Mole Control Atlantic Seaboard
Atlantic Seaboard mole work: Hout Bay flagship plus Sea Point, Camps Bay, and Llandudno. Coastal lawns and irrigated verges—humane trapping for golden moles and mole-rats, no broad-spectrum poisons.
Regional hub for mole control on the Atlantic Seaboard—from Hout Bay and Llandudno through Camps Bay to dense Sea Point lawns and hotel strips. Coastal irrigation and sandier soils can support golden moles and mole-rats; we trap active runs humanely and advise on moisture and prey where helpful. Mole Control Cape Town is our city-level page; Pest Control Atlantic Seaboard covers all pests for this area.
This hub is part of a full mole ecosystem for the Atlantic Seaboard: Hout Bay is our flagship suburb page, with dedicated pages for Sea Point, Camps Bay, and Llandudno. We still serve the whole strip from here and from Mole Control Cape Town.
Mole identification guide — golden moles vs mole-rats and IUCN status.
Humane trapping. No poisons.
Golden moles & mole-rats · Lawns, gardens, sports fields

Book mole control in Atlantic Seaboard
engineered to eliminate™—tell us where you are seeing ridges, molehills, or tunnel damage so we can plan humane trapping and deterrents.
- Name your suburb (Hout Bay, Sea Point, Camps Bay, etc.)
- Lawn, verge, estate lawn, or sports strip
- Describe ridges, molehills, or tunnel damage
- Note irrigation, sea sand, or retaining walls if relevant
- Quote, booking, or WhatsApp
Protecting lawns and sports turf from mole damage
Moles and mole-rats undermine presentation and safety on lawns and pitches. Professional control targets active runs and reduces the conditions that draw them back—without poisons that risk pets or other wildlife.
Why Atlantic Seaboard clients choose Verminator for moles
We distinguish golden moles from mole-rats where signs allow, set traps on active runs, and advise on grubs and irrigation. That keeps treatment humane and appropriate for the species involved.
- Coastal Atlantic Seaboard mole service
- Humane trapping — no poisons
- Lawns, villas, estates, hotel grounds
- Species-aware (golden moles vs mole-rats)
- Links to city hub and identification guide
Moles activity in Atlantic Seaboard Cape Town right now
Mole activity remains moderate in autumn. Soil is still workable and prey available; good time for trapping or barrier work before colder, drier winter soil.
Activity level
Moderate
Most active now
Cape golden mole, Common mole
What to maintain now
- Continue to reduce grub and worm pressure; limit excess irrigation.
- If fresh molehills appear, book treatment before winter.
Atlantic Seaboard pest context
Our broad Pest Control Atlantic Seaboard page covers how moles fit alongside rodents, ants, and other pests in this corridor. Use it with this mole hub and Mole Control Cape Town for full coverage.
Mole control for Atlantic Seaboard properties
From estate lawns to school fields, we structure services around soil type, irrigation, and how the property is used.
Apartments and sectional-title lawns
Smaller irrigated lawns and shared verges along the strip still attract soil prey. We work discreetly on active runs and coordinate with body corporates where commons are affected.
Sea-facing villas and terraces
Camps Bay, Llandudno, and Bantry-side gardens often combine irrigation, retaining walls, and sandier pockets—good for earthworms and sometimes mole-rats. We confirm sign before setting the service.
Hospitality and club lawns
Guest-facing turf needs to stay presentable. We align trapping visits with operations and follow up after rain or peak irrigation.
Why mole problems show up in Atlantic Seaboard
The Atlantic Seaboard mixes wind, salt air, and year-round irrigation on lawns and hotel grounds. Moist, worm-rich soil supports golden moles; sandier coastal pockets can show larger mole-rat mounds.
Winter rain and summer watering often spike visible activity—ridges along fences and verges are common after wet spells.
Our approach to mole control in Atlantic Seaboard
We read the sign (ridge scale, mound type, soil context) to distinguish golden mole runs from mole-rat activity, then set humane traps on confirmed active tunnels.
We avoid poisons that risk pets and non-target wildlife. Where useful we note grub pressure and irrigation timing so lawns are less attractive after control starts.
Why DIY mole control often fails
Home traps often miss active runs or are set incorrectly. Without reducing grubs or excess moisture, new animals can move in from neighbouring gardens.
