
Mole Control in Covington
Covington's residential neighborhoods sit on former farmland and forestland, and the soil remembers. Rich, workable ground with plenty of moisture makes mole control a recurring conversation for homeowners here. Got Moles handles Covington's mole problems with the same methods that have cleared nearly 5,000 properties across the region.
Call (253) 750-0211219+ Five-Star Google Reviews·Chemical-Free·Proven Results
Got Moles provides professional mole control in Covington, Washington. Chemical-free methods. Nearly 5,000 clients served since 2017. Call (253) 750-0211 for a free quote.
Covington emerged from unincorporated King County into its own city in 1997, and the community has been building its identity ever since. Jenkins Creek Park, Covington Community Park, and the family-focused neighborhoods along Kent-Kangley Road give it a suburban character with enough green space to feel uncrowded.
Why Moles Thrive in Covington
Covington sits on a mix of Alderwood glacial till and richer soils deposited by Jenkins Creek and its tributaries. The glacial hardpan holds moisture in the root zone while the creek corridors provide year-round saturation. Most of Covington's neighborhoods were developed from the 1980s onward, meaning the soil has had decades to build up organic matter and earthworm populations under mature landscaping. The rolling terrain creates low spots where water collects — and where moles concentrate their tunneling.
Moles in Covington Neighborhoods
Neighborhoods along Jenkins Creek see the most consistent mole activity due to the creek's moisture influence on adjacent soil. The established developments near Covington Elementary have mature enough landscaping to support dense earthworm populations that draw moles in. Properties bordering the undeveloped areas to the south and east face recolonization from natural habitat. The newer developments closer to Kent-Kangley Road are seeing increasing mole activity as their landscaping fills in. Even the commercial areas around Covington's town center deal with moles in maintained grounds.
How We Help Covington Homeowners
Year-Round Protection
$100/month
Our Total Mole Control Program keeps your yard protected all year. Regular visits, immediate response to new activity, and a report after every check.
Get Year-Round Protection→One-Time Removal
$450 flat rate
A focused, one-month eradication program for properties under 1 acre. 4-5 weekly visits. If we don't catch a mole, you only pay the $150 setup fee.
Get One-Time Removal→Commercial
Custom quote
Annual contracts for property managers, HOAs, sports facilities, and commercial grounds. Professional reporting, reliable scheduling.
Get a Commercial Quote→Local Tip
Covington's rolling terrain means your low spots collect water and stay wetter longer than flat ground. If mole mounds cluster in the low areas of your yard, it's because that's where earthworm density is highest. Treating those spots first gets the fastest results.
How It Works
Call
Tell us about your property
Inspect
We assess the mole activity
Trap
Professional equipment on active tunnels
Report
Results after every visit
Covington Mole Control FAQ
My property backs up to undeveloped land. Will treatment even work?
Yes. Treatment clears the moles in your yard effectively. For properties bordering natural areas, we recommend ongoing protection to intercept new arrivals rather than repeated one-time treatments.
Are moles the reason my lawn has soft, spongy spots?
Almost certainly. Mole tunnels create air pockets just below the surface that feel spongy underfoot. Those tunnels can also collapse, creating uneven ground. Both are signs of active mole tunneling.
Will you come out just to inspect and tell me what I'm dealing with?
Yes. We offer free inspections. We'll assess the extent of mole activity, identify active tunnels, and give you a clear picture of what treatment looks like before you commit to anything.
My HOA maintains common areas that have moles. Can you work with them?
Absolutely. We work with HOAs across south King County. Coordinated treatment of common areas and individual properties is more effective than treating them separately because moles move between the two.
How do I know the mounds in my yard are moles and not something else?
Mole mounds are volcano-shaped, made of finely crumbled soil, and typically appear in clusters or lines. If you see fan-shaped mounds or holes leading into tunnels, that could be a different animal. We'll confirm what you're dealing with during the free inspection.
Ready for Mole-Free Living in Covington?
Call (253) 750-0211 or fill out the form below.
CALL (253) 750-0211Free inspection. No obligation.