It’s Bat Pup Season – What You Need to Know

June 28, 2022

It’s bat pup season! Do you know your bat and safety facts? South Carolina Wild is the official blog of South Carolina Department of Natural Resources and here’w what they want you to know.

See the helpful tips below to protect people and pets from a bat encounter while also protecting flightless bat pups from a needless death.


I just found out that I have bats! What do I do?

  • DO find where bats are entering or exiting the structure. If they are in your attic, soffits or walls, make sure they can’t get into your living space. Hire an experienced wildlife control operator to help identify potential points of entry.
    • To find help near you, see a list of wildlife control operators, here.
  • DON’T perform exclusions from May to at least mid-July. Exclusion is the process of adult bats leaving a building through a device placed at entry/exit points that won’t allow them to re-enter. Doing so when pups are too young to fly may increase the likelihood of pups gaining entry to living spaces while desperately trying to find their mothers. This results in odor problems as the trapped pups starve to death in often inaccessible crevices.
    • After July, the pupsIt’s bat pup season! Do you know your bat and safety facts? See the helpful tips below to protect people and pets from a bat encounter while also protecting flightless bat pups from a needless death.

      I just found out that I have bats! What do I do?

      • DO find where bats are entering or exiting the structure. If they are in your attic, soffits or walls, make sure they can’t get into your living space. Hire an experienced wildlife control operator to help identify potential points of entry.
        • To find help near you, see a list of wildlife control operators, here.
      • DON’T perform exclusions from May to at least mid-July. Exclusion is the process of adult bats leaving a building through a device placed at entry/exit points that won’t allow them to re-enter. Doing so when pups are too young to fly may increase the likelihood of pups gaining entry to living spaces while desperately trying to find their mothers. This results in odor problems as the trapped pups starve to death in often inaccessible crevices.
        • After July, the pups are old enough to fly, exclusions can more easily be done, and bat entry/exit points should be sealed.
        • Early spring (March-April) and in the fall (August-October) is the best time of the year to exclude bats. See DHEC’s Prevent Bat Intrusion  & Disruptionresource page for helpful tips.
      • DO learn more about the many ways bats benefit you. If you like coffee, tequila, rice or pecans, you can thank a bat. Bats provide $115 million in pest suppression services to South Carolina’s agricultural industry each year by consuming insects known to damage crops and forests, reducing the need for costly pesticides.

      are old enough to fly, exclusions can more easily be done, and bat entry/exit points should be sealed.

    • Early spring (March-April) and in the fall (August-October) is the best time of the year to exclude bats. See DHEC’s Prevent Bat Intrusion  & Disruptionresource page for helpful tips.
  • DO learn more about the many ways bats benefit you. If you like coffee, tequila, rice or pecans, you can thank a bat. Bats provide $115 million in pest suppression services to South Carolina’s agricultural industry each year by consuming insects known to damage crops and forests, reducing the need for costly pesticides.