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June 10, 2026

Rat Control in HDB Flats

Rat Control in HDB Flats

Why HDB buildings are vulnerable. Building-wide solutions that actually work.

 

You keep rats out of your unit. But rats still appear. You’re not alone. Over 80% of Singaporeans live in HDB flats with shared infrastructure vulnerabilities that individual units cannot control alone.Rats are attracted to accessible food and secure hiding places. In HDB blocks, rubbish chute rooms, service ducts, and cluttered corridors provide both, making shared areas a common hotspot for activity. The problem isn’t your cleanliness. It’s the building itself.

Why HDB Buildings Are Rat Magnets

Structural factors making HDB vulnerable

  • Centralized garbage chutes: All residential units dispose waste through a single chute system that feeds to a ground-floor chamber. Rats congregate at chute access points and in waste chambers. One chute = all units exposed.
  • Vertical movement: Rodents can move between floors using pipes, ledges, and structural gaps, so sightings in corridors do not always mean the problem is inside your unit. Rats travel vertically through shared pipes.
  • Shared wall penetrations: Pipes, electrical conduits, and ventilation ducts pass through walls connecting units. Gaps around pipes where utilities penetrate walls allow rats to move between neighboring units.
  • Drainage system access: Broken floor traps in chute chambers enable unrestricted rat access to sanitary drainage systems shared across all units served by that chute.
  • Dense population density: Hundreds of units create massive food source. Female rats produce 8-12 litters per year with 5-10 pups per litter, allowing rapid population recovery.
  • Structural age: Older HDB buildings have deteriorating seals, loose pipes, and larger gaps. Wear and tear creates new entry points annually.

The Garbage Chute Problem

How chute systems enable rat infestation

  • Individual Refuse Chute System (IRCS): Older HDB buildings (pre-1989) have Individual Refuse Chute systems where each unit has a hopper. All refuse flows through a single chute to a ground-floor bin chamber accessible by metal door. A removable plastic bin collects all waste from units served by that chute.
  • Rat congregation point: Chute chambers = protein-rich food source. Rats nest in and beneath chambers. Multiple units = multiple feeding opportunities per day.
  • Access vulnerabilities: Metal door to chamber can have gaps. Floor trap (drainage point) can be broken. Gaps in chute linings allow rat access.
  • Sanitary drainage access: Rats escape through broken floor traps upon disturbance and access the entire sanitary-line network shared across all seven chutes serving the block. One chute breach = whole building at risk.
  • Sealed chamber problem: Sealing the chute is not ideal because residents still need to use it. Effective chute-specific sealing requires professional technical solution.
  • Modern PWCS alternative: Newer buildings use Pneumatic Waste Collection System (PWCS) with underground pipes. Still susceptible but less direct access.

Ground Floor Vulnerability: Why Lower Units Suffer Most

Lower-floor HDB units are more susceptible to pests as they can crawl up and enter through windows or the rubbish chute. Ground and first-floor units bear the brunt of HDB rat infestation:

Ground Floor (Highest Risk)

Direct access from underground drainage. Rats tunnel up from sewers. Chute chamber directly below. Burrow entry through foundation gaps. Outdoor area vulnerabilities (landscaping, storage).

2nd-4th Floors (High Risk)

Chute access above. Rats travel through shared pipes. Drainage system connections. Corridor entry points. Neighbor unit penetrations.

5th-10th Floors (Medium Risk)

Roof rat territory. Overhead entry via external routes. Pipe systems still shared. Upper-floor nesting possible.

Above 10th Floor (Lower Risk)

Less Norway rat activity. Roof rats possible but limited external routes. Still vulnerable via shared pipes and ventilation.

Common Rat Entry Points in HDB Units

Even clean units can have rats because entry often comes from building infrastructure, not inside:

Pipes through walls

Gaps around pipes where utilities enter. Sewage pipes have multiple penetrations. Gaps >1/2 inch allow rat entry.

Garbage chute access

Direct connection to waste chamber. Hopper door gap. Chute liner gaps. Floor trap below chute opening.

Front door gaps

Light visible under door = gap large enough for rats. Door hinge side often has small gap. Threshold wear creates entry.

Window grilles gaps

Older grille designs have gaps. Maintenance damage. Poor fitting. Rats access from outside corridors.

Electrical penetrations

Gaps around electrical conduits. Utility box openings. Air conditioning line entry points.

Neighbor walls

Service ducts connecting units. Pipe penetrations. Electrical runs. Shared wall deterioration.

