
If you’ve got fleas inside the house and pets that spend time outside, the indoor treatment is only half the story. Fleas don’t live in your carpet by choice. They get there because adult fleas hitch a ride in on your dog or cat after biting in the yard, and the eggs drop where the pet rests. Treat the inside without addressing the outside and you reseed the infestation within weeks.
Key takeaways
- Outdoor fleas live in the shaded 10-15% of your yard, not the open lawn.
- DIY hose-on sprays miss them because they don’t reach harbourage zones and don’t include an IGR.
- Professional yard treatment is a 30-45 minute add-on at $50-$100 above standard indoor pricing.
- Three signs you need it: repeat indoor infestation, pet behaviour change, new wildlife in the yard.
- Maintenance (mow short, trim shrubs, sweep leaf litter) reduces flea pressure between treatments.
Where outdoor fleas live (and why most yard sprays miss them)
Fleas don’t survive in dry, sunny lawn. They die fast in direct UV. The places they thrive are the shaded, humid corners pets pass through every day.
The 10-15% rule
Adult fleas live in only about 10-15% of your yard: under decks, beside fences, in long grass against the house, in mulch beds, under shrubs, around dog runs, and in the dirt under raised garden beds. The other 85% is too dry or too sunny.
That’s why blanket-spraying the lawn produces poor results. The fleas aren’t in the lawn. A targeted treatment that focuses on harbourage zones works better than five times the volume of broadcast spraying.
Why DIY yard sprays fall short
The other reason DIY yard sprays fail is the same as the indoor problem: most retail products are adulticides only. They kill the adult fleas exposed at the moment of treatment, but eggs and larvae in the soil and mulch survive and hatch over the following 2-3 weeks.
Without an insect growth regulator (IGR) to break the cycle, the yard re-populates almost as fast as you treated it.
What a professional outdoor treatment includes
A professional yard treatment runs as a 30-45 minute add-on to your indoor flea control booking. The technician sprays an adulticide-plus-IGR combination directly into the harbourage zones, not the open lawn. That hits adult fleas, kills larvae feeding in the mulch and soil, and prevents eggs from hatching for 6-8 weeks of residual protection.
Specific zones we treat
- Shaded fence lines and the dirt strip against the house
- Under decks, sheds, and raised garden beds
- Mulch beds and around the base of shrubs
- Pet sleeping areas (kennels, regular dig spots, shade trees)
- Soil within 1 metre of any pet door
Lawn itself usually gets a light pass only on properties with active pet activity. Most of the budget goes into the shaded perimeter where fleas actually live.
When you need outdoor flea control
The yard add-on isn’t always required. Three signs it is.
1. Repeat indoor infestation
If you’ve had professional indoor flea control done and fleas come back within 4-6 weeks, the source is almost always outdoor. Pets carry fresh fleas from yard zones into the house. Treating the yard breaks the cycle.
2. Pet behaviour change
Dogs that suddenly stop using a particular spot in the yard, or cats that scratch immediately after coming inside, are giving you the most reliable signal that the yard has a flea population.
3. New pets or new wildlife
Foxes and possums are the main wildlife flea carriers across Greater Melbourne. If you’ve started seeing wildlife in the yard at night, your pets pick up the cat fleas (Ctenocephalides felis) those animals carry. The same applies if a flatmate or family member moves in with a previously untreated pet.
If none of those apply and your indoor treatment cleared the infestation cleanly, you can usually skip the yard add-on. We don’t push it on every job.
Cost and how it pairs with indoor treatment
The yard treatment is priced as an add-on, not a standalone service. Most outdoor flea problems exist alongside an indoor problem, so booking the indoor and outdoor together is the efficient way to do it. The combined treatment runs $50-$100 above the standard indoor price ($175-$300), depending on yard size and how much shaded harbourage area there is.
What’s included
- The same products used inside, registered with the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority
- Targeted application to harbourage zones (not broadcast spraying)
- Yard maintenance advice tailored to your property
- The same 8-12 week residual window as the indoor treatment
- Written treatment receipt with licence number
Pets need to stay off treated areas until dry, usually 2-4 hours. Once dry, dogs and cats can use the yard normally.
Yard maintenance that prevents re-infestation
A few low-effort changes reduce flea pressure between treatments.
Lawn and garden routine
- Mow the lawn to standard height (50-60mm). Long grass holds moisture and creates the humid microclimate fleas need.
- Trim shrubs back from the house so sunlight reaches the soil along the wall.
- Sweep up leaf litter and pet waste regularly (both are larva food).
- Restrict pet access to heavily-shaded sections during summer (December to March is peak flea season in Melbourne).
Wildlife exclusion
- Possum-proof the gap under decks
- Seal gaps under sheds
- Remove open compost or pet food bowls left out overnight
- Block fox entry points along fence lines
Frequently asked questions
How long does outdoor flea treatment take?
30-45 minutes when added to an indoor booking. Standalone outdoor-only treatment isn’t typically offered because most flea problems are indoor + outdoor combined.
Are pets safe to use the yard after treatment?
Yes, once dry (2-4 hours). The products are registered with the APVMA for residential pest control and non-toxic to mammals at the application rate once the spray dries.
Will rain wash the treatment away?
Light rain after the product dries (within 2-4 hours of application) doesn’t significantly impact effectiveness. Heavy rain within the first 24 hours can dilute the residual. We watch the forecast and reschedule if needed.
Can I treat the yard myself with retail products?
You can. Most retail outdoor flea sprays cost $30-$80 per bottle and cover a small area. They lack the IGR component, so they kill exposed adults but don’t break the life cycle. Most DIY users go through 3-4 rounds before booking a pro, totalling more than the professional treatment would have cost.
Booking outdoor flea control in Melbourne
For the comprehensive flea-control approach (indoor and outdoor combined), see our flea control Melbourne overview. For the full indoor process, our what to expect during a professional flea treatment guide walks through the sequence.
To book an outdoor treatment alongside the indoor service, call (03) 4060 1090. Same-day bookings available across Greater Melbourne.




