Characteristics

  • Size: Medium-sized flies about one quarter of an inch in length.
  • Color: Dark gray; four stripes are present on top of the thorax in front of the wings. Looks very similar to a housefly.
  • Behavior: This fly is very closely related to the house fly and, in fact, an entomologist is needed to distinguish between the two species. If “house flies” are suddenly appearing inside a building during the fall, winter or spring, then face flies are likely involved. The face fly’s status as a pest is similar to that of the cluster fly. These flies have discovered that heated buildings are ideal for surviving the cold of winter, and the face fly is one such species. As the weather cools in late summer and early fall, the sun warms the southern and western walls of buildings. The warmth attracts these insects to buildings where they crawl inside cracks and stay there for the winter. This would be fine, but during warm winter days, some flies “wake up” and end up on the inside of the building.

Habitats

Like house flies, face flies breed primarily in fresh animal manure, so they are more common in buildings in rural areas near farms.

 

Tips for Control

The best way to control face flies is by prevention as described below. If it’s too late and they are already inside, it takes a professional to find and treat the right areas to minimize the numbers of pests seen inside. If your building has experienced a problem in the past with face flies (or other overwintering pest species), take the following steps next summer to prevent a recurrence:
  • Seal as many cracks and holes on the outside of the building as possible, especially on the south and west walls where the sun heats the surfaces during the late summer and fall.
  • Be sure that all foundation and attic vents (if present) have tight-fitting insect screens. Plug weep holes in brick veneer buildings with small pieces of screening or wire mesh. Do not permanently seal weep holes.
  • Check the soffit vents and any gable vents or turbine vents on the roof.
    Have your Terminix professional treat the outside west and south walls of the building near the eaves. This treatment should be completed in mid- to late August.

If flies are already inside the building, complete elimination of interior invasions is often not possible. Treatments may be applied to cracks around window frames and into cracks in walls above false ceilings, but these may not reach all the voids and spaces in which flies might be waiting out the winter. Sealing cracks around window frames is helpful in excluding flies from crawling into the building’s interior rooms.