Common bite patterns
Bed bug bites are often described as itchy, inflamed marks that may appear in a line or cluster. They often show up on exposed areas such as arms, neck, hands, face, or legs, but bite appearance varies by person.
Why bites are confusing
A bite does not identify the insect by itself. Skin irritation, fleas, mosquitoes, mites, hives, and other reactions can look similar. A home should not be turned upside down based only on marks on the skin.
What to photograph
Photograph the bites if useful, but also photograph seams, bedding, mattress edges, headboards, baseboards, nearby furniture, luggage areas, and any insect or spotting. Physical signs are more useful for service planning.
What Vermont Safe Heat reviews
The private review looks at photos, timing, where bites occur, whether other signs exist, whether items moved, and whether the home needs inspection guidance, treatment, or another path.
What to send Vermont Safe Heat
- Property type and town.
- Room, unit, suite, or affected area.
- Photos of signs, insects, bites, moisture, odor source, or affected contents.
- Urgency, occupancy, and access window.
- What has already been moved, cleaned, heated, sprayed, discarded, or treated.
- Whether treatment records or certified-room documentation would help.
Clear next step
Use the private review. The goal is to route the concern toward the correct service path: bed bug heat treatment, certified-room documentation, rapid drying, photo intake, room-release guidance, or another thermal solution.
Peace of mind starts with a clear first step: document the signs, keep suspect items controlled, and request a private review.