📋 What You'll Learn
If you have bed bugs in one room of your Livonia home, you need to understand one thing right now: bed bugs don't stay in one place on their own. They spread — and most of the time, homeowners are the ones spreading them without realizing it.
After 40+ years eliminating bed bug infestations across Southeast Michigan, Hi-Tech Pest Control sees the same three mistakes repeated in nearly every home we treat. These aren't rare scenarios — they're what most Livonia homeowners do naturally, not knowing that each action is making the infestation worse.
Here's exactly what's happening in your home, why it matters, and what to do right now.
#1 Dirty Clothes and Bed Sheets Are Carrying Bed Bugs to Your Couch Right Now
This is the single most common way bed bugs spread from a bedroom to the rest of a Livonia home — and almost no one realizes they're doing it.
Here's what's happening: bed bugs don't just live in your mattress. They live in your bed sheets, pillowcases, and the clothing you wear in the bedroom. When you get dressed in an infested room, bed bugs can be on your shirt, your jeans, your socks. When you sit down on the couch or recliner in those clothes — you just carried bed bugs with you.
It gets worse. When most people change their bed sheets or strip the bed, they carry the sheets through the house before they get to the washing machine. They might drop them on the couch for a minute. They put them on the laundry room floor. Each time infested bedding touches a new surface in your home, bed bugs climb off and begin exploring — and nesting — in that new area.
The Real Problem: How Long Between Washes
Most people wash their jeans every few months. Most people change their bed sheets every few weeks — sometimes longer. During an active bed bug infestation, that timeline is catastrophic. Bed bugs can travel 20 feet in a single night. Clothing worn for even one day in an infested bedroom — and then worn on the couch — is a direct highway from your bedroom to your living room furniture.
Couches and recliners are the second most common bed bug nesting location in Michigan homes. By the time most people call us, the bed bugs are no longer just in the bedroom — they're in the couch they sit on every evening, the recliner they relax in after work, and the chair at the kitchen table. The clothing and bedding carried them there.
What to Do About It — Right Now
- Wash and heat-dry all clothing worn in or near the infested bedroom every 2–3 days — not every few months
- Never drop infested bed sheets on a couch, chair, or floor — go directly from bed to washing machine
- Wash bed sheets and pillowcases in hot water (120°F or above) followed by at least 30 minutes in a high-heat dryer
- Place clean clothing in sealed plastic bags until worn to keep them bed bug-free
- Change into clean clothes outside the infested bedroom whenever possible
- Never place dirty, potentially infested laundry on any upholstered furniture
#2 Spraying One Room Forces Bed Bugs Into the Rest of Your Home
This one surprises most Livonia homeowners — but it's one of the fastest ways to turn a bedroom infestation into a whole-house problem.
Here's what happens: you discover bed bugs in your bedroom. You go to Home Depot or Walmart and buy a general-use insecticide. You spray the bedroom — the mattress seams, the baseboards, the furniture. It seems like a reasonable thing to do.
But you've just done something that makes the problem significantly worse.
General-use insecticides do not kill all the bed bugs in a room. They repel them. Bed bugs sense the chemical and flee — into the walls, into adjacent rooms, under the door to the hallway, into the living room, into other bedrooms. You've turned a localized infestation into a scattered, whole-home infestation. And the bed bugs that fled have now established new colonies in areas that were previously unaffected.
Why "Treating One Room" Never Works
Even when homeowners do everything right in the bedroom — spray thoroughly, use mattress encasements, wash everything — they leave the rest of the home completely untreated. The bed bugs that were already living in the couch, the carpet edges, the wall outlets, and the closet of the next room are completely undisturbed and continue breeding.
Weeks later, the bedroom seems "better" — and then the infestation is worse than ever because the population spread while the bedroom was being treated. We see this pattern in Livonia homes constantly.
