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The Minnesota Fall Invasion: Box Elder Bugs, Asian Lady Beetles, and Cluster Flies

Every September in Minnesota, three insects start massing on houses looking for a way inside for the winter. Here is how to tell them apart and what to do.

Published September 14, 2026

Every September in Minnesota, the same thing happens. The weather turns, the first cool nights arrive, and suddenly the south-facing walls of houses across the state are covered with insects, all of them looking for a way in. Then they disappear into the walls, and for the rest of the fall and winter they reappear, a few at a time, on warm windows and sunny interior surfaces.

This is the fall invasion, and it is the most distinctive pest season in Minnesota. Three insects dominate the calls exterminators get in autumn: box elder bugs, Asian lady beetles, and cluster flies. They are nuisance pests, not destructive ones, but in the right neighborhood they show up by the thousands. Here is how to tell them apart, why they do this, and what actually keeps them out.

Why they come indoors

All three of these insects share one behavior: they overwinter. As cold weather approaches, they look for a sheltered, protected place to spend the winter dormant or semi-dormant, and the wall voids and attics of a heated house are ideal. They are not coming in to breed, to feed, or to damage anything. They are coming in to survive a Minnesota winter, the same way they would use a rock crevice or a hollow tree in the wild.

The timing is consistent. Entry happens mostly in September and October, often triggered by the first warm afternoon after a cool spell. The insects mass on warm, sunny walls, the south side of the house gets the most sun and so the most insects, and work their way into any gap they can find. Then, on warm days through the winter and especially in early spring, the ones in the walls become active again, head toward light, and end up on your interior windows. The spring prevention guide covers that spring emergence.

This complex is the defining pest-control season for Minnesota. It is what drives a wave of new customer calls every fall, and it is genuinely worse here than in warmer states, because Minnesota’s hard winters give the insects a strong reason to get inside.

Box elder bugs

Box elder bugs are the most recognizable of the three, and in much of Minnesota they are the most numerous. Adults are about half an inch long, flat, and black with distinct red-orange lines outlining the body and wings. Young nymphs are bright red. They are named for the boxelder tree, which is a type of maple, and they feed through the summer on boxelder, maple, and ash trees, all extremely common across the Twin Cities suburbs.

Box elder bugs are especially heavy in suburbs with a lot of boxelder trees, places like Lakeville and Cottage Grove, where they can mass on a south-facing wall by the thousands. They do not bite, do not breed indoors, and do not damage the house. Their main offense is sheer numbers and the fact that crushing them can leave a stain.

Asian lady beetles

The multicolored Asian lady beetle looks like a ladybug, because it is one, but it is not a native species. It was introduced to control aphids and has become a major fall nuisance across the upper Midwest. The color varies a lot, from pale orange to deep red, with anywhere from no spots to many. The most reliable identifying mark is a small black “M” or “W” shape on the white area just behind the head.

Asian lady beetles feed on aphids in crop fields through the summer, so homes near soybean and corn fields, common around Rochester, Mankato, and the metro fringe, see the heaviest numbers. They congregate on sunny, light-colored walls in October before slipping inside. Unlike native ladybugs, they can deliver a small nip, and when disturbed or crushed they release a yellow fluid that stains and smells.

Cluster flies

Cluster flies are different from the house flies you know. They are slightly larger, darker, and noticeably more sluggish, and they have a covering of fine golden hairs on the thorax. The name comes from their habit of clustering together in large groups in attics and wall voids.

Cluster flies have an unusual life cycle: their larvae develop as parasites inside earthworms. That makes Minnesota’s rich soil ideal habitat, and it is why cluster flies are a particularly heavy complaint in older homes with gaps in the roofline and in rural-edge houses around St. Cloud and the agricultural counties. They do not bite, do not breed indoors, and do not contaminate food the way house flies do. But a wall void full of cluster flies produces a steady, sluggish trickle of flies on the windows all winter, which is genuinely annoying.

