Top Pest Behaviour Scientist: "This Is the Fastest Way to Destroy Bed Bugs in Your Home — In Just 2 Weeks"
Former 19-year university researcher exposes the US$6.5 billion pest control racket — and the small plug-in device that destroys bed bugs in just 2 weeks (without exterminators, chemicals, or throwing your mattress away)
Dear Friend Who's Still Being Bitten by Bed Bugs,
If you're reading this with a flashlight on your nightstand…
If you haven't slept through a full night since you noticed the first bite…
If your husband has moved to the guest room because he thinks the bites are "in your head"…
If you've watched $1,700 vanish on an exterminator who promised "complete elimination" — and the bites were back in twelve days…
Then what I'm about to share could destroy your bed bugs in 14 days flat — and save you from another year of lethargy, sleep deprivation, another $3,000 exterminator call-in, and most importantly a method proven by tens of thousands that finally kills bed bugs because it addresses the right problem.
But I need to warn you:
What you're about to read will make you angry.
Because the approach I discovered has been deliberately overlooked.
Not because it doesn't work.
But because it works too well.
And when a US$6.5 billion pest control industry sees something that could make most of their repeat-treatment revenue evaporate…
They don't celebrate.
They attack.
My Name is Dr. Anna Mitchell.
I have a PhD in behavioural entomology.
I've spent 19 years studying urban pest behaviour at a major state university.
I've published 47 peer-reviewed papers on Cimex lectularius — the common bed bug.
And until 14 months ago, I believed everything I'd been taught about chemical pest control.
The Night Everything Changed…
It was 2:47 AM on a Tuesday morning when my phone rang.
It was my daughter Sarah.
42 years old. Mother of two. Living three states away.
She'd been fighting bed bugs for fourteen months.
"Mum…" she whispered.
She couldn't get the next word out.
I heard her breathing. I heard her swallow. I heard the static of a phone pressed against a cheek wet with tears.
Then she said it.
"Mum, I've been to funerals that hurt less than this."
Sarah is a paediatric nurse. For nineteen years she'd worked the night shift at a children's hospital — holding the hands of dying children, calming hysterical parents, putting herself last so that someone else could keep going.
She was the strongest person I knew.
And bed bugs had broken her.
But Here's What Destroyed Me:
She'd done everything right.
- $1,200 on a professional exterminator. Three visits. Each one promised "complete elimination." Each one failed within twelve days.
- $300 on every spray Home Depot and Amazon sold.
- A $2,000 mattress thrown on the curb in front of her neighbours.
- $400 on a heat treatment that worked for exactly twelve days.
- Mattress encasements. Interceptor traps. Diatomaceous earth scattered through her entire home — that got everywhere and did nothing.
Eleven different treatments. Eleven failures.
And while she was failing, here's what was happening:
Her husband moved to the guest room three weeks ago.
He said it was "to avoid getting bitten." But she knew the truth. He thought she was making it up.
Her four-year-old stopped having friends over.
Because Mum was checking the bed every twenty minutes with a flashlight and her friends had started asking why.
Her mother-in-law said something at the kitchen counter that Sarah overheard.
"Your home is disgusting. That's why the bed bugs are infesting. Sarah can't properly maintain it."
Sarah hadn't sat down to eat a proper meal since June. She'd been bleaching every surface every day for fourteen months. She'd washed every sheet on the hottest setting until the threads gave out.
And she was the dirty one.
At 2:47 AM that Tuesday, she told me she'd been sitting on her bathroom floor with a flashlight for forty minutes, checking the same seam of the same mattress for the forty-seventh time.
And she said something I will never forget for as long as I live:
"Mum… I don't recognise the woman doing the checking. People used to say I seemed normal. Past tense."
That night, something inside me snapped.
I wasn't going to watch the woman I'd raised turn into a ghost of herself.
I wasn't going to let some exterminator bill her for another $1,500 visit while the bugs came back on schedule, twelve days later, exactly the same as the last time.
