Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (2024)

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (1)

The most common clothes moths are the Webbing Clothes Moth, easily identified with a golden color and around half an inch in length, and the Case-Bearing Moth, which can be identified about ½ inch long and their forewings are mottled brown with one large and a few smaller indistinct black spots.

These moth species can attack clothes and other home textiles, and are commonly known as clothes moths or carpet moths depending on where their larvae are found causing damage.

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Webbing Clothes Moth / Case-Bearing Clothes Moth

It is important to note that Clothes Moths and Carpet Moths are not separate species - the species of moths that attack clothing and carpets are the same - they are commonly called ‘clothes’ or ‘carpet’ moths depending on where they are found and what fabrics they target.

It's also important to note that these moths are looking for animal-based fibers to lay their eggs - think wool, merino, cashmere, silk, feather, fur.

The reason that it is animal-based fibers only is that the larvae of clothes moths and Carpet Moths feed on keratin - a protein found in animal fibers, and also in dust. A large proportion of dust is made up of human skin cells and hair shed day to day in homes. There are two main moth species that cause most of the damage to clothing and home textiles. They are the Webbing Clothes Moth and the Case-Bearing Moth, also known asthe Case Making Moth.

There are two main moth species that cause most of the damage to clothing and home textiles. They are the Webbing Clothes Moth and the Case-Bearing Moth.

Webbing Clothes Moth (Common Clothes Moth)

The Webbing Clothes Moth (Tineola bisselliella) is also known as the Common Clothes Moth or simply Clothing Moth.

Easily identifiable with a golden color and around half an inch in length. Webbing Clothes Moths will most commonly be seen flying just after pupation and a sudden occurrence will often happen with warmer weather in Spring. The transition from winter to spring triggers pupation and the move to the next lifecycle stage. Flying Clothes Moths are usually looking to mate.

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (2) Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (3)

As the adult Webbing Clothes Moths mature, they will be less active and prefer dark, undisturbed areas and that is exactly the environment where they will lay their eggs - to be undisturbed and on the animal fiber based food source that will be needed by the larvae to survive after they hatch.

Less used corners of closets or drawers, fitted carpets under furniture that is rarely moved and wool rugs are particular favorite places for egg laying. Rugs are also a target because it is easy for the larvae to crawl underneath and do their damage from below. Webbing Clothes Moth larvae will also crawl under baseboards in search of darkened areas where debris has gathered and which consequently contains food.

The eggs are tiny, most being under 1 mm long and barely visible. A female will lay several hundred during her lifetime. Egg placement is carefully chosen in locations where they will have the best chance for survival.

The eggs are attached with a glue-like substance and can be quite difficult to remove. After the egg hatches, the clothes moth larva will immediately look for food. Clothes moth larvae can obtain their required food within two months to progress to the next stage of their life-cycle, but if conditions are unfavorable they will feed intermittently for a long time. Whether it takes two months or two years, each larva will eventually spin a cocoon in which it will pupate and change into an adult Webbing Clothes Moth. Clothes moth larvae stay in these cocoons for between one and two months and then emerge as adults ready to mate and lay eggs.

Contrary to what most people believe, adult moths do not eat or cause any damage to clothing or fabric. It is the clothes moth larvae which are solely responsible for damage to clothing and carpets, and which spend their entire time eating and foraging for food.

Case-Bearing Moth

The Case-bearing Clothes Moth (Tinea pellionella) is widespread within North America. The adults are typically encountered during summer and early autumn, but the casemaking moths that live in human dwellings may be seen all year-round.

The adults of this small moth are about ½ inch long and their forewings are mottled brown with one large and a few smaller indistinct black spots. The hindwings are plain pale brown-grey. Both the forewings and the hindwings are edged by a hairy fringe.

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (4) Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (5)

The casemaking moth larvae eat keratin, similarly to webbing clothes moths, and found in animal based fabrics - clothing and home textiles including carpets and rugs. The Case-Bearing Clothes Moth builds itself a portable case out of debris such as fibers and hairs, in which they can hide.

The Life Cycle of a Carpet Moth & Clothes Moth

The carpet moth has a very similar life cycle to a clothes moth.

The adults do not live long and the mated adult female lays hundreds of eggs in her short life time. The eggs will be laid in the quieter, darker and undisturbed areas of carpets and rugs and lay dormant for approximately 4 to 10 days before hatching. The larvae can live for up to 2 years which accounts for continued damage as they eat through the winter months, but in warmer periods they will pupate within 2 months of hatching, resulting in a number of cycles through the Spring to Autumn months. The pupation stage will last up to 2 weeks before the adults emerge. The adults are relatively harmless and only live 2-3 months, but the issue and risk to property is clearly the risk of further egg laying and the infestation getting out of land, hence the need to deal with both adult and larvae stages of the carpet moth lifecycle in treatment routines.