Telling them apart

A quick reference. Box elder bugs are black with red-orange lines and a flat oval body. Asian lady beetles are dome-shaped, orange to red, often spotted, with the telltale “M” behind the head. Cluster flies are dark, hairy-bodied, sluggish flies, larger than a house fly. All three behave the same way in fall, so the identification matters less for what to do about them and more for knowing what you are looking at. The brown marmorated stink bug is a fourth fall invader that follows the same pattern, a shield-shaped brown bug that releases a sharp odor when crushed; it is a newer arrival in Minnesota but its numbers are climbing.

What actually keeps them out

Here is the key point about all three: once they are inside the walls, there is not much to be done. Spraying inside the wall void does little, and the insects continue to trickle out on warm days regardless. The real control happens before they get in, and it is exclusion, sealing the house, not spraying it.

The work to do, ideally in late summer before the September entry begins:

  • Seal exterior gaps. Caulk cracks around windows, doors, and trim. Seal the gaps where utility lines, pipes, and cables pass through walls. These are the main entry routes.
  • Check and repair screens. Window and door screens, and attic and soffit vent screens, should be intact. Damaged screening is an open door.
  • Fix weatherstripping. Worn weatherstripping at the bottom of doors lets insects walk right in.
  • Repair soffit and fascia gaps. Attics are prime overwintering sites, and gaps in the soffit and fascia are how insects reach them.

For the insects that do get in, the simplest approach is a vacuum. Vacuum up the ones you see on windows and walls and empty the canister. Do not crush them, since box elder bugs and lady beetles can stain, and lady beetles smell.

Why they keep reappearing all winter

A question Minnesota homeowners ask every year: the insects came in months ago, so why are they still showing up on the windows in January or February? The answer is in how overwintering works.

The insects that entered in September and October are not gone. They are dormant or semi-dormant in the wall voids, attic spaces, and other protected cavities of the house, waiting out the winter. They are not active and not breeding. But a wall void is not a perfectly stable environment. When the sun warms a wall on a mild winter day, or when the spot they are sheltering in warms up, some of those insects rouse, become active, and head toward light and warmth. That often means the interior side of the wall, and from there your windows and living space.

So the trickle of box elder bugs or cluster flies you see in midwinter is not a new invasion. It is the population that came in last fall, stirred by a warm spell. The same thing happens on a larger scale in early spring, when warming weather wakes the whole overwintering group and they try to get back outside, often ending up indoors instead. This is exactly why sealing in late summer matters and why spraying inside in winter accomplishes little.

What these insects are not

It is worth being clear about what fall invaders do not do, because the alarm they cause is often out of proportion to the actual threat.

They do not bite, with the minor exception that Asian lady beetles can deliver a small, harmless nip. They do not sting. They do not breed indoors, so the population cannot grow inside your house the way a roach or mouse population does; the number you have is the number that came in. They do not feed on your home, your food, or your belongings, and they do not damage the structure. They do not carry disease in any meaningful way for a household. Cluster flies do not contaminate food the way house flies do.

The honest summary is that fall invaders are an aesthetic and nuisance problem. They are unpleasant in numbers, they collect on windows, and crushing them can stain or smell. But a house full of box elder bugs is not a house at risk.

When to call a professional

For most homes, fall invaders are a nuisance to manage with sealing and a vacuum, not a reason to call an exterminator. But there are situations where professional help makes sense.

If your home gets these insects by the hundreds or thousands every year, a professional can do a thorough exclusion job, finding and sealing the entry points more completely than a homeowner usually can, and apply a targeted exterior perimeter treatment to the walls in late summer, before entry, which does reduce the numbers that get in. That preventive treatment, timed correctly in August or early September, is something a professional does that a homeowner generally cannot. Many Minnesota residential pest control plans include it as part of a quarterly program.

If the fall invasion at your house is bad enough every year that you want it handled properly, you can get connected with a licensed Minnesota exterminator who covers your area. The cost guide lays out Minnesota pricing. The honest summary, though, is that for most homes the answer to fall invaders is a caulk gun in August and a vacuum in October.

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