Today's score
Ticks in Santa Fe Springs, CA
Los Angeles County
Low risk
Tick activity is low right now, but never zero. A quick check after time outdoors is still worth it.
Updated July 19, 2026
- Life stage
- Low (summer drought)
- Forest
- 3%
- Tick species
- 5 of 7 here
Right now
Latest reading- 71°
- Temperature
- 86%
- Humidity
- 0.0"
- Recent rain
TickZone for iPhone · launching soon
Quiet in Santa Fe Springs today. Know the evening before that changes.
7-day outlook
Risk recalculates daily from the local forecast.
What's active right now
Summer heat and drought suppress tick questing across most of the West. Unlike the Northeast, midsummer is a LOW point out West: dry air and cured grass push ticks down to rehydrate. The exception is California chaparral, where Pacific Coast tick larvae and nymphs hold a late-summer bite risk.
Local tick habitat
Santa Fe Springs is 6% natural land cover (3% forest, plus open and brushy areas) across its 8.86 sq mi, home to about 20,174 people. That makes it the 126th-most wooded of the 141 towns in Los Angeles County. The Rocky Mountain wood tick favors shrub-steppe, rocky slopes, and grassland-forest edges, while the western blacklegged tick lives in oak woodland and coastal brush: the more of that habitat a town has, the more places ticks can quest.
Los Angeles County reports about 0 Lyme cases per 100,000 people a year. That county-level disease pressure, combined with Santa Fe Springs's local habitat, sets how high its daily score can climb when the weather and season allow.
Tick control in Santa Fe Springs, CA
Do I need tick control in Santa Fe Springs?
Today's risk in Santa Fe Springs is low (10/100), so there is no urgency. Quiet stretches are actually a good time to book: pros apply barrier treatments before activity climbs, and spring nymph season is when most Lyme transmission happens.
Professional tick control in Santa Fe Springs typically means a barrier treatment along the lawn edge, leaf litter, stone walls, and shady borders where ticks wait for a host, applied two to four times a season by a licensed pest control company. It is the single most effective way to cut tick numbers in the part of the yard your family actually uses.
How much does tick control cost in Santa Fe Springs?
Most homeowners pay about $100 to $200 per visit for professional tick spraying, or roughly $350 to $600 for a full season of barrier treatments, depending on lot size and how wooded the property is. Quotes are free, so it costs nothing to get a real number for your yard.
From a vetted local tick exterminator serving Santa Fe Springs. No cost, no obligation.
Is it tick season in Santa Fe Springs right now?
Yes. Summer heat and drought suppress tick questing across most of the West. In Santa Fe Springs, today's risk reads low (10/100). Tick activity is low right now, but never zero. A quick check after time outdoors is still worth it.
Nearby towns
Tick risk is local. Check the towns around you.
Stay ahead of ticks in Santa Fe Springs
The TickZone iPhone app (launching soon) alerts you the evening before Santa Fe Springs's risk spikes, so protection happens before the bite.