Bees and wasps are often confused at first glance, but they’re very different insects. Understanding those differences helps you respond to stinging insects around your home, garden, or business.
Bees play a vital role in pollination. Wasps are predators and scavengers. Both can sting, but their habits, behaviors, and risks vary. Knowing the difference helps you protect pollinators while managing unwanted threats.
Types of Bees and Wasps
Bees and wasps are common around homes and gardens, especially during warmer months. While they may look similar, their behavior, nesting habits, and interaction with people can differ. Our pest ID library can help you identify the various types of stinging insects. Understanding the types of bees and wasps you’re likely to see can help you spot potential problems early and decide when to bring in professionals for help.
Common Bee Species
In the southeastern U.S., the most frequently encountered bees include honeybees, carpenter bees, and bumblebees.
- Honeybees are social insects known for their role in pollination and honey production. They typically live in large colonies and are not aggressive unless provoked. You might notice them around flowering plants or near water sources. Their hives sometimes end up in hollow trees, wall voids, or attics.
- Carpenter bees are solitary and often misidentified as bumblebees due to their size. Unlike honeybees, they bore into untreated or exposed wood to create nesting tunnels. Males can be territorial but are stingless, while females will sting if handled or threatened. If you notice perfectly round holes in wood structures, this may indicate carpenter bee activity.
- Bumblebees are round and fuzzy, and usually found in gardens and flower beds. They live in smaller colonies and often nest underground or in compost piles. While they are typically non-aggressive, they will defend their nest if disturbed.
Common Wasp Species
In the southeastern U.S., the most commonly encountered wasps include paper wasps, yellow jackets, and mud daubers.
- Yellowjackets are known for their aggressive nature and tendency to defend their nests aggressively. They are smooth-bodied, black and yellow, and often build nests underground or in structural voids. You’ll usually find them scavenging around trash bins or sugary drinks in warmer months.
- Paper wasps are less aggressive than yellowjackets but will sting if threatened. They are easily recognized by their long legs and umbrella-shaped nests made of a papery material, usually attached to eaves or other sheltered spots around your home.
- Mud daubers are solitary wasps that build tube-like nests out of mud. While they can look intimidating, they rarely sting and are not considered aggressive. These wasps often help by hunting spiders and are generally not cause for alarm unless nesting becomes excessive.
Understanding the types of bees and wasps common in your area helps with proper wasp control and ensures that protected bee populations aren’t harmed unnecessarily.
Difference between Bees and Wasps
Although bees and wasps belong to the Hymenoptera order (a large group of insects), they differ in many ways, from their appearance to their behavior and preferred nesting sites.
Body Type and Appearance
Bees have hairy, robust bodies that help them collect and distribute pollen. Their coloration ranges from golden brown to black, often with muted striping. This body structure is a big part of what makes them such effective pollinators.
Wasps, in contrast, have smooth, shiny bodies with a narrow waist that gives them a sleek appearance. Their coloring is typically bright yellow and black. These visual differences can often help you tell at a glance whether you’re looking at a bee or a wasp.
Behavior and Diet
Bees primarily feed on nectar and collect pollen. They are typically not aggressive and only sting when provoked or when they feel their colony is under threat.
Wasps are hunters and scavengers. They feed on other insects as well as sugary human foods. This is why you’ll often see them buzzing around picnic tables, trash bins, or open drink cans. They are more likely to exhibit aggressive behavior, particularly late in the season when food sources become scarce.
Nesting Habits
Bees tend to nest in protected spaces. For example honeybees build wax combs in hives that can be found in tree hollows, wall cavities, or specialized hive boxes. Carpenter bees bore into wood and create individual brood chambers within. Bumblebees prefer nesting underground or in compost areas.
Wasps build nests from a papery material made from chewed wood fibers. Yellowjackets often construct their nests underground or in hidden wall voids. However, paper wasps attach their umbrella-shaped nests to eaves or ceilings. At the same time, mud daubers build their namesake nests in sheltered, vertical surfaces.
Why Should We Protect Bees?
