Does It Matter Which One You Have?
Yes — significantly. Rats and mice have different habits, preferred harborage sites and behaviours that affect how a pest controller will approach treatment. Misidentifying the rodent can lead to bait being placed in the wrong locations and a treatment that doesn’t work.
Physical Differences at a Glance
| Feature | Rat (Roof Rat / Norway Rat) | Mouse (House Mouse) |
|---|---|---|
| Body length | 18–25cm (not including tail) | 7–10cm |
| Weight | 150–500g | 15–30g |
| Tail | Long, scaly, roughly equal to body length | Long relative to body, thin and lightly haired |
| Ears | Small relative to head | Large relative to head |
| Snout | Blunt | Pointed |
| Droppings | 15–20mm, capsule-shaped | 3–6mm, pointed ends |
Behavioural Differences
Rats
- Cautious (neophobic): Rats are suspicious of new objects in their environment — including bait stations — and may avoid them for several days before feeding
- Strong swimmers: Norway rats can enter buildings through drains and are excellent swimmers
- Established runways: Rats use the same routes repeatedly, leaving greasy rub marks along walls
- Larger food requirements: Rats consume 20–30g of food per day and prefer high-protein or high-fat foods
Mice
- Curious: Mice are exploratory and typically investigate new objects in their environment quickly — making bait and trap placement easier
- Many small meals: Mice graze frequently throughout the night, visiting multiple food sources
- Small home range: Mice typically stay within 3–9 metres of their nest — so baits should be placed at close intervals
- Prolific breeders: A mouse can produce 8 litters of 6 pups per year — infestations escalate quickly
How Treatment Differs
Rats require bait to be placed along established runways and in sheltered locations. Because of their neophobia, bait stations may need to remain unbaited for several days before bait is introduced. Snap traps should be placed perpendicular to the wall along runways.
Mice respond well to both bait stations and snap traps placed at frequent intervals (every 1–2 metres) throughout the infested area. Their curiosity means they investigate new objects quickly, so traps and bait are usually effective within 1–2 days.
Can You Have Both?
Yes — while less common, it is possible to have both rats and mice in the same property, particularly in larger homes with connected outbuildings. Interestingly, rats will kill and eat mice, so a strong rat presence may actually suppress a mouse population — but both species still need to be addressed.
Next Steps
If you’ve identified rodent activity but aren’t sure which species, a professional pest controller can make a definitive assessment based on droppings, gnaw marks, rub marks and burrow characteristics.
Pestyologist handles both rat and mouse infestations across Sydney. Contact us today for an inspection.