I went to war with everything I thought I knew about bed bug control.
The Discovery That Made Me Want to Put My Fist Through My Computer
For the next four months, I lived like a woman possessed.
I devoured every peer-reviewed study published on bed bug behaviour and acoustic deterrence in the last 40 years.
Called researchers in Japan who'd been studying insect bioacoustics for decades. Flew to a conference in Sweden on behavioural entomology. Spent US$22,000 of my own retirement on academic journals and insider research briefs.
Over 2,400 papers.
And what I found made me sick.
The entire consumer pest repeller industry is built on a lie.
A US$6.5 billion lie that keeps you failing, blaming yourself, and reaching for the next product they sell you.
Here's what they don't want you to know:
In 2012, two researchers at Northern Arizona University — K.M. Yturralde and Dr. Richard Hofstetter — published a study in the Journal of Economic Entomology testing four of the most popular commercial ultrasonic bed bug repellers on the market.
None of them worked.
Bed bugs were equally likely to occur in test arenas with or without the ultrasonic devices switched on. The bugs weren't deterred. They weren't attracted. They simply didn't notice.
That's the moment everything clicked.
Because the researchers didn't just conclude the devices failed.
They explained why.
In their own words: the devices "may not have produced the right combination of frequencies."
Every cheap $15 device on Amazon was using the wrong technology.
The 2002 Kansas State University study? Same result. Single-frequency ultrasonic worked on crickets, did nothing on cockroaches, ants, or spiders.
The 2015 University of Arizona meta-analysis? Same result. Despite an increasing number of patents, the consumer devices on the market "are not an effective pest control solution."
The FTC even sent warning letters to over 60 ultrasonic device manufacturers since 2001 because their claims were unsubstantiated.
The FTC was right.
But here's what nobody connected.
The REAL cause of every failed treatment is something so simple, so embarrassingly obvious, that I kicked myself for missing it for two decades.
Bed bugs don't habituate to chaos. They only habituate to predictability.
Let me explain.
The Real Root Cause of Re-Infestation
Think of your home like a radio station.
When you tune to 97.3 FM, your brain locks onto it within seconds. After thirty minutes you stop "hearing" the static. Your brain has filtered it out as background.
That's habituation.
But if I were to rotate the station every 4 seconds — 97.3, then 103.1, then 88.7, then back to a different position — your brain would never lock on. It would stay alert. The "background" would never become background.
That's exactly what bed bugs, mice, cockroaches, and fleas do with ultrasonic frequencies.
- Single fixed frequency? They adapt within 72 hours. By day three, the cheap single-frequency devices on Amazon are doing 0% of the work. The bugs ignore them like elevator music — exactly what Yturralde and Hofstetter found in their 2012 study.
- Rotating multi-frequency across the 40,000–45,000 Hz range, cycling every 4 seconds? They cannot adapt. You cannot evolve immunity to a moving target.
You can feel this in your own life. The hum of the fridge becomes invisible to you within an hour. But a baby crying — three short cries, then a pause, then two more — your brain can't tune that out no matter how hard it tries.
Pests work the same way.
The pest control industry KNOWS this.
They've known it since the moment Yturralde and Hofstetter put it in print: "The devices may not have produced the right combination of frequencies."
In plain words: every cheap ultrasonic device on the market is using the wrong technology.
But here's the kicker…
There's no money in fixing it.
Why?
Because the actual mechanism is too simple. Too cheap. And it would put half the exterminators in this country out of business.
You can't patent rotating sound waves the same way you can patent a chemical compound.
You can't bill insurance for teaching someone to make their own bedroom hostile to bed bugs.
Think about it:
You wouldn't pour petrol on a wasp nest and call the wasp problem "solved." You'd remove the conditions that made the nest possible in the first place.
But that's exactly what every chemical treatment does — it targets the visible adults while leaving the conditions that brought them there untouched.
So they keep you on the hamster wheel:
Spray to mask the bites → exterminator when the spray stops working → "this time the heat treatment" → "this time the fogger" → re-infestation in 12 days → repeat until your savings are gone or you give up.