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (6)

For more detail on the clothes moth life cycle, see our page describing the full life cycle of the clothes moth.

Clothes Moth Traps

MothPrevention clothes moth traps contain specific pheromones that will attract the male Webbing Clothes Moth and male Case-Bearing Moths - the pheromones differ from those needed to catch pantry moths (Indian Meal Moths being the most common). This is why it is so important to identify the species that you believe to be a problem.

Our clothing moths pheromone traps are highly effective, natural and odor-free. They use powerful German engineered pheromones in order to catch the adult male moths and help break the breeding cycle. You can then monitor for any further moth activity and refill the traps every 12 weeks.

Buy Now

Other Species and Types of House Moths

Even though they are by far the most common, you may not recognize your moths as the ones above; it may be that you have White-Shouldered Moths or Brown House Moths, both of which can damage clothing.

Identifying Clothes Moths & Carpet Moths With Images

Use our photo guide below to identify clothes moths and carpet moths. Click on the images for more information about each species.

Look for 1/2-inch long buff-colored moths with narrow wings that have hairs along the edges. These are adult clothes moths. The adults do not eat fabric, but their presence means that eggs will be laid that will produce fabric-eating larvae.

Check for the clothes moth larvae if adult moths are present. The larvae are creamy-white colored caterpillars, which can be as much as a 1/2 inch in length. Identify webbing clothes moth larvae by their feeding tunnels of silk, or webbing patches left behind on the fabric as they move around.

Adult webbing clothes moths have a wingspread of about 1/2-inch and that of the male is somewhat less... The body is about 1/4-inch long with wings folded and golden-yellow with a satiny sheen (see picture below). A tuft of reddish golden hairs on the head is upright and reddish-gold. Eggs are oval, ivory, and about 1/24-inch long. Larvae are a shiny, creamy white with a brown head, up to 1/2-inch long. The larvae spin long threads and construct tunnels of silk.

Clothes moth larvae feed on wool, feathers, fur, hair, leather, lint, dust, paper, and occasionally cotton, linen, silk, and synthetic fibers. They are especially damaging to fabric stained with beverages, oil from hair, and sweat. Most damage is done to articles left undisturbed for a long time, such as old wool blankets, wool upholstery, feathered hats, antique dolls and toys, weavings, wall hangings, piano felts, old furs, and especially wool carpets under heavy furniture and clothing in storage.

Damaged fabrics have holes eaten through them by small, white larvae and often have silken cases, lines of silken threads, and fecal pellets over the surface of the materials. Moths are destructive during the larvae stage. Adult "millers" or moths are entirely harmless.

Clothes and Carpet Moth Control

We have prepared easy to follow, step by step guides to guide you through dealing with Clothes and Carpet Moths:

Buy Now

  • carpet moths
  • closet organization
  • clothes moth larvae
  • clothes moths
  • clothing care
  • essential reads
  • pantry moths
  • Show All Articles

About MothPrevention

MothPrevention® speak to customers every day about their clothes moth issues - clothes moths are a species that are ever increasing and that can cause significant damage to clothes, carpets and other home textiles.

To date, we’ve helped over 150,000 customers deal with their moth problems. We have developed professional grade solutions including proprietary pheromones, not available from anybody else in the USA, and engineered in Germany to the highest production standards.

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification (2024)

FAQs

Identifying Clothes & Carpet Moths - Carpet & Clothes Moth Identification? ›

The most common clothes moths are the Webbing Clothes Moth, easily identified with a golden color and around half an inch in length, and the Case-Bearing Moth, which can be identified about ½ inch long and their forewings are mottled brown with one large and a few smaller indistinct black spots.

What's the difference between Carpet Moths and clothes moths? ›

They are in fact the same insect, known as the common clothes moth. The reason the two get confused is that infestations can be found on clothes or in the carpet. It is a common pest that lives on natural fibres such as animal fabrics and furs such as wool.

What do clothes and Carpet Moths look like? ›

Case-bearing clothes moth

Both fore and hind wings have a fringe of hairs along the margins. The forewings are brown with one large dark spot and two smaller dark spots, although these often rub off on older specimens. This moth has a wingspan of 9-16mm. The head is coated with grey hairs.

How can you tell if you have Carpet Moths? ›

Look for signs of Carpet Moths, which include bald patches and threadbare spots on your carpets, larval casings, and sticky web-like substances. You can also check for eggs, webbing material and casings in dark crevices, near the floorboards, and the walls. Dead adult Carpet Moths are another sign of these insects.

