If you are trying to get a rough idea of price before making contact, that is a fair question.
Pest Gone’s services page currently lists Rodent Pest Control Services – From £80. At the same time, its FAQ page makes it clear that pricing varies depending on the type of pest, how serious the infestation is, and the size of the property.
So the honest version is simple.
Yes, there is a clear starting point. No, that does not mean every rat or mouse job will cost exactly the same.
This is where people sometimes get the wrong idea.
A starting price is useful because it tells you Pest Gone is not hiding behind “call for price” with no guidance at all. But it is still a starting point, not a flat rate for every rodent problem. Pest Gone’s own FAQ says the quote depends on the pest involved, the extent of the infestation, and the size of the property.
That means a smaller, more straightforward issue may sit closer to the entry price.
A more established infestation, a larger property, or a job that needs more time and follow-up may cost more.
Not all rodent jobs are alike.
A single mouse issue in one part of a property is different from ongoing rat activity with multiple signs across a larger building. Pest Gone’s FAQ does not publish one fixed price for every case because the real cost depends on what is actually happening on site.
The main things that usually affect the quote are:
That pricing logic is consistent with the way Pest Gone explains its service costs publicly.
This part matters.
It is easy to focus on the starting figure and treat that as the expected final price. Sometimes that may be close. Sometimes it will not be.
Pest Gone says it can provide a quote once it fully understands the pest problem. That is the sensible way to handle it, because the cost should reflect the actual situation rather than a made-up average that may not match your property.
In other words, the £80 starting point is useful for guidance, but the real quote still needs to be based on the job.
If you want the plain-English version, think of it like this:
That is a cleaner and more honest way to present it than pretending every rat or mouse issue fits one neat price.
If you are seeing signs of rats or mice, the best next step is to use the starting price as a guide, not a guarantee.
Pest Gone already gives you a useful baseline with rodent pest control from £80. From there, the right quote comes down to the size of the problem and the property involved. If you want a clearer idea of likely cost, the quickest route is to get the issue looked at properly and priced on the real conditions rather than guesswork.