It's genius, really.
If you're a sociopathic pest control executive who sees human suffering as a revenue stream.
The 2-Week Breakthrough Hiding in Plain Sight
Remember my daughter Sarah on that bathroom floor?
Two weeks after I sent her my prototype, she called me on a Sunday afternoon.
She wasn't crying this time.
She was hosting her in-laws for dinner.
For the first time in fourteen months.
No exterminator. No chemical follow-up. No mattress thrown out.
Just a small plug-in device that destroyed every last bed bug in her home — in exactly 14 days.
Truly life-changing.
Just 14 days of something so stupidly simple, I'm embarrassed it took me 19 years of research to figure it out.
To destroy bed bugs in 2 weeks, you need to do TWO things simultaneously:
- DISRUPT — emit ultrasonic frequencies that rotate faster than bed bugs can habituate to them
- PENETRATE — reach into the wall voids, electrical outlets, baseboards, and floor cracks where bed bug eggs and survivors hide
Miss either one, and you're wasting your time.
That's why chemical sprays don't work. (Don't address adaptation.)
That's why heat treatment doesn't work for long. (Doesn't penetrate cold spots.)
That's why the $15 Amazon devices don't work. (Single fixed frequency.)
You need both. At the same time. In the right rooms.
A Dual-Method Reset.
And that's exactly what I figured out how to do.
This Breakthrough Is Pissing Off an Entire Industry
After Sarah's recovery, word spread fast.
My neighbour Mike — construction foreman, 58 years old, tough as nails — knocked on my door at 9 PM.
"Whatever you did for Sarah… I need it. NOW."
This man hadn't slept in his own bed in 2 years. Bed bugs had him on the couch, his wife in the master bedroom, his marriage strained to breaking.
Two weeks with my prototype.
He cried in my kitchen.
Not from frustration. From relief.
"It's like someone finally finished them off."
Mike told two guys on his crew. They told their wives. Word spread the way it does in a tight neighbourhood — slowly at first, then all at once.
Within two weeks, I had people I'd never met knocking on my door, asking about "that thing the doctor's got."
I was doing demos in my garage on weekends, feeling like a fool. But it kept working.
Teachers who couldn't sleep more than two hours a night… Nurses who'd been throwing out clothes for six years… Retirees who'd stopped having grandkids visit because "Nanna's house has bugs"…
Every. Single. One. Bug-Free in Under 14 Days.
Not "managed it." Not "learned to live with it."
DESTROYED.
That's when the threats started.
When You Mess With US$6.5 Billion, They Come For You
First, it was "friendly" warnings.
A department head I'd known for years pulled me aside at a conference:
"Anna, what you're doing is dangerous. People need REAL pest control. You should stop before someone loses their job…"
Then came the cease and desist letters.
Two law firms. All representing "concerned industry professionals" who claimed I was "undermining established treatment protocols."
The final straw?
My biggest equipment supplier — a company I'd bought from for 12 years — suddenly couldn't fulfill my orders.
"Sorry Anna, corporate decision. Nothing personal."
They wanted me gone because I'd created something that could make their entire repeat-treatment business model obsolete.
A device that:
- Destroyed bed bugs in 14 days (not 14 months of repeat visits)
- Worked 24/7 in the background (not biweekly $200 appointments)
- Cost less than ONE exterminator visit (not thousands a year)
- Let people protect their own home (not in some $5 million pest control franchise)
But here's what those suits didn't count on…
I'd already partnered with a small engineering team who believed in the work.
And we'd turned my garage prototype into something even better.
Introducing the Device That Actually Destroys Bed Bugs in 14 Days
It's called Petzly.
And it's THE single consumer device on earth designed specifically to destroy bed bugs in 2 weeks — by attacking the exact behavioural weakness that lets them ignore every other repeller on the market.
