🎓 College Students Headed Home for the Summer?

What Maryland Families Should Know About Bed Bugs This Month

May is one of the busiest moving times of the year across Maryland.

College students are packing up dorms, clearing out apartments, and heading home—from College Park and Towson to Baltimore and Salisbury.

Most families are focused on:
âś” Laundry
âś” Storage
âś” Getting everything settled back in

But very few are thinking about this:

What might be coming home with them.


đź§  Why This Happens More Than You Think in Maryland

In Maryland, many students live in:

  • Shared apartments
  • Multi-unit buildings
  • High-turnover housing near campuses

Add in frequent travel, visitors, and shared laundry spaces, and you get one key factor:

👉 Constant movement between people, spaces, and belongings

That’s exactly how bed bugs spread.

This isn’t about cleanliness—it’s about exposure.


đź§ł What Students Might Bring Home (Without Realizing It)

Bed bugs don’t live on people.
They move quietly through items.

The most common carriers we see include:

  • Suitcases stored under or beside beds
  • Laundry baskets moving between rooms or facilities
  • Backpacks placed on shared furniture
  • Bedding used in multiple environments
  • Storage bins that haven’t been opened in months

Nothing about these items looks suspicious—which is why they’re often overlooked.


đźšš The Overlooked Risk: Moving Trucks & Vans

There’s another exposure point most families don’t think about during move-out:

Rental moving trucks and vans, such as U-Haul.

These vehicles:

  • Are used by multiple households back-to-back
  • Transport mattresses, couches, and upholstered furniture
  • Are not routinely sanitized between uses

That means bed bugs can be left behind—and picked up by the next person using the truck.


🏠 What Smart Maryland Homeowners Do Differently

This isn’t about overreacting—it’s about being intentional.

âś” They control how items enter the home

Instead of bringing everything straight inside:

  • Items go into a garage, laundry room, or entryway first
  • Nothing goes directly into bedrooms

âś” They process items in stages

  • Clothing is bagged first
  • Then dried on high heat
  • Then put away

Not all at once—and not loosely.


âś” They pay attention to the details

  • Suitcase seams and zippers
  • Mattress edges
  • Upholstered furniture
  • Items that haven’t been moved in a while

That’s where problems usually start.


⚠️ Where Things Usually Go Wrong

Most issues don’t come from obvious situations—they come from small oversights:

  • Everything gets brought inside at once
  • Furniture goes straight into bedrooms
  • Luggage sits unpacked for days
  • No one takes a closer look

👉 That’s all it takes.


đź‘€ What to Watch for After Move-In

You don’t need to panic—but you do need to be aware.

Over the next couple of weeks, pay attention to:

  • Unexplained bites that repeat
  • Small dark spotting along seams or edges
  • Anything that doesn’t look quite right

If something feels off, it’s worth checking.


đź’¬ When It Makes Sense to Have a Professional Take a Look

Sometimes everything looks fine—but you still don’t feel 100% sure.

That’s actually when a professional inspection makes the most sense:

  • After a move-in
  • After bringing in multiple items
  • Or when you just want confirmation

It’s easier to check early than to deal with something later.


đź§  Why Experience Matters

Bed bugs aren’t always obvious.

Knowing where to look—and what you’re actually seeing—is what makes the difference.

At ECO Bed Bug Exterminators, we specialize exclusively in bed bugs, which allows us to:

  • Identify early-stage activity
  • Focus on high-risk areas most people overlook
  • Provide clear, realistic next steps

No guessing. No assumptions.


🎯 Final Thought

Bringing your college student home should feel like a reset—not a risk.

A little structure during move-in can prevent:

  • Weeks of uncertainty
  • Disruption inside your home
  • A situation that’s harder to unwind later

📞 Need Peace of Mind?

If your student is coming home—or already has—and you want to be sure your Maryland home is protected:

Call (410) 929-3420 to schedule your inspection, or click here to submit a request online.


📍 Serving Maryland Communities

We work with homeowners and property managers throughout Maryland, including:

  • Baltimore County
  • Montgomery County
  • Prince George’s County
  • And surrounding areas

Leave a comment