Can you get rid of Carpet Moths yourself? ›

Vacuuming regularly with a good-suctioning vacuum is an effective way to remove eggs and moth larvae from your carpets, furniture and clothes. Be sure to get into all the nooks and crannies of your wardrobe and along the edge of your carpets to ensure you reach all surface areas.

Can you ever get rid of Carpet Moths? ›

Getting rid of Carpet Moths permanently is going to take some time. You will need to clean, vacuum, and routinely use repellents or moth killing sprays. You can purchase carpet moth pheromone traps and Carpet Moth Killer Kits from MothPrevention to kill moths, eggs, and larvae quickly and efficiently.

What does a clothes moth infestation look like? ›

Webbing clothes moth larvae spin silken tubes or patches of webbing as they move about on the surface of infested materials. They often feed within folds of fabric and other concealed areas. As larvae graze along the surface, threadbare spots occur where fibers are removed at the base.

How do you stop Carpet Moths? ›

This includes keeping your carpets clean and free of clutter, sealing any cracks or crevices in your home where they might be able to enter, and using moth-proof storage bags for any clothing or other items that you're not using. That way, they will have less reason to enter your home and ruin your carpets.

Do Carpet Moths live under the carpet? ›

Yes, Carpet Moths are visible in the adult phase. However, Carpet Moth Eggs and Larvae can sometimes be hidden in the pile of carpets or underneath installed carpets near your subfloor. So, just because you can't see Carpet Moths does not mean that they aren't in your house.

What is the app that identifies moths? ›

Leps analyzes your moth/butterfly photos to suggest possible IDs that can be later verified by the Fieldguide community. Leps arranges your observations into a dynamic checklist. When taxonomic treatments change, your records update automatically.

How do you tell the difference between clothes moths and regular moths? ›

The main defining feature between the two is their color. The webbing moth is solid whitish-gray, while the casemaking moth has brown or gray spots on its wings. Both have narrow, hairy wings. The clothes moths will avoid light and are weak fliers, so they tend to stay in one place to lay their eggs and feed.

What is the most common house moth? ›

The most common types of moths that infest homes are Clothes Moths and Pantry Moths. There are many subspecies of both of these moths.

What do carpet moths hate? ›

Many natural remedies can also be used to deter moths from infesting carpets. These include cedar, lavender, mint, bay leaves, rosemary, and thyme. Most natural remedies, sprays, and powders may need to be refreshed regularly until there are no longer any moths anywhere in your home.

Does vacuuming get rid of moths? ›

Year-Round Proactive Measures. Weekly use of a high-powered vacuum on carpets and quick cleanup of spills can reduce the chance that moths can find your best clothes and bedding. Vacuuming removes moth larvae from carpets before they have the opportunity to hatch.

What kind of moths live in carpets? ›

Carpet Moth Eggs, Larvae, Pupae, and Adult Phases

Adult female Carpet Moths will lay their eggs on suitable keratin-containing materials like fabric, carpets, feathers, wool, or tapestries. These materials serve as a safe haven for the eggs and provide a food source for the larvae once they hatch.

How do I get rid of carpet and clothes moths? ›

The fastest way to get rid of Carpet Moths involves thoroughly cleaning an area, treating it with a moth-killing spray solution or steam cleaning, and then vacuuming up any dead larvae and eggs. Then, use Moth Traps to keep any future issues at bay.

How do you treat Carpet Moths in your house? ›

Baking Soda and Vinegar

A great cost-effective home remedy for refreshing carpets is the combination of baking soda (this can be purchased at any supermarket in the 'baking' section) with white vinegar. As well as refreshing, this method also has the added benefit of removing any spots or stains from your carpet.

Why am I getting Carpet Moths? ›

But where do carpet moths come from? The natural habitat of carpet moths is actually outdoors, and birds nests in particular, where they feed on keratin in bird feathers, or in discarded animal fur or skin. They can get in the house as tiny eggs, picked up on shoes or by pet dogs and cats.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Zonia Mosciski DO

Last Updated:

Views: 6147

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Zonia Mosciski DO

Birthday: 1996-05-16

Address: Suite 228 919 Deana Ford, Lake Meridithberg, NE 60017-4257

Phone: +2613987384138

Job: Chief Retail Officer

Hobby: Tai chi, Dowsing, Poi, Letterboxing, Watching movies, Video gaming, Singing

Introduction: My name is Zonia Mosciski DO, I am a enchanting, joyous, lovely, successful, hilarious, tender, outstanding person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.