Bed Bug Bites but No Bugs Found? Why Your Symptoms Are Real — and How to Find the Cause

NYC Pest Control · ACE-Led

Straight answers from a licensed New York exterminator and Associate Certified Entomologist (ACE) — serving all five boroughs, in English and Spanish.

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⏱ 12 min read

You feel it — the crawling, the biting, the itch that won’t stop. But inspection after inspection turns up no bed bugs, and you’re starting to feel like no one believes you. You are not imagining it, and you are not alone. Guidance from an Associate Certified Entomologist.

Quick answer: If you feel bitten but no bed bugs are found, your symptoms are real — and you are far from the only one. In the medical literature, roughly 60% of “invisible infestation” cases have a real, undiagnosed underlying cause, and many are treatable. The catch is that the cause is often not bed bugs at all: it may be another insect that leaves little trace (bird or rat mites, carpet beetle larvae, cockroach allergens), a skin or nerve condition, a nutritional or hormonal issue, or a medication. A certified entomologist’s job is to definitively rule the insect in or out with physical evidence and biology — then point you to the right specialist to find the rest.

You’re not imagining it — and you’re not “crazy”

The sensation of something crawling, biting, or stinging on or under the skin has a medical name — formication — and it is a genuine, well-documented neurological experience with dozens of possible causes. Major clinical reviews of “delusional infestation” (the term doctors use when someone is convinced they’re infested) find that about 60% of cases are “secondary” — meaning a real underlying medical condition is driving the sensation — and that many cases start real and only spiral when no one finds the cause.

So when a doctor or exterminator shrugs and implies it’s all in your head, that isn’t an answer. It usually means the cause hasn’t been found yet. Finding it is the whole point — and it starts with ruling out the one thing everyone assumes.

First, the math: how we rule bed bugs in or out

This is where a trained entomologist does something no one else in the process can. We don’t just look — we reconcile your symptoms against how bed bugs actually behave:

  • Feeding frequency. Bed bugs feed roughly every 3 to 7 days, not on demand every night. A small population physically cannot produce “100 bites a night.”
  • The reaction curve. Bite reactions are delayed and highly variable. Up to one in three people never visibly react at all, and reactions can appear days after a bite. Going from zero reactions for weeks to a hundred a day out of nowhere does not match bed bug biology.
  • The evidence trail. An infestation big enough to cause heavy, daily reactions would leave a clear trail: fecal spotting, shed skins, eggs, live bugs, and harborage. When there are many reactions but zero physical evidence, the absence is the finding — the sensations are not bed bug bites.
“When someone tells me they’re ‘highly reactive’ and getting a hundred bites a day, the first thing I do is the math. Bed bugs don’t feed that often, most people don’t react that strongly, and a population that active would leave evidence all over the room. If the reactions are there but the evidence isn’t, bed bugs aren’t the answer — and now we can actually help.”
— Jorge Bedoya, Associate Certified Entomologist (ACE)

Once we’ve honestly ruled the insect in or out — see how we approach a real case on our bed bug treatment page — the search for the true cause can finally begin.

The insect causes people miss (that leave almost no trace)

Before assuming there’s no bug at all, a good entomologist checks the pests that do affect people but leave little of the evidence a bed bug would. These are commonly overlooked:

Cockroach allergens (a reaction with no bite)

German cockroach proteins — in their droppings, shed skins, and body fragments — are one of the most significant indoor allergens, and they’re especially common in NYC apartment buildings. They can trigger asthma, rhinitis, and skin flare-ups or eczema that feel like bites, even though no roach is biting you. If there’s a hidden roach reservoir in the building, addressing it can quiet the reactions. See German cockroach extermination and cockroach control.

Bird mites and rat mites

When a pigeon or sparrow nest in a window AC unit, ledge, or vent — or a rodent nest in a wall void — is abandoned, the tiny mites left behind disperse indoors looking for a host and bite people. They’re pinhead-sized, tied to a hidden nest, and routinely missed. This is one of the most common true causes of “bitten but no bed bugs.” We cover it in depth in Bitten But No Bed Bugs? Bird & Rodent Mites in NYC High-Rises and our mite control service.

Carpet beetle larvae

Carpet beetle larvae carry barbed hairs that can cause itchy, welt-like reactions mistaken for bites — and carpet beetles are the pest most often confused with bed bugs. Full detail in Carpet Beetles or Bed Bugs?

Scabies and other real mites

Scabies is a real human mite that burrows into the skin and requires a dermatologist’s diagnosis and prescription treatment — it must never be missed. Fleas, straw-itch mites, and pet-associated Cheyletiella mites can also bite people. Part of our inspection is making sure a genuine, treatable pest isn’t hiding behind the “mystery.”

The non-insect causes worth checking (real, and often fixable)

When the insect question is honestly cleared, a large list of real medical causes of the crawling/biting sensation opens up — many of them simple to test for and treat. Clinical references compile these from confirmed cases; the ones we see most often in New Yorkers include:

  • Dry, heated-apartment skin (xerosis). NYC’s overheated winter apartments are a leading, under-appreciated cause of itch and crawling sensations.
  • Skin conditions — eczema, hives, folliculitis, prurigo.
  • Nutritional — vitamin B12, iron, or vitamin D deficiency; thyroid disease; diabetes.
  • Hormonal — menopause and perimenopause commonly cause formication.
  • Neurological — peripheral or small-fiber neuropathy, shingles, pinched nerves.
  • Medications and substances — certain prescriptions, stimulants, and even, at times, a heavy chemical pesticide treatment can irritate the skin and nerves.
  • The itch–anxiety cycle. Stress and hyper-focus genuinely amplify itch — that’s neurology, not weakness — and it’s treatable.

