The best pest control Google Ads keywords are not "pest control". Bid on specific-service searches like wasp nest removal, bed bug treatment, and rodent control, add emergency and "near me" variants, and block the wasted searches with negative keywords. Sharp intent means cheaper clicks and more booked jobs.
Every new pest control account makes the same first move. It bids on "pest control". It feels like the obvious keyword, the one everyone types, the front door to the whole market. It is also the fastest way to burn a budget and see nothing back.
The head term is the worst keyword you can buy on a small or mid-size budget. The national chains own it, they pay top dollar for it, and half the people clicking it never wanted a treatment in the first place. There is a better way to spend that same money, and it comes down to picking searches where the person already knows exactly what they need. Here is how to do it.
Terminix and Orkin will pay the top price for "pest control" and "pest control near me" all day long. A national budget can absorb it. When you bid against them on a local budget, you are buying the clicks they leave behind, at the highest price on the page.
It gets worse. The head term is vague, so it pulls in every kind of searcher. Some want a job. Some want to kill ants themselves. Some are just checking what the big brands charge and will never call a local operator. You pay the same premium price for all of them, and only a slice are real buyers.
For scale, the average Google Ads click across all industries runs about $5.26 and the average lead costs about $70, based on WordStream's 2025 benchmark data. Pest control sits well above that. Home services is one of the priciest categories on the whole platform, and pest control is one of the twenty most expensive keyword groups Google sells. A search like "exterminator near me" runs around $34 a click in competitive markets, and termite or bed bug head terms have been bid past $30. That is a lot to pay for a click that might be a job seeker.
The searches that book jobs are the ones where the person has a problem right now and knows what it is. Someone typing "wasp nest removal" has a wasp nest. Someone typing "bed bug treatment" is not researching, they are ready to pay to make it stop. That is intent, and intent is what you are really buying.
There are three buckets worth your money. Specific-service terms are the core. Emergency and "near me" variants layer urgency on top. And negative keywords protect the whole thing by blocking the searches that waste it. Get those three right and a modest budget outworks a big one aimed at the head term.
Notice what these have in common. Each one names a pest or a service, and most name urgency or a place. That is a person ready to book, not a person browsing. And because the chains care less about these longer, sharper searches, the clicks cost less too.
This is not a small edge. It is the difference between a campaign that pays and one that quietly drains. Broad pest control terms run roughly $12 to $35 a click in most markets. Specific service terms often run $3 to $8, because they are longer, sharper, and the big spenders are not fighting as hard for them. Cheaper click, stronger intent, higher conversion. All three move in your favor at once.
| Keyword type | Example | Rough click price | Intent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broad head term | pest control near me | $12 to $35 | Mixed, often weak |
| Specific service | wasp nest removal | $3 to $8 | Sharp, ready to book |
| Emergency variant | same day bed bug treatment | $4 to $10 | Urgent, high value |
| Job or DIY search | how to kill ants | $1 to $5 | None, never buys |
Click prices above are approximate national ranges, so your city will land somewhere inside them rather than exactly on them. But the shape holds everywhere. Say a broad click costs $12 and a specific-service click costs $5. On the same $300, the broad term buys about 25 clicks while the specific service buys about 60. Now add conversion rate. A rough new account converts near 5 percent, but sharp emergency searches convert closer to 12 to 15 percent because the intent is so clear. More clicks and a higher conversion rate on the same budget is how one campaign books jobs while another books nothing.
This is the same lesson behind the budget itself. If you want the full breakdown of how much to spend and the math that turns a budget into booked jobs, the numbers there line up exactly with the keyword choice here. Targeting and budget are two halves of the same decision.
Picking good keywords is only half the job. The other half is blocking the bad searches before they spend your money. Negative keywords tell Google which searches to skip, and a pest control account without them leaks every single day. This is one of the most common places budgets quietly disappear, and it is covered in more depth in the guide on where pest control ad budgets leak.
Add these as a shared negative keyword list so every campaign in the account is protected at once. Then check your search terms report every week or two, because real searches always surface new junk to block. The list is never truly finished, and the operators who win keep pruning it.
Match types decide how loosely Google reads your keyword. There are three, and on a small budget the choice matters a lot.
The simple rule for a lean budget is phrase and exact only. They keep you on the searches you actually picked, so your money lands on intent instead of guesswork. Broad match can work later, once you have conversion data and a negative list strong enough to fence it in. Start early with broad and it will spend your budget on the exact junk searches this article is telling you to avoid.
The winning move on any budget below big-chain size is the same. Skip the head term. Pick two or three specific services with strong margins and clear demand in your area. Run them on phrase and exact match, layer in the emergency and near-me variants, and wrap the whole account in a solid negative keyword list. That is a campaign that books jobs from day one instead of waiting months for a broad term to maybe warm up.
If you already run ads and you are not sure whether your money is landing on the searches that book or the ones that waste, that is exactly what a free report shows. It maps every keyword you are paying for against the jobs it actually brings in, so you can see the leaks before you change a thing.
Give me view-only access and I will spend about 15 minutes pulling your Google Ads apart, then hand you a plain-English report showing which searches book jobs and which just burn money. You keep it either way. No pitch, just the numbers.