Quick answer
To get rid of silverfish in NYC, lower the humidity in bathrooms, basements and closets (ventilate, fix leaks, run a dehumidifier), store paper, food and starched fabric in sealed containers, and seal and treat the cracks around baseboards and plumbing where they hide — because silverfish are a moisture pest, so drying out their harbourage and cutting their starchy food supply is what makes them leave for good rather than for a week.
The short answer
Silverfish are a moisture pest, so getting rid of them means drying out where they live and cutting the starchy food they eat — then treating the crevices they hide in. Silverfish live and develop in damp, warm places such as bathrooms, basements and laundry rooms, and feed on paper, glue, wallpaper paste, cereals and starched fabric (UC IPM). Lower the humidity, seal away their food, and seal and treat the cracks around baseboards and plumbing where they shelter.
What silverfish are and why NYC apartments suit them
Silverfish are small, silvery, teardrop-shaped insects that wriggle like a fish when disturbed. They are nocturnal and hide during the day, coming out at night to seek food and water (UC IPM). Their flat bodies let them slip into narrow crevices, and they shelter in cracks around doors and window casings, behind baseboards, in closets and bookcases, and in the gaps where pipes pass through walls (UC IPM).
That’s a near-perfect description of a New York apartment. Pre-war buildings and brownstones combine humid bathrooms, below-grade basements and laundry rooms with deep baseboard gaps and wall voids — the damp, crevice-rich conditions silverfish need. And because they’re long-lived — silverfish can live for at least two to three years and produce more than 50 offspring (Penn State Extension) — an untreated population settles in rather than passing through.
Step by step
- Cut the moisture — ventilate bathrooms, fix leaks, run a dehumidifier in damp basements and laundry rooms.
- Remove their starchy food — seal cereals, flour and pet food; keep paper, books and starched fabric out of humid spots.
- Seal and treat the crevices — baseboards, window and door trim, gaps around plumbing.
- Address the wall voids — the visible silverfish are a fraction of the damp-void population.
Why DIY sprays usually fail
A can of spray kills the silverfish you can see, but it does nothing about the population hidden in damp wall voids and the conditions sustaining them. Silverfish destroy cereals, books, papers, wallpaper and other starchy items, scraping the surface with weak jaws (Penn State Extension), and they’ll keep doing it as long as the dampness and food remain. Lowering humidity and removing their food does more lasting good than any spray — and in a humid pre-war building, that moisture source is often shared and hard to reach.
When to call a professional
If silverfish keep coming back after you’ve reduced moisture, if they’re damaging books or stored documents, or if they’re appearing across a multi-unit building, the harbourage is usually in damp wall voids beyond your reach. Our silverfish control service treats the crack-and-crevice harbourage where silverfish shelter and helps you target the underlying moisture — so they lose the conditions they need to survive.