None of these mean you imagined anything. They mean there’s a real, findable answer — usually a blood test or a proper skin exam away.

Bitten but no bugs found? Talk to an entomologist first.
We offer a free consultation to reconcile your symptoms with the evidence and help you find the real cause.
Book a free consultation →  or call (347) 210-4646

Why we send you to a dermatologist — not the ER

If our inspection clears an active infestation, we don’t just leave you there. We point you to the right professional: a dermatologist — ideally one comfortable with the connection between skin and stress — along with your primary care doctor, who can run the bloodwork for the causes above.

We specifically do not recommend the ER or urgent care for this. Those settings are built for acute emergencies; they tend to discharge these patients quickly, without the workup, and people leave feeling dismissed. That’s the opposite of what you need. Walking into a dermatologist’s office with a written finding from a certified entomologist — “no active infestation, documented” — changes how seriously your case is taken and lets the doctor focus on the real cause.

“These clients have often been brushed off by everyone — landlords, exterminators, sometimes doctors. They don’t need another person telling them it’s nothing. They need someone to take the insect question off the table with real evidence, and then hand them a clear next step. That’s the whole job.”
— Jorge Bedoya, ACE

How an entomologist inspection actually helps

We see one or two of these cases a month, and our goal is always the same: give you a clear direction. In an inspection we:

  • Search thoroughly for physical evidence of any biting pest.
  • Identify any specimen you’ve collected — often it turns out to be lint, fibers, or skin, which is itself useful information.
  • Reconcile the “math” of your symptoms against bed bug biology.
  • Check the commonly missed causes — bird and rat mites, carpet beetles, and cockroach allergen sources.
  • Give you a written finding you can bring to your doctor.

In our experience, every client who has come to us with this has left with a clearer path to the real cause — either a genuine (often non-bed-bug) pest we can treat, or a documented all-clear that lets a physician find the medical answer. We won’t dismiss you.

Please note: This article is for education and is not a medical diagnosis or medical advice. If you are experiencing these symptoms, a licensed dermatologist and your primary care physician are the right professionals to identify and treat the cause. If you are in significant distress, please reach out to a doctor or a mental health professional — you deserve real, compassionate care, and help is available.
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A Brooklyn-based, NYSDEC-registered company (Reg. #15140) led by Jorge Bedoya, an Associate Certified Entomologist (ACE). For biting-pest concerns, NYE provides a careful inspection to confirm the source before any treatment. ACE-led work comes with a client portal of service reports and photos, fully bilingual service, and no long-term contract.

Bites but no bugs — FAQ

I feel bites but no bed bugs are ever found. What is going on?

Your symptoms are real. Roughly 60% of “invisible infestation” cases have a real, undiagnosed underlying cause, and many are treatable. Often it is not bed bugs at all — it can be another insect that leaves little trace (bird or rat mites, carpet beetle larvae, cockroach allergens), a skin or nerve condition, a nutritional or hormonal issue, or a medication. A certified entomologist can rule the insect in or out, then point you to the right specialist.

How can an entomologist tell if it is really bed bugs?

With evidence and biology. Bed bugs feed roughly every three to seven days, not every night, so a small population cannot produce a hundred bites a night. Reactions are delayed and variable, and up to one in three people never visibly react. A true infestation heavy enough to cause many reactions leaves fecal spotting, shed skins, eggs, live bugs, and harborage. Heavy symptoms with zero physical evidence indicate the sensations are not bed bug bites.

Can cockroaches cause skin reactions without biting?

Yes. German cockroach proteins in droppings, shed skins, and body fragments are a major indoor allergen, especially in NYC apartments. They can trigger asthma, rhinitis, and skin flare-ups or eczema, which people sometimes experience as bites even though cockroaches are not biting them.

What are bird mites and rat mites, and can they bite people?

They are tiny parasites that live in bird and rodent nests. When a nest in a window AC unit, ledge, vent, or wall void is abandoned, the mites disperse indoors seeking a host and can bite people. They are pinhead-sized and easy to miss, so they are frequently misdiagnosed as bed bugs.

Can carpet beetles cause a rash that looks like bites?

Yes. Carpet beetle larvae have barbed hairs that can cause itchy, welt-like skin reactions often mistaken for bites, even though nothing is biting. Carpet beetles are the pest most commonly confused with bed bugs.

Should I go to the ER or urgent care for mystery bites?

Usually not. Emergency rooms and urgent care are built for acute emergencies and tend to discharge these patients quickly without the needed workup. A dermatologist, ideally one comfortable with the connection between skin and stress, together with your primary care doctor, is the right place to properly examine the skin and run tests.

If it is not insects, what else could cause the sensation?

Many real, often fixable conditions can cause formication: dry skin from heated apartments, eczema or hives, vitamin B12 or iron deficiency, thyroid disease, menopause-related changes, nerve conditions such as neuropathy or shingles, certain medications and substances, and the anxiety-itch cycle. This is why a proper medical workup matters.

Talk to an entomologist who will take you seriously

New York Exterminating is led by Jorge Bedoya, an Associate Certified Entomologist (ACE). Mystery bites are a diagnosis problem before they are a treatment problem, and an entomologist is the one professional who can settle the insect question with evidence and biology — then guide you to the right care. If you’ve been told it’s nothing and you know it isn’t, start here.

Get a clear answer.
Book your free consultation →  or call (347) 210-4646 — English, Spanish & Chinese.

JB
Jorge Bedoya, ACE
Associate Certified Entomologist (ACE) · NYSDEC-licensed · Owner, New York Exterminating

Every NYE article is written and reviewed by Jorge Bedoya, who holds a degree in science and is an Associate Certified Entomologist (ACE) and licensed New York exterminator. NYE provides IPM-based, low-exposure pest control across all five boroughs — in English and Spanish.

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