No — mosquitoes do not die off in winter in South Florida. Temperatures rarely drop below 50°F, which is the threshold that stops mosquito activity. Year-round mosquito pressure is a defining characteristic of Broward and Palm Beach county living. Population levels are lower in winter, but not eliminated.
South Florida vs. Northern States: Mosquito Season Comparison
| Month | South Florida (Broward/PBC) | Northern States |
|---|---|---|
| January | Low — but active. Culex and Aedes present. No-see-ums on coasts. | None — populations dormant or dead |
| February | Low — same as January. Some Aedes aegypti activity. | None |
| March | Low–Moderate — temperatures begin rising, populations increasing. | Eggs begin hatching in southern tier states |
| April | Moderate — pre-rainy season buildup begins. Increasing pressure. | Emerging activity in mid-latitudes |
| May–October | HIGH to PEAK — rainy season. Overlapping surge cycles. | Active season — but with seasonal beginning and end |
| November | Moderate — populations declining as rain season ends. | Season ending or ended |
| December | Low — reduced but persistent. No-see-um dry season begins. | None or dormant |
Why South Florida Has No Off-Season
Mosquito populations die off in northern states when temperatures sustain below 50°F for extended periods, killing adults, larvae, and most overwintering eggs. Boca Raton's average January low is 57°F. Fort Lauderdale's is 59°F. True killing cold is essentially absent from South Florida's climate.
Northern states have mosquito season driven partly by the melt and spring rains. South Florida receives rain in every month — including December through March 'dry season' rains. These wet events restart the 7–10 day development cycle year-round, even at lower frequencies than rainy season.
Unlike some northern species that enter a true diapause (biological dormancy) in winter, South Florida's dominant Culex quinquefasciatus maintains continuous breeding at reduced rates throughout the mild winter. There is no population reset.
A unique South Florida wrinkle: dry season (November–April) is actually peak no-see-um (Culicoides) season for coastal and Intracoastal properties. Lower rainy-season mosquito pressure doesn't mean less biting — it means different biting from a different species.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Do mosquitoes die in winter in Florida?
No — in South Florida (Broward and Palm Beach counties), mosquitoes do not die off in winter the way they do in northern states. South Florida's subtropical climate maintains temperatures that sustain mosquito activity and breeding throughout the year. Average winter temperatures in Boca Raton and Fort Lauderdale range from 55°F to 75°F — well above the threshold temperatures that kill mosquito populations in northern climates. Culex quinquefasciatus, South Florida's most common species and the primary West Nile vector, remains active year-round. Aedes aegypti, the dengue/Zika vector, similarly maintains a year-round population in South Florida.
When are mosquitoes active in Florida in winter?
In South Florida's winter (November through April), mosquito pressure is reduced compared to the rainy season (May–October), but not eliminated. Key winter activity patterns: (1) Culex quinquefasciatus activity increases in the evening hours when temperatures drop slightly — similar to year-round, but at lower overall population levels. (2) Aedes aegypti activity persists in winter but is lower than peak summer. (3) No-see-ums (Culicoides biting midges) are actually more active in South Florida's dry season (November through April) in coastal and Intracoastal areas. (4) South Florida winters with wet spells — periodic rain events occur even in dry season — produce modest mosquito surges following the 7–10 day development cycle.
Should I get mosquito spray in winter in Florida?
Yes — if you have a South Florida property with significant mosquito pressure, year-round professional service maintains the compounding reduction effect that takes 3–4 treatments to build. Stopping service in November and restarting in April means you've lost the population reduction that took months to achieve — and face a full season of rebuilding from baseline. Year-round service at reduced frequency (monthly in winter vs. biweekly in rainy season) maintains the population reduction and costs less than starting from scratch every spring. Additionally, if your property has Intracoastal frontage or coastal exposure, winter no-see-um pressure can be worse than summer mosquito pressure — making winter service particularly valuable for those properties.
What temperature kills mosquitoes in Florida?
Mosquitoes become inactive below approximately 50°F and mosquito eggs, larvae, and pupae are killed by extended freezing temperatures (below 32°F). In South Florida, overnight temperatures rarely reach 50°F even in winter, and temperatures below 32°F are extremely rare events that occur perhaps once per decade. This is the fundamental reason South Florida mosquito control is a year-round concern: the temperature killing mechanism that naturally resets mosquito populations in northern states simply doesn't occur here. Occasional cold snaps — a few nights at 45–50°F — may temporarily reduce activity but do not reset the population the way a genuine northern winter does.
Are mosquitoes worse in summer or winter in South Florida?
Summer (May–October rainy season) is substantially worse — population counts are typically 10–20 times higher during peak rainy season than in winter. The combination of more frequent rain events, warmer temperatures (which accelerate the 7–10 day development cycle to closer to 5–7 days), and longer daylight hours creates the conditions for South Florida's most intense mosquito pressure. That said, winter in South Florida still has more mosquito activity than summer in most U.S. northern states. And winter no-see-um pressure from dry season Intracoastal activity specifically can be substantial for coastal properties even when overall mosquito populations are lower.
Year-Round Protection for South Florida Properties
No off-season means no natural population reset. Year-round professional service maintains your compounding results through every season. No contracts — cancel any time. FL License JB313837.
After nearly two decades in corporate finance — including managing a $1B+ P&L at Chico's FAS — Eric Vincent earned his MBA from Rollins College and made a deliberate pivot into pest control, completing his Pest Control Technology degree at the University of Florida while building Mosquito Shield of Boca and Fort Lauderdale from the ground up. He holds five Florida state licenses including Certified Pest Control Operator (JF341961) and Public Health licensee (PH340549), and is currently partnered with Arkion Life Sciences on next-generation all-natural mosquito control research.