution of white vinegar and water (50/50 mix). This disrupts the pheromone trail and temporarily disorients the workers. Wipe down the entire path you can see — along the baseboard, up the wall, across the counter.

Step 2: Eliminate Food Sources

This is the most important step and the one most people skip.

Step 3: Seal Entry Points

Focus on the areas where ants are entering:

Step 4: Create a Perimeter Barrier

Apply a perimeter treatment along the exterior foundation where ants are entering. This can be a commercial ant barrier spray or a natural deterrent like diatomaceous earth along the door threshold. For best results, treat:

Step 5: Address the Colony

If you want permanent results, you need to eliminate the colony — not just the foragers. Ant bait stations are more effective than contact sprays because workers carry the bait back to the colony, where it’s shared with the queen and other workers.

Place bait stations:

Important: don’t use spray insecticide and bait at the same time. Sprays kill the workers before they can carry bait back to the colony, making the bait useless.

When to Call a Professional

DIY methods work well for minor ant problems — a few ants in spring that respond to cleaning and sealing. But call a professional if:

Professional ant treatment targets the colony directly using commercial-grade baits and applications that aren’t available in hardware stores. A trained technician can also identify the species, trace the entry points, and create a treatment plan specific to your situation.

Preventing Ants Year After Year

Ant problems in Maple Ridge tend to be seasonal but recurring. The same conditions that attracted ants this year will attract them next year unless you make lasting changes:

Get Your Kitchen Ant-Free

Ants in the kitchen are frustrating, but they’re solvable. For most Maple Ridge homeowners, a combination of thorough cleaning, entry point sealing, and targeted baiting will get the problem under control. For persistent problems or large infestations, professional treatment is the fastest path to a pest-free kitchen.

Canadian Pest Control provides ant treatment for homes and businesses across Maple Ridge, Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Pitt Meadows, and the Lower Mainland. Call (778) 598-7378 for a free inspection and quote — we’re available 24/7.

Canadian Pest Control