Not every buzzing insect is a threat. Bees are essential to our environment. One-third of the food we eat relies on pollinators. Without them, fruits, vegetables, and even livestock feed would be harder to produce.
While bee stings can be painful and dangerous for those with allergies, most bees will not sting unless directly disturbed. Careful consideration is given to protecting bee populations, which is why professional residential bee removal services may focus on relocation, rather elimination.
The goal is to protect and preserve bee colonies, especially honeybees, whenever possible whilst still protecting your home from infestation. Our team can help assess the situation and guide you toward the best outcome for your family and the bees. Our technicians are trained to identify whether a nest can be safely relocated. We work closely with local experts when relocation is the best option, helping protect these important insects while keeping your home safe.
How to Identify Bees and Wasps
If you’ve spotted flying insects around your property and are unsure whether they’re bees or wasps, look for these signs:
- Nest location: Are they coming from a hole in the wood, such as decks, siding, or fences (carpenter bee)? Are they flying to and from a hanging papery nest (wasp?, Or emerging from a hole in the ground commonly lawns or garden beds (yellowjacket)?
- Body shape: Slim, narrow-waisted and shiny bodies usually indicate a wasp. Bees tend to be rounder, with a fuzzy or hairy appearance that helps collect pollen.Fuzzy and round points to bee.
- Flight pattern: Bees typically fly in a much slower, more purposeful path as they travel between flowers. . Wasps move quickly, more erratically and often hover.
Wasp or Bee? Why It Matters
Understanding the difference between a wasp and a bee is essential to your safety and the protection of our environment and ecosystems. Misidentifying a nest could mean accidentally destroying a valuable bee colony or failing to treat a growing wasp infestation.
Wasp nests tend to grow fast and become highly aggressive by late summer. Multiple stings can happen in seconds if you disturb one. Bee colonies, especially carpenter bees, are more discreet but can cause damage to decks, fences, or siding.
If you’re seeing carpenter bees boring holes into wooden structures or wasps building nests on your porch, correctly identifying the insect will help you choose the right approach to manage the issue and find the most effective solution..
What Does a Bee Nest Look Like?
Bee nests vary by species so there’s no single sign to look for. It depends on the type of bee present. You also may not see the nest directly, but instead notice subtle signs of presence:
- Honeybee nests: Often hidden, but signs may include bees entering a small gap repeatedly, a faint buzzing inside walls, or honey stains/dark patches on interior surfaces. If visible, honeycomb is made of pale wax and arranged in orderly hexagonal layers.
- Bumblebee nests: Usually hidden below ground or under debris. You may spot sudden bee traffic in and out of a single entrance hole, or hear buzzing from beneath a shed or compost pile. Their nests look like loosely arranged waxy cells, not neat honeycomb.
Carpenter bee activity: Marked by perfectly round holes in untreated wood (about the size of a pencil), with coarse sawdust nearby. No visible nest as they tunnel inside wood to create brood chambers.
When to Call the Experts
If you see increased insect activity around the side of the house or decking, pests flying in and out of a single area, it may seem like a minor issue, but these are signs to call expert pest control technicians. If you have a nest under your eaves, contact us immediately to help assess the risk and safely move the infestation.
DIY attempts often fail to eliminate the full colony or cause insects to scatter and build elsewhere. Bees and Wasps are protected and dangerous, so professionals are your best next step. Our team will safely assess and treat your stinging insect problem, whether it turns out to be bees, wasps, or something else entirely.
How Gregory Pest Control Can Help
At Gregory Pest Control, we know that fast, expert service makes all the difference in managing stinging insects. Whether you’re dealing with mud daubers, carpenter bees, or a swarm of yellowjackets, we have the tools and knowledge to solve the problem safely.
Our team offers expert species identification, safe bee removal services, and targeted wasp control. When possible, we focus on bee-friendly relocation. We also provide preventative treatments and advice to reduce the chance of future infestations.
We understand you want your home to be safe without harming essential pollinators. Our technicians are trained to make the right call, protect your property, and preserve what matters most. If you’re searching for a reliable residential bee relocator, contact Gregory Pest Control.