
Mole Control in Medina
Medina's lakeside soil, mature landscaping, and decades of meticulously built-up topsoil make it one of the most mole-active zones on the Eastside. When mole damage hits a Medina property, the restoration cost on specimen plantings, cultivated lawn, and waterfront landscaping is substantial — which is why we're called quickly. Got Moles serves Medina with the same chemical-free, guaranteed approach used across nearly 5,000 Western Washington properties.
Call (253) 750-0211219+ Five-Star Google Reviews·Chemical-Free·Proven Results
Got Moles provides professional mole control in Medina, Washington. Chemical-free methods. Nearly 5,000 clients served since 2017. Call (253) 750-0211 for a free quote.
Medina is the Gold Coast of Lake Washington — a waterfront city of mature estates, deep lots, and some of the most private residential land in the Pacific Northwest. With Medina Beach Park on the shoreline, Medina Park's 17 acres of meadows and walking trails in the middle of town, and the Fairweather Nature Preserve tucked into the southern end, residents live quietly behind hedges that have been growing for decades.
Why Moles Thrive in Medina
Medina sits on a mix of Alderwood glacial till on the higher ground and softer, organically amended soil along the Lake Washington shoreline. The lakeside water table keeps eastern-facing lots moist year-round, and decades of landscaping, composting, and irrigation have built up topsoil that produces some of the densest earthworm populations on the Eastside. With 37+ inches of annual rainfall, mild winters that never freeze the ground, and mature tree canopy dropping organic matter into the soil for generations, Townsend's moles stay active in every month of the year. Proximity to Medina Park, Fairweather Nature Preserve, Clyde Hill, and the shoreline greenbelt means new moles can always migrate in from undisturbed ground nearby.
Moles in Medina Neighborhoods
Waterfront estates along Evergreen Point and Medina's Lake Washington shoreline see the heaviest mole activity in the city — the combination of high water table, deep amended soil, and mature planting beds produces earthworm habitat at an almost agricultural scale. Properties around Medina Park deal with regular reinvasion from the park's 17 acres of open meadow and wooded edges. Homes near Fairweather Nature Preserve on the southern end face ongoing pressure from the preserve's undisturbed native ground. The interior streets between 84th Avenue NE and the shoreline have large lots with established tunnel networks moles have used for years. Even the smaller properties toward the Clyde Hill and Hunts Point borders see moles moving through shared tunnel systems that run under multiple connected yards.
How We Help Medina 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
Medina waterfront properties almost always show mole activity first on the lake-facing side of the lot, where soil moisture peaks. If you can catch new mounds within a week of them appearing — before the tunnel network spreads across the terraces — you save a significant amount of lawn restoration and replanting.
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
Medina Mole Control FAQ
My landscaping is a significant investment. How quickly can you respond?
We prioritize inspections on properties with mature or newly installed landscaping because damage accelerates fast on that kind of ground. Medina homeowners typically see us within two business days of the first call.
Are your methods safe around my dogs, grandkids, and gardens?
Completely. We use professional body-gripping traps placed underground in active tunnels — nothing on the surface, no chemicals, no poisons, nothing touching the lawn or planting beds. Pets, children, and gardens are unaffected during and after treatment.
We have a live-in gardener and property manager. Can you coordinate with them instead of me?
Absolutely. A lot of Medina work runs through estate staff, landscape crews, or property managers on the homeowner's behalf. We'll schedule, report, and invoice through whichever channel works best for your household.
Do mole tunnels cause problems with irrigation, retaining walls, or waterfront hardscape?
Yes. Tunneling can shift drip lines, disrupt sprinkler heads, channel water toward foundations, and undermine walkways, terraces, and retaining walls. On Medina waterfront properties, where hardscape and irrigation budgets are substantial, the secondary damage from untreated moles often costs more than the initial lawn repair.
Is the ongoing program the right choice for a Medina estate?
Usually, yes. Properties bordering Medina Park, Fairweather Nature Preserve, the shoreline greenbelt, or other large landscaped estates face continuous reinvasion pressure. The Total Mole Control Program intercepts new moles before they establish tunnel networks, which is the most cost-effective approach for protecting a landscape at this level.
Is mole trapping legal in Washington?
Yes. Professional body-gripping traps for moles are legal and are the most effective removal method in the state. We use proven, humane methods that comply with Washington wildlife regulations.
Ready for Mole-Free Living in Medina?
Call (253) 750-0211 or fill out the form below.
CALL (253) 750-0211Free inspection. No obligation.