Individual Unit Prevention (Limited Success)

What you can do alone (20-30% success rate)

  • Seal your entry points: Door gaps, window grilles, electrical conduits in your unit. Use approved materials (hardware cloth, concrete, galvanized metal). Success depends on identifying all entries—easy to miss shared wall gaps.
  • Remove food sources: Store all food in airtight containers. Clean under appliances. Empty trash daily. Don’t leave pet food overnight. Water: Fix leaking taps, dry sink areas.
  • Monitor for entry: Place traps along walls, under furniture, near pipes. Check droppings to identify species and confirm activity. Track rat movement patterns.
  • Report to building management: Contact your Town Council or building management about chute problems, broken floor traps, and common area entry points.
  • Limitation of individual effort: Once rodents establish a nest, DIY measures become less effective, and professional intervention is usually required to prevent further spread.

Building-Wide Coordination: Why It Works (90-95% Success)

Effective HDB rat control requires coordination between residents, building management, and professionals:

Resident Responsibility

Individual unit sealing (doors, windows, pipes). Food storage and waste management. Monitoring and reporting. Cooperation with pest control access. Communication with neighbors.

Building Management Role

Chute maintenance and repairs. Broken floor trap replacement. Common area treatment. Pest control scheduling. Building-wide inspection coordination.

Professional Pest Control

Comprehensive building inspection. Bait station placement in common areas. Chute chamber treatment. Pipe penetration sealing. Monitoring and follow-up visits.

Town Council Support

Call your local Town Council if you need pest control support or disposal of infected items. Infrastructure funding. Building improvement approval. Coordination with NEA requirements.

Professional HDB Rat Control Strategy

Effective pest control approach for multi-unit buildings:

Building-wide treatment process

  • Step 1 – Building inspection: Assessment of common areas, chute system, drainage access, entry points across all affected units. Identify species and infestation severity.
  • Step 2 – Chute chamber treatment: Rats escape through broken floor traps upon disturbance. Professional treatment involves floor trap repair, chamber sealing, and intensive bait station placement in waste management areas.
  • Step 3 – Drainage system treatment: Sanitary drainage systems shared across chutes require systematic bait placement at access points and pipe penetrations.
  • Step 4 – Common area baiting: Strategic bait stations in corridors, utility areas, and perimeter. Elevation adjustment based on Norway rat vs roof rat activity zones.
  • Step 5 – Individual unit sealing: Coordinated sealing of entry points in affected units. Professional-grade materials with 5-10 year durability.
  • Step 6 – Management coordination: Building management must conduct regular inspections to secure waste chutes and ensure properly sealed chutes prevent rodent access to waste materials.
  • Step 7 – Ongoing monitoring: Follow-up visits at 2-week intervals. Trap monitoring. Adjustment of strategy based on population response. 3-month verification period.

Frequently Asked Questions

My unit is clean but I still have rats. Why?

Rats in HDB are not just a cleanliness issue. Even if your home is clean and well-maintained, pest activity can come from outside your unit via shared spaces, building structure, and environmental conditions. Individual cleanliness alone cannot control building-wide infestation.

Should I treat before neighbors treat their units?

No. Rats can move between floors using pipes, ledges, and structural gaps. Treating one unit drives rats to neighbors. Building-wide coordination required. Unsynchronized treatment spreads problem, wastes money, and fails.

Can the Town Council help with HDB rat control?

Contact your local Town Council if you need pest control support or disposal of infected items. Town Councils manage common areas, chute systems, and building infrastructure. They coordinate building-wide treatment approval and funding.

How much does professional HDB rat control cost?

Cost depends on building size, chute system complexity, and infestation severity. Coordinated building treatment more expensive initially than individual unit treatment. However, success rate (95% vs 20-30% DIY) justifies investment. Monthly building maintenance prevents reinfestation.

How long until rats are gone from HDB building?

Timeline depends on severity. Light infestation: 4-6 weeks with professional treatment. Moderate: 8-12 weeks. Severe (long-standing): 12-16 weeks. Ongoing monthly monitoring for 3 months prevents reinfestation.

Professional HDB Rat Control Assessment

Individual unit treatment fails in HDB buildings. Building-wide coordination required. Professional assessment identifies vulnerabilities, coordinates with building management, and implements building-wide solutions. Stop treating rats alone. Get professional building coordination.

 

© 2026 GreenCare Pest Control SingaporeHDB Rat Control Specialists

Building Coordination & Professional Multi-Unit Pest Management

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