Knowledge Base

Nevada

Las Vegas, Henderson, and beyond — scorpion guides for Nevada homeowners.
What is Scorpion Alert?

Get instant alerts when scorpions are detected in your home

Scorpion Detectors watch over your home at night, when scorpions are most active. The moment a scorpion crosses one, you get a phone alert — so you can act before it makes a home out of your shoe, bed, laundy basket, or anywhere else.
  • Detectors arrive ready to plug in
  • Live alerts go straight to your phone or watch, with location
  • Alert multiple family members with a single account
  • One flat monthly monitoring fee — no contract, cancel anytime
Get Scorpion Alert
From our customers

What homeowners are saying

Map of Las Vegas, NevadaLas Vegas, Nevada
This is by far the best way to catch these little b*$t%rds.
Enrique
8 scorpions detected
Map of Las Cruces, New MexicoLas Cruces, New Mexico
It works exactly as I hoped it would. Please make something similar for snakes.
Anjelica
7 scorpions detected
Map of Queen Creek, ArizonaQueen Creek, Arizona
We haven’t come across a scorpion in our house unexpectedly since we started using this.
Monique
6 scorpions detected
Common questions

Frequently asked questions

How bad is the Phoenix heat really, and what does “dry heat” mean day-to-day?

Phoenix heat is more than a catchy “dry heat” phrase—sun exposure, hot pavement, and constant AC use shape your routines from June through September, when locals settle into an “indoor season.” This section covers how schedules shift to early mornings/evenings and what to check in a new home (insulation, window coverings, HVAC age and filters) to avoid surprise comfort and energy costs. See the practical checklist in Phoenix dry heat homeowner tips.

What should I do if I find a scorpion in my room—or someone gets stung?

Stay calm and use a controlled trap method (cup over the scorpion, then slide a card underneath) rather than trying to grab or smash it. Contact the front desk or host and consider requesting a non-adjacent room/unit—ideally not ground-floor—while documenting with a photo. For stings, follow Poison Control/medical guidance and treat kids, pregnant travelers, and worsening symptoms as higher priority, as outlined in what to do if you find a scorpion.

What should I do right away if my dog got stung by a scorpion?

Start by keeping your dog calm, checking the likely sting areas (often paws or face), and using a brief cold compress to help with pain and swelling. The article also covers when to call your vet versus going to the ER immediately for severe symptoms like breathing trouble, collapse, tremors, or repeated vomiting. Follow these scorpion sting first aid for dogs steps and avoid giving any human meds or “home remedies” unless a veterinarian directs you.

Why are scorpions coming into my house in the first place?

Scorpions usually come inside for the same reasons other pests do: food (insects), water, shelter, and more stable temperatures. In the Southwest they’re most active at night and often move along edges like baseboards and walls rather than crossing open floors. This section breaks down the difference between accidental entry and purposeful hunting, including what scorpion pincers are used for in capturing prey, in why scorpions enter homes at night.

Is a scorpion in a glue trap dead, or can it still sting me?

Assume it can still move and sting until you confirm there’s no motion in the legs or tail, because “looks dead” isn’t a reliable test. The safest approach is to keep your distance, use long tongs to gently tap the trap, and avoid putting your hands or face close (a UV light at night can help you see clearly). This section also explains why bare-handed handling is risky and what to do next if you’re unsure in this glue trap scorpion safety checklist.

Is this scorpion sting an emergency or can I watch it at home?

Most scorpion stings cause local pain, tingling, and mild swelling that can be watched at home, but breathing problems, facial swelling, fainting, or chest pain are 911-level red flags. Risk can also depend on who was stung (especially small children or medically fragile adults) and whether you’re in an area where bark scorpions are common. This scorpion sting ER decision guide explains what to monitor in the first few hours and when to escalate care.