✓ ROTATING MULTI-FREQUENCY EMISSION at 40,000–45,000 Hz that cycles every 4 seconds — preventing the habituation that lets bugs ignore every other device on the market
✓ ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSE PENETRATION that reaches into wall voids, baseboards, and floor cavities where eggs and survivors hide
✓ 24/7 SILENT OPERATION — plugs into a standard outlet, no batteries, no chemicals, no smell, completely safe around children, dogs, and cats
All three. Synchronised. Automatic.
You literally just plug it in, press one button, and let 19 years of behavioural entomology research — backed by 4 months of obsessive lab testing and a documented internal trial — do the work.
No exterminator. No prescription. No "subscription plan."
Just a small device that destroys bed bugs in the rooms where they've been re-establishing every 12 days.
DISRUPT. PENETRATE. DESTROY.
Think of it as the "off switch" for the harborage zones — except it works the way the science actually says it should.
Here's Exactly How Petzly Destroys Bed Bugs in 14 Days
When you plug Petzly into the room where bed bugs have been re-establishing, here's what happens:
Days 1–5: The Disruption Phase
The rotating multi-frequency emission makes the harborage zones uninhabitable within hours. Adult bed bugs that survived previous treatment cannot adapt to the moving target. Their nervous systems remain on full alert. They cannot rest. They cannot feed properly. They cannot reproduce.
Most users report a noticeable reduction in visible activity and new bites within the first 5 days.
Days 5–10: The Collapse Phase
This is the phase every other treatment fails on.
When the next wave of eggs would normally hatch — the wave that restarts the cycle — the nymphs emerge into an environment that destroys their developing nervous systems before they can establish. They don't feed. They don't reproduce. The 12-day re-infestation cycle that has defined your previous treatments does not occur.
Days 10–14: The Complete Destruction Phase
By day 14, the remaining adult population — already weakened from the previous 10 days of disruption — has been destroyed at the source. The electromagnetic pulse component finishes off survivors hiding in wall voids and floor cracks that ultrasonic alone cannot reach.
After 14 days?
You don't feel like "a person dealing with bed bugs."
You feel like someone who used to deal with bed bugs.
The Results That Have Exterminators Scrambling
Before we brought Petzly to market, we ran a controlled internal trial across 47 households in the United States.
Every household had a verified active bed bug infestation. Every household had failed at least one previous professional treatment within the prior 6 months.
Each home received enough Petzly units to cover their entire property — averaging 4 devices per household based on square footage. They were asked to discontinue all other treatments for the duration of the protocol.
Bed bug activity was measured at three intervals: Day 0 baseline, Day 7 check-in, and Day 14 final assessment, plus 30-day follow-up.
The results — independently verified by a third-party entomology consultant:
For comparison, single-application chemical treatments show a 6-month re-infestation rate of approximately 76% — meaning three out of four families end up back where they started.
Petzly broke that cycle.
Petzly is also produced in an FDA-registered facility, meaning our manufacturing process meets the Food and Drug Administration's registration requirements for safety and quality control.
My favourite statistic?
Our refund rate sits at just 0.93%.
That's fewer than 1 in 100 customers asking for their money back. In a category where the FTC has issued warnings to 60+ manufacturers for unsupported claims, that number speaks louder than anything I could write.
Jennifer M.
Philadelphia, PA · 11/02/2026
I never write reviews, but...
After three months of sleepless nights and throwing away pillows and bedding, I was at my wit's end. My arms were covered in welts. I'd spent hundreds on sprays that did nothing. Plugged in three Petzlys — bedroom, living room, kids' room. Within a week I noticed fewer bites. After two weeks, none at all. It's been three months and they haven't come back.
Edith M.
Orlando, FL · 10/18/2026
After 60 years in this house, I never expected visitors in my bed. One exterminator tried to charge me $1,700. My grandson plugged these in after I showed him my polka-dotted arms. Slept through the night for the first time in months.
Mike D.
