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

⚠️ Dead Animal Removal in College Park

Local licensed expert serving College Park and all of Fulton County. Dead animals in walls, attics, or crawlspaces create dangerous biohazards, unbearable odors, and attract secondary pests.

Dead Animals in College Park, Georgia

Dead animal removal in College Park spans residential attic recovery, dead-rat work after rodenticide use, and crawlspace recovery in pre-1960 housing. Typical College Park dead animal removal runs $200-$1,500+.

Dead Animal Removal — College Park, Georgia

Licensed local expert. Same-day and emergency service in College Park.

Serving College Park and all of Fulton County, Georgia

Licensed & Insured Same-Day Available Humane Methods

Dead Animal Removal in College Park — What to Expect

Decomposing animals release dangerous bacteria and attract blowflies. The odor and health risk intensify every day — immediate removal is critical.

🛠️

Our Process in College Park

Our local Fulton County contractor serves all of College Park using the same proven, humane process for every job.

  • Dead animal location and removal
  • Full decontamination and sanitization
  • Odor elimination treatment
  • Maggot and insect treatment
  • Entry point sealing to prevent recurrence
(844) 544-3498

Locating the Dead Animal

  • Walk each room slowly, sniffing low at baseboards, ceiling height, near HVAC vents.
  • Check attic, crawlspace.
  • Listen for blowflies.

Cost

$200-$350 accessible carcass, $350-$700 wall-cavity, $700-$1,500 College Park pre-1940 lath-and-plaster wall recovery or under-house, $1,500-$5,000+ full structural remediation.

⚠️ Rapid Decomposition Season

Warm temperatures dramatically accelerate decomposition — a dead animal that would take weeks to decompose in winter may fully liquefy within days in summer heat. Same-day removal is critical from spring through fall to prevent odor, fly infestations, and secondary pest intrusions.

Dead Animal Removal Cost in College Park

$150–$500+

Depends on species, location, and accessibility. Animals inside walls or attics are at the higher end. Call for an estimate — pricing varies by contractor and job complexity.

Frequently Asked Questions — Dead Animal Removal in College Park

How much does dead animal removal cost in College Park? +
$200-$1,500+. Accessible $200-$350. Wall-cavity $350-$700. Pre-1940 lath-and-plaster recovery or under-house $700-$1,500. Full structural remediation $1,500-$5,000+.
How do I find the dead animal smell? +
Walk each room sniffing low at baseboards, ceiling height. Smell strongest at wall closest to carcass. Listen for blowflies.
How long does dead animal smell last? +
Severe odor 7-14 days. Decomposition-fluid saturation produces residual odor 1-6 months.
There are flies in my College Park house — is it dead-animal related? +
Probably yes if blowflies (large metallic green/blue, 1/4-1/2 inch). Adult emergence 7-10 days after death event.
Can I just leave the dead animal? +
Decomposes in 3-6 weeks but waiting costs much more in odor, flies, drywall replacement. Same-day removal is dramatically cheaper.
How much does dead animal removal cost in College Park, Georgia? +
Dead animal removal in Georgia typically costs $150–$500+ depending on the species, location, and accessibility. Animals in accessible outdoor areas are at the lower end. Animals inside College Park walls, crawlspaces with limited access, or deep in attic insulation are at the higher end due to the time required to locate and extract them.
How do I find a dead animal in my walls in College Park? +
Dead animals in College Park walls are located by smell — the odor is strongest closest to the carcass. Professionals use scent tracking, experience with common species entry routes in Georgia homes, and sometimes thermal imaging to locate animals without opening large sections of wall. Most carcasses can be accessed through a small opening directly at the source.
How long will a dead animal smell in my College Park home? +
A dead mouse may smell for 7–14 days. A dead squirrel or opossum can produce odor for 3–6 weeks. A raccoon in a College Park attic can produce strong odor for 1–3 months, especially in Georgia's warmer months. Same-day removal prevents the worst of the smell and eliminates the secondary pest and fly infestation that follows.
Is a dead animal in my College Park house a health hazard? +
Yes. Decomposing animals attract blowflies and secondary scavengers like mice and rats into your College Park home. The carcass harbors fleas, ticks, and mites that migrate into living areas. Bacteria from decomposition contaminate insulation and building materials. Professional removal and sanitization — not just carcass extraction — are the appropriate response.
What is the most common dead animal found in Georgia homes? +
Georgia homeowners contend with high populations of raccoons, gray squirrels, and Virginia opossums, along with an expanding armadillo range across the southern half of the state. The species found most often in College Park structures depends on local habitat — wooded areas see more squirrels and raccoons, while properties near water or agricultural land see more opossums and rats. A professional identifies the species and determines the most likely entry route.