If you’re hearing scratching sounds coming from inside your walls, there’s a good chance you already know what’s causing it — you just don’t want it to be true. Recognizing the signs of mice in walls early is one of the most important things a Wisconsin homeowner can do before a small problem becomes a serious one.
Here’s what to look for, what it means, and when to act.
Why Mice Head Indoors in Wisconsin
Wisconsin winters push mice to seek warmth, shelter, and food — and your home offers all three. Mice can squeeze through a gap as small as a dime, and once one finds a way in, others follow. House mice and deer mice are the most common species in Southeastern Wisconsin homes, and both are capable of nesting inside wall cavities, insulation, and crawl spaces where they’re almost never seen directly.
That’s what makes them tricky. By the time most homeowners realize they have a problem, a small entry has already become an established route — and a pair of mice has already become a lot more.
Signs of Mice in Your Walls
You’re unlikely to see mice directly, especially during the day. What you’ll notice are the signals they leave behind:
- Scratching or scurrying sounds — Most active at night, mice move through wall cavities, across ceilings, and behind baseboards. If you hear it after the house settles down for the evening, take it seriously.
- Droppings near baseboards or in cabinets — Small, dark, and pellet-shaped. Fresh droppings are soft; older ones dry out and crumble. Either way, they indicate active or recent activity.
- Gnaw marks on wood, drywall, or food packaging — Mice gnaw constantly to keep their teeth worn down. Look for chewed corners on boxes, baseboards, or structural wood near the floor.
- Grease marks along walls — Mice travel the same routes repeatedly and leave oily smudge marks along baseboards and walls from the oils in their fur.
- A musty, ammonia-like odor — Mouse urine has a distinctive smell that becomes more noticeable in enclosed spaces like cabinets, closets, or utility rooms.
- Pet behavior changes — Dogs and cats often detect rodents before humans do. If your pet is fixating on a wall, cabinet, or corner of the room for no obvious reason, trust their instincts.
Why One Mouse Means More
This is the part most homeowners underestimate. Mice reproduce rapidly — a single female can produce 5 to 10 litters per year, with 5 to 6 pups per litter. A couple of mice that find their way into your home in October can become dozens by spring.
Mice also rarely travel alone. If one has found a reliable food source and a safe nesting spot, others will follow the same scent trails. Seeing or hearing one mouse is almost never the whole picture.
The Risks Beyond the Nuisance
Mice aren’t just unpleasant to think about — they create real problems inside your home:
- Structural damage from gnawing on insulation, wood framing, and electrical wiring (a leading cause of house fires)
- Contamination of food, countertops, and stored items through droppings and urine
- Health risks from pathogens carried in droppings, including salmonella and hantavirus
This is why rodent control in Milwaukee homes is something we take seriously — and why waiting to see if the problem resolves on its own is rarely a good strategy.
What to Do If You’re Seeing the Signs
If you’ve noticed one or more of the signs above, here’s what to do:
- Don’t ignore it. Activity doesn’t stop on its own once mice are established indoors.
- Avoid using poison bait yourself. Rodenticide placed incorrectly can harm pets and children, and mice often die inside walls — creating odor and secondary pest problems.
- Seal obvious entry points around pipes, dryer vents, and foundation gaps — but understand this alone won’t address mice already inside.
- Call a professional. A trained technician can identify entry points, assess the extent of the infestation, and implement a targeted treatment plan.
Don’t Wait Until Spring to Deal With It
Mice don’t slow down once they’re inside. They nest, breed, and cause damage year-round in the warmth of your walls and attic spaces. The earlier you address it, the less damage gets done — and the simpler and less costly the solution.
If you’re hearing scratching in your walls or seeing any of the signs above, Ehlers Pest Management can help. We provide rodent control in Milwaukee and across Southeastern Wisconsin — straightforward, effective, and without the runaround.
Schedule your inspection today.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if the scratching in my walls is mice or something else?
Mice are most active at night and produce light, rapid scratching or scurrying sounds. Squirrels are more likely to be heard during the day and in the attic. If you’re hearing sounds at night near baseboards or inside lower wall cavities, mice are the most likely culprit in a Wisconsin home.
Can mice in walls go away on their own?
Rarely. Once mice establish a nesting site and food source inside your home, they stay. Without intervention — sealing entry points and removing the existing population — the problem typically grows.
How long does it take to get rid of mice in walls?
It depends on the size of the infestation and the treatment method. A professional treatment plan typically produces noticeable results within one to two weeks, with follow-up to confirm the problem is fully resolved.
Is it dangerous to have mice in my walls?
Yes. Beyond the nuisance, mice chew through electrical wiring, contaminate surfaces with droppings and urine, and can carry pathogens that pose health risks to your family.
