(844) 544-3498
24/7 Emergency Response
Licensed & Insured
Humane Methods
Local Experts
Coweta County, Georgia

🐾 Opossum Removal in Coweta County

Opossums nest in attics, crawlspaces, and under decks — causing odor problems, droppings contamination, and potential disease exposure.

Opossum Removal — Coweta County

Licensed local expert. Same-day and emergency service available.

Serving all of Coweta County, Georgia

Licensed & Insured Same-Day Available Humane Methods

Opossum Removal in Coweta County, Georgia

Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana) — North America's only marsupial — den under decks, porches, sheds, and in crawlspaces across Coweta County. Most Coweta opossum work concentrates in mid-century Newnan housing where elevated wood decks and unsealed crawlspaces are common, plus Grantville, Moreland, Turin, and Haralson farmstead properties where outbuilding crawlspaces and barn foundations function as long-term den sites. Opossums are nocturnal and generally beneficial (they eat ticks, slugs, beetles, and small rodents), but den sites under residential structures are still a legitimate exclusion situation — and with kits in the pouch from February through October, timing matters.

Opossum Removal Services in Coweta County

Opossums carry leptospirosis and other diseases. Their droppings contaminate insulation and require professional cleanup.

🛠️

Our Opossum Removal Process

Our Coweta County contractor uses proven, humane methods to remove opossums and keep them from coming back.

  • Live trapping and relocation
  • Attic and crawlspace cleanup
  • Entry point sealing
  • Odor treatment
  • Deck and foundation exclusion
(844) 544-3498

Why Opossums Den Under Coweta County Homes

Virginia opossums are habitat generalists — they'll den anywhere that's dark, dry, and protected. Under elevated wood decks is the single most common Coweta residential den site, particularly across Newnan's mid-century neighborhoods between the Historic District and the Newnan Hospital area. Crawlspaces with damaged or missing foundation vent screens are second-most-common. Grantville, Moreland, Turin, and Haralson farmstead properties add barn foundations, outbuilding crawlspaces, and pasture-edge structures to the den-site mix.

Unlike raccoons, opossums are not aggressive — when threatened, they typically play dead (catatonic stress response) or display teeth without actually biting. They're not a rabies vector in the typical risk profile because their body temperature is too low to support the virus efficiently. The case for exclusion is structural — opossum droppings under decks accumulate, opossums can damage insulation in crawlspaces, and they bring secondary pests (fleas, ticks).

The Opossum Pouch Calendar — Why Timing Matters

Female opossums in Georgia carry kits in the pouch from February through October, with most active reproductive periods in spring and summer. Performing exclusion when a mother is denning with pouch-young or just-emerged juveniles separates the family — the mother exits to forage and can't return, and the kits are left to die. The right approach during reproductive season is one-way exclusion devices that allow the mother and any mobile kits to exit but prevent re-entry, deployed only after confirming no immobile pouch-young are present.

Standard residential opossum jobs in Coweta run $300-$800+ for trapping and relocation. Under-deck or crawlspace exclusion (sealing the den-site access plus screening foundation vents) adds $300-$900+. Multi-structure farmstead work in Grantville, Moreland, Turin, and Haralson trends higher because of multi-building inspection scope.

Identifying Opossum Activity vs Raccoon Activity

  • Opossum droppings: smaller than raccoon, usually in concentrated piles near the den entry, often with visible insect parts
  • Raccoon droppings: larger, often in elevated latrine sites, with visible plant material
  • Opossum activity: silent and slow — homeowners rarely hear them moving
  • Raccoon activity: heavy thumping, chittering, and clear sound from above ceilings
  • Opossum tracks: distinct opposable thumb pattern visible in soft soil; raccoon tracks have clearly separated finger pads

Opossum Removal in Coweta County — Service Area Map

Our licensed contractor handles opossum removal across the full Coweta County footprint. Tap the map to open directions in Google Maps.

📍

Coweta County, Georgia

Service Area · 33.3793, -84.7641

View on Google Maps →

Opossum Removal by City in Coweta County

Find opossum removal help in your specific city

Opossum Removal Across Coweta County

Same licensed contractor — varied anchor coverage across the county.

📅 Summer Activity

Opossums raise their second litter of the year through summer. Juvenile opossums dispersing from their mother are frequently found in unexpected places, including inside garages, under appliances, and in crawlspaces.

Opossum Removal Cost in Georgia

$150–$400+

Trapping and relocation. Cleanup and entry point sealing are additional services. Pricing varies by contractor, location, and severity. Call for an estimate specific to your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions — Opossum Removal in Coweta County

Are opossums dangerous to my family or pets in Coweta County? +
Opossums are not aggressive and rarely bite — when threatened they play dead or display teeth without engaging. They are not a typical rabies vector because their body temperature is too low to efficiently support the virus. The real exposure risks are secondary: fleas, ticks (opossums actually eat substantial numbers of ticks, but they also carry them), and droppings accumulation under decks. Pet exposure is generally low-risk; cats and dogs that engage opossums usually disengage when the opossum plays dead.
How much does opossum removal cost in Coweta County? +
Standard residential opossum jobs run $300-$800+ for trapping and relocation. Under-deck or crawlspace exclusion (sealing den-site access plus screening foundation vents) adds $300-$900+. Multi-structure rural farmstead work in Grantville, Moreland, Turin, and Haralson trends higher because of multi-building scope. Properties with concentrated dropping accumulation under elevated decks may need additional sanitation work. Each contractor provides property-specific estimates.
When are opossum kits in the pouch in Coweta County? +
Female opossums in Georgia carry kits in the pouch from February through October, with most active reproductive periods in spring and summer. Performing exclusion when a mother is denning with pouch-young separates the family — the mother exits and can't return, and immobile kits die. Right approach during reproductive season is one-way exclusion devices deployed only after confirming no pouch-young are present, allowing the mother and any mobile juveniles to exit while preventing re-entry.
Why do opossums keep returning to my Newnan deck? +
Opossums are habitat generalists and remember den sites. If you sealed the obvious access without sealing every viable opening, the population just moves to the next available den. Effective Newnan opossum exclusion seals every viable foundation opening (typically 2-4 per home), screens foundation vents, and addresses any food-source attractants (pet food left outside, accessible trash, fallen fruit). Single-issue treatment without addressing the structural openings produces re-occurrence within weeks.
Should I really call a contractor for an opossum, or just leave it alone? +
Two scenarios. Single transient opossum spotted in the yard at night with no signs of denning — leave it alone, opossums are beneficial. Established den under your deck with regular activity, dropping accumulation, smell, or pet-interaction — call. The exclusion work seals the den-site access permanently, preventing the next opossum (or raccoon, or skunk) from using the same opening. Inspection is usually quick; treatment is straightforward when timed correctly.

More Wildlife Services in Coweta County

We handle all wildlife removal needs in Coweta County

Opossum Removal in Neighboring Counties

Need opossum removal in a county next to Coweta County? We cover those too.