
Deer tick
Ixodes scapularis
Established in Delaware
- Size:
- Small, a sesame seed (nymph: a poppy seed)
- Look for:
- Reddish-orange body, solid dark shield, black legs, no pattern
- Carries:
- Lyme, babesiosis, anaplasmosis, Powassan
The ticks you are most likely to find in Delaware, with photos and the size, color, and markings that tell them apart. Only the deer tick carries Lyme disease. Below the chart, see which types live in your county.

Ixodes scapularis
Established in Delaware

Dermacentor variabilis
Established in Delaware

Amblyomma americanum
Established in Delaware

Rhipicephalus sanguineus
Found nationwide, the one tick that infests homes and kennels indoors

Amblyomma maculatum
A southern tick spreading north into the mid-Atlantic

Haemaphysalis longicornis
A newer arrival, established in the mid-Atlantic and spreading north
Delaware establishment is shown for the three ticks CDC tracks by county; the others carry a regional range note. Source: CDC tick surveillance (ArboNET Tick Module), 2025. County surveillance is coarse: “not established” is a lack of records, not proof a tick is absent.
These are the three ticks CDC maps county by county, not the only ticks in Delaware: the brown dog, Gulf Coast, and Asian longhorned ticks are in the chart above. Tap a county for its daily tick-risk detail.
| County | Deer tick | American dog tick | Lone star tick | Gulf Coast tick |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kent County | Established | Established | Established | Reported |
| New Castle County | Established | Established | Reported | Reported |
| Sussex County | Established | Established | Established | Reported |
Lone star ticks and alpha-gal syndrome
The lone star tick is established in Delaware, including Kent County, Sussex County. Its bite can cause alpha-gal syndrome, an allergy to red meat.
Nymph deer ticks are the size of a poppy seed and cause most Lyme cases in Delaware because they are so easy to miss. When you check for ticks, look for the small ones too, especially in June and July.