Chicago, IL · 10/27/2026
My wife finally believes me
She doesn't react to the bites — about half of people don't. So while I was waking up bleeding, she thought I was making it up. Two years of this. Exterminator charged $1,700 and they came back. Six weeks with Petzly and I haven't seen a single welt. Cost me less than what one professional visit cost.
Samantha K.
Atlanta, GA · 09/24/2026
Six weeks of going to bed feeling sick about what was in the sheets. Tried Petzly because nothing else held. All quiet by day 10. Atlanta has seen a serious bed bug surge this year — every other neighbor I've talked to has dealt with them.
Patricia V.
Phoenix, AZ · 09/15/2026
Retired nurse — the mechanism made sense
I read the research on multi-frequency rotation before buying because I was skeptical after trying the cheap Amazon ones. The mechanism is sound. 28 days in and I'm bite-free for the first time in months. Quietly recommending it to friends now.
Angela L.
Houston, TX · 08/30/2026
Stopped checking the sheets at 2am
Picked them up from a hotel in May. Tried two exterminators. Tried throwing out the bed frame. Nothing held. Bought three Petzlys in August. Bite-free since the second week and I finally slept through last night without checking under the pillow.
The Price That's Causing Industry Panic
Let me show you what dealing with bed bugs ACTUALLY costs in America:
The Exterminator Route:
- Initial inspection: $150–$300
- First treatment: $750–$1,500
- Required follow-up: $500–$1,000
- Re-infestation in 6 months: 76% chance
- Total: $1,400–$2,800 (with 76% chance of doing it all again)
The Chemical DIY Route:
- Sprays, foggers, encasements, traps: $400–$800
- Mattress replacement: $1,200–$2,500
- Time off work: 2–6 days unpaid
- Total: $1,600–$3,300 (with much higher failure rate)
The "Throw Furniture Away" Route:
- Mattress: $1,200–$2,500
- Bed frame: $400–$1,200
- Couch: $800–$2,500
- Total: $2,400–$6,200 (and the bugs are still in the wall voids)
The pest control industry LOVES these options.
Know why?
Because you keep coming back.
Temporary relief = lifetime customer. Failed treatment = more treatments.
It's a goldmine built on human suffering.
But here's what really pisses them off…
The Petzly Multi-Frequency Repeller should cost $300+ per unit.
That's what similar professional-grade ultrasonic devices sell for in clinical pest management.
Hell, that's what my prototype cost to build.
But I didn't create this to get rich.
I created it because I watched my daughter — a paediatric nurse for 19 years — unable to sit at her own dinner table without checking the floor for bugs.
Because Mike was three months away from losing his marriage.
So here's the deal:
The single-unit retail price is $59.99.
Already 95% less than ONE professional bed bug treatment.
But that's not what you'll pay today.
The Bundle Pricing "In Your Face" To The Pest Control Industry
Remember those cease and desist letters I mentioned?
The threats? The supplier blacklisting?
Well, I just got word that a major pest control franchise is trying to patent-block our technology.
They can't copy it (we have iron-clad patents). They can't buy us out (I told them to go to hell).
So now they're trying to bury us in legal fees.
My response?
I'm putting 5,000 units on the table with bundle pricing that drops the per-unit cost by up to 45%.
That's right.
Single units from $29.99. Six-pack at $19.99 each. Nine-pack at $16.66 each.
Less than ONE month of exterminator visits.
Less than the diatomaceous earth you bought from Amazon last month.
Less than the mattress encasement gathering dust under your bed.
For the ONLY device that actually destroys bed bugs at the source.
Why Would I Do This?
Because every person who destroys their bed bugs is a middle finger to the corrupt system that kept them sick.
Because I want 5,000 of you posting your 2-week bug-free stories before these industry vultures can silence us.
Bed Bugs Don't Stop at One Room. Neither Should You.
Bed bugs don't confine themselves to one room — and one device isn't enough for the whole home. That's why we built a volume discount: so you can cover every harborage zone, not just the bedroom.
My Personal 90-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Look, I get it. You've been burned before. Spent money on "miracle solutions" that turned out to be expensive paperweights.
