When to Treat for Varroa Mites: A Seasonal Timing Guide
With varroa, when you treat matters as much as what you use. Treat at the wrong moment and you can lose a colony even after killing most of the mites.
First rule: monitor, don't guess
You can't time a treatment you haven't measured. The two standard tests are an alcohol wash or a sugar roll on a sample of around 300 bees, which gives you mites per 100 bees. Many beekeepers act somewhere around a 2โ3% infestation, but thresholds vary by region and season โ your local association can tell you what's normal where you are.
Test the same way each time so your numbers are comparable from month to month. A rising trend is more useful than any single count.
The critical window: late summer to early autumn
This is the treatment most beekeepers can't afford to skip. In late summer the colony begins raising the long-lived "winter bees" that must survive until spring. If mite levels are high while those bees develop, they emerge weakened and the colony can dwindle and die in mid-winter โ often months after the mites peaked.
The goal is simple: knock mites down before winter bees are reared, so the colony heads into the cold with a healthy population. For most keepers that means acting in late summer / early autumn, right after pulling honey supers.
The other windows
- Early spring: a check (and sometimes a light treatment) keeps mites from riding the colony's population boom into summer.
- Broodless mid-winter: when the colony has little or no capped brood, mites have nowhere to hide, which is why some keepers do a winter knock-down. Effectiveness depends heavily on your climate and on the colony actually being broodless.
A few timing rules of thumb
- Let your monitoring trigger the treatment, not the calendar alone.
- Match the product to the temperature โ many treatments have strict temperature ranges on the label.
- Rotate the active ingredients you use over time to slow resistance.
- Always follow the product label and any local guidance to the letter.
The takeaway
Think of varroa control as a season-long rhythm: monitor regularly, protect the winter bees with a well-timed late-summer treatment, and verify it worked with a follow-up count. Timing is the lever that decides whether your colonies see spring.
Log it once, in the apiary
HiveDash turns every inspection into a record you can actually use โ eggs, brood, stores, mite counts, all in one tap.
Open HiveDashThis article is general educational content for beekeepers. Colonies, climate, pests and local regulations vary by region โ always cross-check with your local beekeeping association or agricultural extension before acting.