Ready to restore your lawn? Call.
Spot ridges, molehills, or spongy turf? Address activity before it spreads across the lawn or pitch.
Signs you may need professional mole control
- Raised ridges across lawn or verge near the coast
- Fresh molehills or loose soil along retaining walls
- Spongy turf over shallow tunnels after irrigation
- Damage clustering after rain on watered lawns
- Larger mounds on sandier pockets toward Llandudno or Hout Bay (possible mole-rat)
Identify before you control
Most lawn and garden call-outs in the Western Cape involve common golden moles or mole-rats that are not conservation priorities — but South Africa also has golden moles with higher IUCN threat status. Always confirm what you are dealing with and the legal context before lethal control. Our mole identification guide covers species clues and status — without pinning threatened populations to places on a map.
Common mole species in Atlantic Seaboard gardens
South Africa does not have European or American true moles (Talpidae). “Mole” damage here is usually golden moles (insect-eaters) or mole-rats (rodents). All four profiles below are IUCN Least Concern — the species most often involved in Cape Town lawns and gardens. If you are on fynbos, dunes, or unsure, check our identification guide before any lethal control.
Cape golden mole
Chrysochloridae · Least Concern
Small, blind, iridescent-furred insectivore. Tunnels after grubs, worms, and soil invertebrates. Leaves raised ridges and small molehills in moist, irrigated lawns and garden beds.
- Raised ridges or “runs” in lawn and garden
- Small molehills; soft soil near irrigation
- Superficial burrows; damage to turf and roots
- Year-round activity in Cape Town’s mild climate
The species you are most likely to mean by “mole” in Cape Town gardens. Humane trapping and deterrents; reduce grubs and excess irrigation where practical.
Hottentot golden mole
Chrysochloridae · Least Concern
The most widespread golden mole in South Africa. Similar signs to the Cape golden mole — long burrows, molehills, and surface runs — and also common in suburban gardens and sports fields.
- Molehills and ridges in lawns, farmland, and verges
- Widespread from coast to Highveld — overlaps with Cape golden mole in many suburbs
- Insectivore; peaks when soil is workable after rain or watering
Often interchangeable with Cape golden mole from damage signs alone; both are Least Concern. Professional assessment targets active runs correctly.
Cape dune mole-rat
Bathyergidae · Least Concern
Large solitary rodent (not a golden mole). Digs with claws; herbivore. Pushes up big molehills and ridges in sandy coastal soil — common from the West Coast through to sandy Cape suburbs.
- Large molehills and pronounced ridges on sandy lawns and fields
- Damage to irrigation lines and buried cables reported
- Solitary; one animal per burrow system in many cases
Main mole-rat “mole” pest on sandy Cape coastal strips. Humane trapping and exclusion; different biology from golden moles.
Common mole-rat
Bathyergidae · Least Concern
Colonial rodent; herbivore. Molehills and tunnel systems in gardens, pasture, and crop edges. Widespread in the Western Cape and beyond.
- Colonial activity — multiple hills or a “town” of mounds
- Pasture, gardens, and areas with bulbs or roots
- Often confused with Cape dune mole-rat (smaller; different social system and range)
Control may need colony-focused strategies. We assess whether signs fit common mole-rat vs solitary Cape dune mole-rat.
Mole control and prevention
Learn more about mole behaviour, damage signs, and control options in the Western Cape.
Mole control and preventionTrapping, deterrents, and habitat tweaks
We use humane trapping on active runs and can combine deterrents with advice on grubs and irrigation. We do not use poisons that risk pets or non-target wildlife.
Trapping
Correct placement on active runs improves catch rates; we explain timelines when we quote.
Deterrents & food source
Reducing grubs and tuning irrigation makes lawns less attractive alongside trapping.
Atlantic Seaboard areas we cover
Suburbs listed here align with our regional coverage for Atlantic Seaboard. Book with your address to confirm service. Broad area intel: Pest Control Atlantic Seaboard.
Key areas
Sea Point, Green Point, Camps Bay, Clifton, Bantry Bay, Bakoven
Suburb-level mole pages: Mole Control Hout Bay (flagship), plus Sea Point, Camps Bay, and Llandudno. Use related links at the bottom of this page for siblings and the city hub.
Explore more mole and pest resources
City hub, identification guide, related pest services, and graph-derived links for this region.
