You open a bag of flour and find small worms. Or you spot tiny moths fluttering around the kitchen ceiling. Or you see webbing inside a cereal box that definitely didn’t come from the factory.

Pantry moths — specifically Indian meal moths — are one of the most common stored product pests in Canadian homes. They’re not dangerous, but they contaminate food, they’re stubborn to eliminate, and they can infest your entire pantry if you don’t catch them early.

Here’s how to identify them, clean up an infestation, and make sure they don’t come back.

What Are Pantry Moths?

The Indian meal moth (Plodia interpunctella) is the most common pantry pest in BC. Adults are small moths, about 8–10 mm long, with distinctive two-toned wings — the front half is pale grey or tan, and the back half is a coppery reddish-brown.

But the adults aren’t the problem. It’s the larvae (small cream-coloured caterpillars, about 12 mm long) that do the damage. Larvae feed inside food packages, contaminating products with webbing, frass (droppings), and shed skins.

Common Pantry Moth Foods

Indian meal moths infest a wide range of dry goods:

They can chew through thin plastic bags and cardboard — so original packaging is no barrier.

How Pantry Moths Get Into Your Home

In almost every case, you brought them home from the store. Eggs or larvae are already inside the food packaging when you buy it. The products look fine on the shelf, but microscopic eggs are present in the packaging, and they hatch in your pantry.

This isn’t a cleanliness issue. Pantry moths infest spotless kitchens just as readily as messy ones. The source is almost always a contaminated product, not a dirty home.

Less commonly, adult moths can fly in through open windows or doors, but the store-bought product route is by far the most common.

Signs of a Pantry Moth Infestation

Step-by-Step Cleanup

Step 1: Find the Source

Inspect every dry food item in your pantry. Open every package — even sealed ones. Look for larvae, webbing, and clumping. The source is often something tucked in the back that you forgot about: an old bag of birdseed, a half-used package of flour, or dried pet treats.

Step 2: Dispose of Infested Items

Throw away anything that shows signs of infestation. Be thorough — if you’re unsure about a product, toss it. Seal infested food in plastic bags before putting it in the garbage, and take the garbage outside immediately.

Step 3: Empty and Deep Clean the Pantry

Remove everything from the pantry — every item, every shelf liner. Then:

Step 4: Use Pheromone Traps

After cleaning, place pantry moth pheromone traps in the pantry. These use a sticky surface with a moth pheromone lure to attract and trap adult male moths. They won’t eliminate the infestation on their own, but they serve two purposes:

Replace traps every 2–3 months.

Step 5: Restock Smart

When you return food to the pantry:

Prevention: Keeping Pantry Moths Out

When to Call a Professional

Most pantry moth infestations can be resolved with thorough cleanup and airtight storage. But contact a pest control professional if:

For related kitchen pest issues, our guide to what attracts cockroaches in clean homes covers another common kitchen invader.

Get Rid of Pantry Moths for Good

Pantry moths are frustrating but manageable. The combination of thorough cleanup, airtight storage, and monitoring traps resolves most infestations within 2–4 weeks. If the problem persists, professional treatment can target the hidden pupation sites that keep the cycle going.

Call Canadian Pest Control at (778) 598-7378 or contact us online if you need help with a stubborn pantry moth problem or any other kitchen pest issue. We serve Maple Ridge, Pitt Meadows, Coquitlam, Langley, Mission, and the Fraser Valley.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Canadian Pest Control