Short answer: bad. Long answer:
grab some coffee. Bed bugs are having a global comeback tour—biting from Paris to Las Vegas to right here in Michigan. They don’t care about your ZIP code, your thread count, or your loyalty status. If there’s a warm human and a cozy seam, they’re RSVP’ing “yes.”
Where are bed bugs worst? In the U.S.
Every year, pest firms publish “worst cities” lists based on treatment data. In 2025, Chicago landed #1 again, followed by Cleveland and Detroit rounding out the top three. (We love you, Detroit—call us, we’ll help.)
Bonus: New York dropped to #15 in 2025—proof that aggressive inspection and prevention help. New York Post
Around the world
Paris had a headline-grabbing surge in 2023, with reports spanning homes, cinemas, and transit (right before the Olympics), and a national discussion about what to do next. London watched nervously, reported concerns on transit, and saw callouts rise—though not as much as the panic suggested. Australia documented a huge multi-year resurgence, too. PMC+5Reuters+5TIME+5
“What about big destinations—Disney World, Kalahari, Las Vegas?”
Large hospitality brands (theme parks, mega-resorts, indoor-waterpark hotels, Strip properties—you get the idea) typically follow hotel industry best practices called IPM (integrated pest management): frequent inspections (housekeeping checks seams & headboards), encasements, quick room-out-of-service protocols, and professional treatments. Those are the industry standards recommended by hotel associations and pest-management experts. Facilities Management Advisor+3AHLA+3National Pest Management Association+3
Do incidents still happen? Yes—anywhere humans travel. Las Vegas has even seen recent lawsuits tied to alleged hotel bed bugs; big tourist hubs deal with both pests and publicity. (This underscores why robust inspection programs matter.) SFGATE+2Fox News+2
Key point: There’s no single U.S. federal rule forcing hotels to publicly disclose bed bug cases; requirements vary by state and city, so most properties rely on internal protocols plus local regulations. Environmental Protection Agency+2Environmental Protection Agency+2
How long has this been a “crisis”?
After a mid-20th-century decline, bed bugs resurged in the late 1990s–2000s worldwide—driven by travel and resistance—and they’ve stayed stubborn ever since. Public-health and research groups have tracked this trend for decades. PMC+2BioMed Central+2
What actually works (and what doesn’t)
Works: Professional, evidence-based IPM: precise inspections, targeted treatments, follow-up verification, and customer education. That’s why hotels and smart homeowners use it. National Pest Management Association
Doesn’t (well): Random sprays, “miracle gadgets,” and wishful thinking. Resistance and hiding behavior mean you’ll miss the majority of the population. BioMed Central
😂 Tiny laughs, big truths
- Bed bugs don’t care if your hotel has a lazy river or a monorail. They’re here for the all-you-can-eat human buffet.
- They’re equal-opportunity hitchhikers: roller bags, purses, hoodies, and—yes—your favorite stadium blanket.
- If you see one, there are probably more. They’re the cocktail party guests who arrive early, stay late, and invite friends.
Michigan & You: What to do right now
- Check seams on beds, couches, recliners, and headboards—look for live bugs, shed skins, tiny black fecal spots, or blood specks.
- After travel: keep luggage off beds, bag clothes, wash/dry on high heat.
• 3. Call professionals early. The earlier we act, the easier (and cheaper) the fix.
✅ Why Hi-Tech Pest Control
- One-treatment eradication with furniture salvage (keep your beds, couches & recliners).
- Same-day service across Livonia, Troy, Bloomfield Twp, Farmington Hills, Westland, Warren, Detroit & all SE Michigan.
- 40+ years of solving what others couldn’t—guaranteed results.
📞 Call 248-569-8001 — Sleep bite-free tonight.
❓ FAQ
Q: Are bed bugs only a U.S. problem?
A: No—there’s a global resurgence tied to travel and resistance. Paris, London, Australian cities, U.S. metros—you’ll find headlines everywhere. Reuters+2TIME+2
Q: Do “fancy” hotels or theme-park resorts avoid bed bugs?
A: They work hard to prevent them with daily inspections and rapid response, but zero risk isn’t realistic anywhere humans sleep. That’s why IPM is standard.
Q: How can a city drop in the rankings?
A: More inspections + prevention can reduce treatments counted by ranking lists. Example: NYC dropped to #15 in 2025. New York Post
Q: Is there a national rule forcing hotels to disclose bed bugs?
A: No single federal rule. Requirements vary by state/city; many properties follow internal protocols and industry guidance. Environmental Protection Agency+1
Q: Why not just spray everything myself?
A: Resistance + hiding behavior often makes DIY methods fail and spreads bugs further. Professional IPM hits all life stages and harborages. BioMed Central