Why Over-the-Counter Sprays Don't Solve the Problem
- General-use sprays don't penetrate wall voids where bed bugs hide
- Eggs are resistant to most OTC insecticides — hatching continues
- Bed bugs develop insecticide resistance quickly
- Spraying repels but doesn't kill — bed bugs relocate and regroup
- No OTC product reaches all life stages in all hiding spots
- Partial treatments scatter the colony and make professional treatment harder
What to Do Instead
- Stop using general-use insecticides immediately — they spread bed bugs more than they kill them
- If you must do something before professional treatment, use mattress encasements — they contain, not scatter
- Treat the problem as a whole-home infestation from the start, not a single-room issue
- Call Hi-Tech Pest Control for same-day professional treatment of all affected areas simultaneously
#3 Too Much Foot Traffic Through Your Home Is Spreading Bed Bugs to Every Room
Bed bugs don't have wings. They don't jump. So how do they get from the bedroom at the back of your Livonia home to the living room couch in the front? They ride on you.
Bed bugs are attracted to human carbon dioxide and body heat. Wherever you go in the home, they follow. But more importantly — bed bugs hitch rides on the clothing you're wearing right now. Every time a person walks from the infested bedroom through the hallway, into the living room, the kitchen, the bathroom — they're carrying bed bugs with them on their clothing.
The more people move through the home, and the more rooms they visit, the faster the bed bugs spread. A family of four with everyone moving freely through a home has bed bugs in every room within days. A single person who limits their movement can slow the spread significantly — but cannot stop it without professional treatment.
The Clothing You're Wearing Right Now Is the Problem
Most Livonia homeowners think of bed bug prevention as a "mattress problem." But the jeans and t-shirt you put on this morning in an infested bedroom — and wore to the living room, the kitchen, and the bathroom — just spread bed bugs to every surface you sat or leaned on.
The average person washes their jeans every 2–3 months. That means the same jeans are making the same trip through every room of the house — carrying bed bugs — for weeks without being washed. Shirts, socks, and other clothing worn in the infested bedroom face the same problem.
The "Moving to Another Room" Mistake
One of the most common things Livonia homeowners do when they discover bed bugs — completely understandably — is move to a different bedroom or start sleeping on the couch to avoid getting bitten. This is one of the fastest ways to spread the infestation.
Bed bugs follow you. Within a week of you sleeping in the new room, they've followed your carbon dioxide trail to the new location and begun establishing a colony there. Now you have two bedrooms infested instead of one — and the original room still has an active colony.
How to Slow Traffic-Based Spreading
- Wash all clothing worn inside the home every 2–3 days in hot water and high-heat dryer
- Change into fresh, sealed clothing when leaving the infested bedroom
- Minimize movement between rooms — especially from infested to non-infested areas
- Do NOT move to a new bedroom or start sleeping on the couch — this spreads the infestation
- Keep infested items — mattress, pillows, clothing — contained to the affected area
- If possible, reduce the number of people moving freely through infested areas until treatment occurs
Quick Reference — Bed Bug Do's and Don'ts for Livonia Homeowners
✅ DO These Things
- Wash all clothing and bedding in hot water every 2–3 days
- Heat-dry everything for 30+ minutes on high
- Go directly from bed to washing machine with sheets — never drop them on the couch
- Store clean clothing in sealed bags until worn
- Treat the whole home — not just one room
- Limit movement between infested and non-infested rooms
- Stay in your own bed — don't move to the couch or a new room
- Call a professional for same-day elimination
❌ DON'T Do These Things
- Drop infested bed sheets on couches, chairs, or floors
- Wear bedroom clothing throughout the entire house without washing
- Spray OTC insecticide on one room and leave others untreated
- Move to a new bedroom or sleep on the couch to "escape" bites
- Wait weeks between clothing washes during an active infestation
- Carry infested mattresses or furniture through the home
- Seal cracks or apply mattress encasements without treating first
- Assume traps or store products will solve the problem
The Only Way to Permanently Stop Bed Bugs from Spreading
Washing your clothing, containing your bedding, and limiting foot traffic are all meaningful steps — and they will slow the spread. But they will not eliminate the infestation. Bed bugs reproduce rapidly. A single female lays 1–5 eggs per day. The colony inside your walls, mattress seams, and furniture grows every day these steps aren't combined with professional treatment.
The three steps above buy you time. They reduce how fast the infestation spreads to new areas. But the only thing that actually ends a bed bug infestation in a Livonia home is complete professional elimination of the entire colony — every life stage, every hiding spot, every affected room — in a single treatment.
Hi-Tech Pest Control has been doing exactly that in Livonia and throughout Southeast Michigan since 1986. One visit. Same day. Done.

