Wasp and Bee Nest Removal: Identifying Species, Legal Protection for Bees and Safe Wasp Nest Treatment

Quick Answer: Wasps have no legal protection and their nests can be treated at any time; the standard treatment is insecticide dust or spray applied directly to the nest entrance. Most bee species are not individually protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, but several bumblebee species are on Schedule 5, making it a criminal offence to kill, injure or disturb them intentionally. Honeybee swarms should always be referred to a local beekeeper rather than treated with pesticide.

Summary

Wasp and bee nest jobs are among the most common call-outs for pest controllers and general tradespeople alike. The work looks simple on the surface — locate the nest, treat it, come back if needed — but the legal and identification requirements make it more complex than it first appears. Getting the species wrong before reaching for the insecticide is not just a reputational risk: treating a protected bumblebee nest can result in prosecution under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

Wasps (most commonly the common wasp Vespula vulgaris and the German wasp Vespula germanica) are aggressive, territorial insects that pose a genuine stinging risk to occupants and contractors. By late summer a large nest can contain 5,000–10,000 workers. Treatments are highly effective when applied correctly, but timing, personal protective equipment (PPE), and correct product selection all matter. The nest dies off naturally in winter — the queen overwinters and starts a new nest in spring, never reusing the old one.

Bees occupy a different legal and ecological position. The public's growing awareness of pollinator decline means customers increasingly ask whether "the bees" can be relocated rather than treated. Knowing which bee species you are dealing with, what the law says, and which local contacts to call is an important part of the professional service.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

Spending too long on quotes? squote turns a 2-minute voice recording into a professional quote.

Try squote free →
Species Protected? Recommended Action Identify By
Common wasp (Vespula vulgaris) No Treat with insecticide dust/spray Anchor mark on face
German wasp (Vespula germanica) No Treat with insecticide dust/spray Three dots on face
Hornet (Vespa crabro) No Treat (with caution, more painful sting) Large size, brown/yellow
Honeybee swarm No (not Schedule 5) Refer to BBKA beekeeper Loose cluster, golden/brown
Honeybee established colony No Refer to BBKA or specialist Propolis-sealed cavity
Common bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) No Advise tolerance; relocate if possible Fluffy, yellow/black/white tail
Short-haired bumblebee (Bombus subterraneus) Yes — Schedule 5 Do not treat; seek specialist advice Short hair, pale tail
Tree bumblebee (Bombus hypnorum) No Advise tolerance; treat only if necessary Orange thorax, white tail
Masonry bee (various solitary spp.) No Advise tolerance; no treatment needed Single burrow holes in mortar

Detailed Guidance

Identifying the Species Before Any Treatment

Never treat before identification. The consequences of treating a protected species are serious, and the correct course of action for honeybees (referral to a beekeeper) is entirely different from wasp treatment. Key steps:

Wasp Nest Treatment Procedure

Timing is important: treat in the evening or early morning when wasps are less active and the majority of the colony is inside the nest.

Products and application:

Nest in wall cavity or soffit:

Nest in roof space:

Follow-up visit:

Bee Swarm Referral Protocol

Honeybee swarms are not a pest control job — they are a beekeeping job. The correct process:

  1. Confirm it is a swarm (temporary cluster, not an established colony)
  2. Advise the customer it is harmless if left alone and will usually move on within 48–72 hours
  3. If the customer wants it removed sooner, refer to the BBKA swarm collector network: www.bbka.org.uk/swarm — postcode-searchable list of local beekeepers who collect swarms free of charge
  4. Do not apply insecticide to a honeybee swarm; it is unnecessary and potentially wasteful of a valuable colony that a beekeeper can rehome

For established honeybee colonies in wall cavities, the situation is more complex: removal requires cutting out comb and relocating the queen. This is specialist work done by a beekeeper, not a pest controller. A pest controller who kills an established colony in a wall cavity must also remove the honeycomb — if left, the wax and honey will melt in summer, causing staining, odour, and secondary pest attraction.

Legal Framework for Protected Bumblebees

Under Section 9 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, it is a criminal offence to:

The penalty on summary conviction is an unlimited fine and/or up to 6 months' imprisonment.

Currently listed bumblebee species on Schedule 5 include the short-haired bumblebee (Bombus subterraneus). The list is reviewed periodically. The safest professional practice is to never treat an unfamiliar bumblebee species without species-level identification confirmation.

For non-protected bumblebees (the vast majority of call-outs), the professional recommendation is still to advise tolerance where possible. Bumblebee colonies are small (50–400 workers), die off by October, and are highly beneficial. Only treat if the nest is in a location where stings are genuinely likely and the customer cannot reasonably avoid the area.

PPE and Safe Working

The minimum PPE for any wasp or bee nest work:

For roof void work, also consider:

Record the PPE used in the job COSHH file.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I treat a wasp nest myself without a pesticide licence?

Homeowners can legally use amateur products (widely sold in DIY stores) on their own property. As a professional contractor, you must use professional-grade products and hold or work under the supervision of someone with a BASIS PROMPT qualification (or equivalent certificate of competence). In practice, most sole-trader pest controllers hold a City & Guilds Level 2 Award in Pest Management or RSPH Level 2 Award, which covers pesticide application.

Do I need to remove the dead nest after treatment?

No — it is not always necessary. Dead nests are not reused by wasps (new queens always build fresh nests). However, removal is sometimes requested by customers for cosmetic reasons or where the nest is accessible. When removing a dead nest, check for secondary infestations (clothes moths, carpet beetles, stored product insects) which sometimes colonise old wasp nests.

What time of year is best to treat a wasp nest?

Early summer (May–June) is easiest: colonies are small (a few hundred workers) and treatment is straightforward. By August–September the colony is at peak size and treatment is higher risk for the operative. Treatment in October is usually unnecessary as colonies are naturally dying; advise customers to wait if the season is late. Never treat in winter — the nest will be long dead.

A customer thinks they have hornets — what should I do?

Hornets (Vespa crabro) are not legally protected in the UK. They are significantly larger than wasps (up to 35 mm) and their sting is more painful, but they are generally less aggressive when away from the nest. Treatment is the same as for wasps — insecticide dust into the nest entrance. Approach with full PPE and extra caution. Hornet nests are typically found in hollow trees, outbuildings, or roof spaces — not underground.

Can bumblebee nests be relocated?

Technically yes, but it is difficult in practice. Moving an active colony risks losing the queen and destroying the colony anyway. The BWARS advises against it except in exceptional circumstances. The practical professional advice: if the nest is not in a high-risk location (e.g. a quiet corner of a garden), advise the customer to leave it. It will be gone by October. Mark the area and keep people away if stings are a concern.

Regulations & Standards