🐭 Mole Removal in Franklin
Local licensed expert serving Franklin and all of Williamson County. Moles tunnel through lawns and gardens destroying root systems, creating hazardous surface tunnels, and making yards unusable.
Moles in Franklin, Tennessee
The eastern mole (Scalopus aquaticus) is the dominant fossorial mammal damaging Franklin lawns, and call density tracks irrigation almost perfectly. Westhaven, Laurelbrooke, McKay's Mill, the Polo Club, Founders Pointe, Fieldstone Farms, Sullivan Farms, the Cool Springs corporate-campus environment, and the newer 2010s-2020s subdivisions in Berry Farms, Stream Valley, and Ladd Park all carry sustained mole populations driven by deep, soft, irrigated soil and the resulting earthworm and grub populations. Surface tunnel ridges across the lawn become visible in early spring as soil temperature rises; molehill mounds appear where deep tunnels are excavated; and a single mole can damage 200-500 linear feet of turf per week during peak feeding.
Mole Removal — Franklin, Tennessee
Licensed local expert. Same-day and emergency service in Franklin.
Serving Franklin and all of Williamson County, Tennessee
Mole Removal in Franklin — What to Expect
A single mole can dig 100 feet of tunnels per day. Fast treatment prevents a small problem from destroying your entire yard.
Signs You Have Moles
Moles are active year-round underground. Surface tunnel activity is highest in spring and fall when soil is moist.
- Raised surface tunnels in lawn
- Molehills (mounds of dirt)
- Dead or dying grass in trails
- Soft spots when walking on lawn
- Uprooted plants
Our Process in Franklin
Our local Williamson County contractor serves all of Franklin using the same proven, humane process for every job.
- Professional mole trapping
- Tunnel treatment
- Grub control (eliminates food source)
- Lawn repair consultation
- Preventative barrier installation
The Franklin Eastern Mole Profile
Eastern moles are not rodents — they are insectivores in the family Talpidae, with cylindrical bodies, paddle-like front feet adapted for digging, and a near-exclusive diet of earthworms and soil-dwelling insect larvae (white grubs, cutworms, beetle larvae). Adults run 4-7 oz with a body length of 5-7 inches. Despite the surface damage they create, moles are not eating the lawn — they are excavating tunnels in pursuit of subsurface prey, and the visible damage is mechanical rather than vegetative. This matters because the standard hardware-store countermeasures — castor-oil granules, ultrasonic stakes, vibrating wind-spinners, gum 'remedies,' chewing-gum-in-the-tunnel — have either zero efficacy or efficacy too weak to overcome the strong food signal of an irrigated Franklin estate lawn.
Why Franklin Estate Lawns Are Mole-Favorable
Three factors converge on the Franklin estate lawn:
- Deep, soft, consistently moist soil — irrigated tall fescue and bermuda lawns in Westhaven, Laurelbrooke, McKay's Mill, and the Polo Club provide the soil moisture profile moles need to tunnel efficiently. Non-irrigated middle-Tennessee soil dries to a hardness that physically excludes mole tunneling for much of the summer.
- Strong earthworm populations — irrigation plus the deep organic-matter layer typical of established estate lawns supports earthworm densities far above the surrounding agricultural land. Earthworms are 70-80% of the eastern mole diet in Franklin.
- Strong soil-grub populations — particularly Japanese beetle, May beetle, and June beetle larvae, which are heavily concentrated in irrigated turfgrass through midsummer. Grub populations also support the Franklin armadillo, raccoon, and skunk pressure on the same lawns.
Surface Damage vs. Deep Tunnel Damage
Moles excavate two distinct tunnel systems. Surface feeding tunnels are the visible raised ridges crossing the lawn, used heavily in spring and fall when soil moisture is high and prey is concentrated near the surface. These tunnels are temporary — a mole excavates them as it forages and abandons them within days. Deep main tunnels run 6-18 inches below grade, are permanent residence-and-travel structures, and are revealed only by molehill mounds where excavated soil is pushed to the surface. Effective trap-based control targets active deep main tunnels, identified through tracking patches and carefully selected mound sites — not the surface feeding tunnels, which are abandoned within days regardless of intervention.
Why Trap-Based Control Beats Every Alternative on a Franklin Lawn
Castor-oil granules and 'mole repellent' liquid concentrates have weak to no efficacy in any peer-reviewed evaluation. Ultrasonic stakes have zero documented efficacy. Grub-control programs (imidacloprid, halofenozide) reduce one component of the mole diet but leave the dominant earthworm prey intact, and a partial reduction in food typically increases mole tunneling activity rather than decreasing it as the animal expands its foraging range. Strychnine and zinc-phosphide bait products are heavily restricted in Tennessee under EPA and state pesticide rules. The only durable Franklin solution is trap-based control: scissor-jaw or harpoon traps deployed in identified active deep main tunnels, checked daily, with re-set protocols that account for the typically 2-4 week control window required to clear a single Franklin yard. Williamson County mole coverage covers the regional pattern.
Post-Control Lawn Repair on Franklin Estate Properties
Surface tunnel damage on a Franklin lawn is largely cosmetic and self-repairing — rolling the affected area with a lawn roller compresses the tunnel ridge and the turf recovers within 10-21 days during the active growing season. Molehill mound damage is more disruptive: the excavated soil is fine-textured subsoil that smothers turf if left in place, and the standard repair is rake-back into the surrounding lawn followed by overseeding the bare patch. Estate properties with significant cumulative damage often benefit from coordinated mole control plus turf-restoration work, which the contractor can sequence with a referral to a Franklin landscape contractor. The control work itself — trap deployment, daily check, and removal — is typically a 2-4 week scope per yard.
⚠️ Peak Spring Activity
Moles are at maximum activity right now. Spring soil moisture draws earthworms to the surface, and moles follow — creating fresh tunnel networks nightly. This is the highest-damage period of the year.
Mole Removal Cost in Franklin
$200–$600+
Initial trapping treatment. Ongoing seasonal programs run $100–$300+/month. Call for an estimate — pricing varies by contractor and job complexity.
Frequently Asked Questions — Mole Removal in Franklin
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