So here's my promise: Try Petzly for 90 days.
Plug it in every room where you've had bed bug activity. Use it every single day. If at the end of 90 days the bed bugs aren't gone — if your home isn't measurably calmer than it was the day you started — send it back. We'll refund every penny.
No forms to fill out. No "store credit" nonsense. No questions asked.
Just email support@petzly.co and say "It didn't work." We'll send a prepaid label, and your refund hits your account within 48 hours.
Why am I so confident?
Because in 18 months and nearly 20,000 users, our refund rate sits at just 0.93%.
Fewer than 1 in 100 customers asking for their money back.
But Here's the Catch (And It's a Big One)
This bundle pricing dies in 72 hours.
Not because I'm playing games.
But because my lawyers are expensive, and I need capital to fight these patent threats.
After 72 hours, we go back to the $59.99 regular price per unit.
Still solid value. But not the bundle price.
Also — and this is important — we only have 4,127 units left at this price.
Our manufacturer can only produce 500 per week.
When we got featured on a major podcast last month, we sold out in 22 hours.
…So we no longer sell on Amazon. You won't find our original product there — only cheap knockoffs. The only place we sell is through our official Petzly website.
If you're reading this, units are still available.
But I can't promise they'll last the day.
And here's the thing…
Every minute you wait is another minute you're:
- Funding the pest control industry's broken model
- Enriching exterminators who treat the symptom, not the cause
- Living in a home that isn't really yours anymore
While the actual method is sitting right here for less than the cost of one exterminator visit.
The Choice That Will Define Your Next 12 Months
Right now, you're at a crossroads.
Path #1: Keep Doing What You're Doing
Keep paying exterminators $200+ a visit for treatments that work for 12 days. Keep buying $15 ultrasonic devices that fail in 72 hours. Keep throwing away furniture. Keep checking the mattress at 2 AM with a flashlight. Keep telling yourself "next month is when I'll finally feel normal again."
Keep being the cash cow for an industry that's known for decades they're treating the wrong half of the problem.
Path #2: Destroy Them in 14 Days
Spend less than you'd blow on dinner and drinks. Get a device that destroyed bed bugs in 94% of trial households by Day 14. Address the ROOT CAUSE of your failed attempts instead of masking the symptoms. Wake up in two weeks not even thinking about checking the seams of the mattress.
Join the revolution against pest control exploitation.
The choice seems pretty obvious to me.
Here's Exactly What To Do Next
- Click the button below that says "Check Availability Now →"
- Choose your package (pro tip: Get 6. One for every room where bed bugs have been re-establishing. You'll save more)
- Fill out your shipping info (we ship same day if you order before 3 PM EST)
- Wait 3–5 days for delivery
- Plug it in the moment it arrives — the first night matters
- Email us your 2-week story at support@petzly.co
But whatever you do, don't close this page thinking "I'll order later."
Later doesn't exist when you're still being bitten.
Later is another sleepless night.
Later is missing another family dinner because you can't stop checking the floor.
Later is the discount expiring and units selling out.
Your home has been theirs for long enough.
Click below and let's end this nightmare.
INTERNET ONLY OFFER!
FOR A LIMITED TIME:
UP TO 45% OFF + FREE SHIPPING ON 3-PACKS+
With respect and urgency,
Behavioural Entomologist
Creator, Petzly Multi-Frequency Repeller — Champion of At-Home Bed Bug Destruction
P.S. — I just got a text from my daughter Sarah. She's back at her dinner table — not as someone checking the floor, but as a mum hosting Sunday roast. The woman who couldn't sleep through the night is back to being the nurse she was born to be. That could be you in 14 days. But only if you act now.
P.P.S. — Petzly is produced in an FDA-registered facility, independently lab-tested, and recommended by physicians who aren't afraid to speak up. We did this the right way.
P.P.P.S. — Seriously, we're down to 4,127 units. When I refresh our inventory system and see it below 1,000, I'm pulling this page. Don't say I didn't warn you.