Nebraska is facing a surge in bed bug infestations across multiple cities, driven by travel, secondhand furniture, and dense housing. Omaha, Lincoln, Grand Island, Kearney, and Norfolk lead the battle with public campaigns, professional treatments, and community efforts as of April 2026.
Omaha: The Epicenter
Omaha ranks 30th on Orkin’s 2024 Top 50 Bed Bug Cities list, up from 35th previously, with persistent issues in hotels, apartments, and public transit. The city launched awareness drives teaching residents to spot rust-colored stains, shed skins, and bites, partnering with pest firms for subsidized treatments.
A 2025 class-action lawsuit against Omaha Housing Authority highlighted failures at low-income high-rises, prompting faster inspections. Public health officials now mandate landlord reporting within 24 hours, reducing spread via early heat treatments (120°F+ kills all stages).
Lincoln: Capital Crackdown
Lincoln reports rising cases in rentals and university dorms, addressed through trained pest control networks and free resident guides on prevention. The city inspects public buildings quarterly, offering low-cost encasements and steamers via health departments.
University of Nebraska Extension runs workshops on IPM (Integrated Pest Management): vacuuming, laundering at 120°F, and interceptors under beds. No Orkin ranking, but complaints doubled since 2023, spurring a “Bed Bug Free Lincoln” app for reporting.
Grand Island: Apartment Alarms
Grand Island combats outbreaks in multi-family units, including Centennial Towers where 2025 commissioner outcry exposed cockroach-bed bug combos. Health officials issued clutter-reduction guidelines and fund heat treatments for vulnerable seniors.
Businesses like hotels collaborate on protocols: mattress covers, canine detection dogs ($200-500 scans), and follow-up sprays. Community outreach targets secondhand shoppers, emphasizing hot-drying clothes post-thrift.
Kearney: Small-Town Surge
Kearney sees quick spread in close-quarters housing, with public health partnering pest experts for school/hotel education. Workshops stress early signs—sweet musty odor, fecal dots—and DIY traps using double-sided tape.
Local firms like Central Nebraska Heat Treatment offer one-day whole-home zaps, killing eggs too. City code now requires landlords to treat within 7 days of notice, fining delays $250+.
Norfolk: Rental Focus
Norfolk tackles infestations in rentals and senior facilities via education campaigns urging weekly checks. Residents report via hotlines; authorities link to affordable pros and long-term plans like building-wide sealing.
Northeast Nebraska Public Health stresses travel vigilance: hotel inspections, luggage isolation. High-heat laundry kills hitchhikers; the city subsidizes for low-income via grants.
Common Combat Strategies
| City | Key Tactics | Partners |
|---|---|---|
| Omaha | Awareness, lawsuits, transit checks | Pest firms, housing authority |
| Lincoln | Workshops, dorm audits | UN Extension, health dept |
| Grand Island | Heat funds, clutter guides | Commissioners, landlords |
| Kearney | Dogs, school programs | Heat pros, code enforcement |
| Norfolk | Hotlines, senior aid | Public health, rentals |
All emphasize non-chemical first: steam (212°F), desiccants (diatomaceous earth), and isolation. Pro sprays (neonics, pyrethroids) follow, with resistance monitored.
Why the Onslaught?
Bed bugs (Cimex lectularius) hitchhike via bags/suits, thriving sans disease but causing anxiety/itching. Nebraska’s resurgence ties to post-COVID travel boom; Orkin notes Midwest jumps. Eggs hatch in 6-10 days; one female yields 500 offspring yearly.
Climate aids: milder winters let survivors linger. Used furniture markets in college towns amplify.
Detection and Prevention Tips
- Signs: Bites in lines, blood spots, shells.
- Checks: Peel linens, probe seams, use blacklight for stains.
- Travel: Plastic bags for clothes; hot-dry on return.
- Home: Declutter, encase mattresses ($30-60), vacuum daily.
- Act Fast: Pros cost $1,000-5,000/home; DIY fails 70% long-term.
Report to health depts; Nebraska lacks statewide registry but cities track.
Broader Impacts
Infestations displace families, spike allergies, cost $300M/year nationally. Nebraska lawsuits rise; insurers deny if neglected. Schools close temporarily; tourism dips in affected hotels.
SOURCES:
- https://collincountymagazine.com/2025/06/24/insect-invasion-5-nebraska-cities-combatting-bed-bug-onslaught/
- https://www.iheart.com/content/2024-01-25-one-nebraska-city-named-among-worst-cities-for-bed-bugs-in-the-us/












