Baby Raccoon Removal Toronto
The only wildlife removal service in the GTA built around kit-safe science — not guesswork. When kits are involved, every decision carries legal and biological consequences.
- Licensed by Ontario MNRF
- Humane Reunification Protocol
- Same-Day Kit Inspection
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⚠ Legal Alert for Toronto Homeowners
Under Ontario's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act, interfering with a nursing raccoon family without following MNRF reunification protocols is a provincial offence carrying fines up to $25,000. If you suspect kits are present — do not touch, block, or attempt to relocate anything. Call a licensed operator first.
Biological Reference
Kit Development Stages
Understanding exactly how old the kits are determines the entire removal approach. Age affects mobility, vocalisation patterns, nest location, and legal timeline obligations.
Week 0 – 2
Newborn — Fully Immobile
Week 3 – 5
Eyes Opening — Nest Bound
200 – 350g avg weightCritical — Reunification Required
Week 6 – 9
Mobile — Exploring Near Nest
Kits begin crawling out of the nest cavity. Can move up to 2 meters. Begin solid food ingestion alongside nursing. Attic damage increases as mother brings food scraps in.
Week 10 – 16
Near-Independent — Family Unit Intact
Kits follow mother outside. Begin climbing independently. Weaning occurs gradually. One-way exclusion becomes viable once all kits can exit the attic unassisted.
Diagnostic Guide
Is That Sound a Baby Raccoon?
Most attic sounds are misidentified. Knowing exactly what you’re hearing determines the correct response — and whether MNRF kit protocols apply to your situation.
Raccoon Kits
High-pitched repetitive chirping or mewing — similar to a domestic kitten but louder and more urgent. Sounds appear in clusters of 3–8 calls, pause, and then repeat. It’s most intense at dawn (5–8am) and dusk (8–11pm) when the mother exits to forage. Thumping or rolling sounds occur when the mother repositions kits.
Grey Squirrels
Fast, light scurrying and scratching — often heard in the early morning (6–8am) and late afternoon. Squirrels are diurnal; sounds stop completely after dark. Gnawing on wood is common. Chattering “tchk-tchk” calls are distinct. No sustained chirping or mewing patterns.
European Starlings
Chirping and whistling from roof vents or soffits — sounds are higher-pitched and more musical than raccoon kits. Active exclusively in daylight. Rapid high-frequency calling when chicks are hungry. No heavy thumping or rolling movements associated with the sound.
House Mice
Very soft scratching inside walls and ceiling — barely audible without pressing your ear to the surface. Squeaking is faint and intermittent. No thumping or rolling sounds. Often heard along specific linear paths as mice travel established runways inside wall cavities.
Kit-Safe Method — Explained
The Reunification Box — How It Works
The reunification box is a precision tool — not a cage. Its design, placement, and thermal conditions determine whether the mother relocates her kits voluntarily within 24–72 hours.
| Reunification Box Specifications | |
|---|---|
| Material | Insulated plastic / wooden box |
| Interior temp target | 32–35°C (mimics nest) |
| Heating method | Low-wattage heat pad (reptile grade) |
| Placement height | Adjacent to primary entry — elevated |
| Entry orientation | Away from prevailing wind, sheltered |
| Bedding | Used nesting material from original site |
| Mother incentive | Scent transfer — never food baiting |
| Check frequency | Every 24–48 hours — photo timestamped |
| Typical relocation window | 24 – 72 hours after setup |
Why the Mother Must Move Them Voluntarily
- Physically moving kits triggers an acute stress response in the mother — she may abandon them rather than follow if she detects human scent on her young.
- The reunification box must be placed before the one-way exclusion door is installed — the mother needs free access to both the attic and the box during the transition period.
- Original nesting material transferred to the box carries the kits’ scent — this is what guides the mother to accept the new location. Synthetic bedding alone does not work.
- Food baiting is specifically prohibited under our protocol — it attracts other wildlife and conditions the mother to return to the property site rather than relocate.
- If the mother does not use the box within 72 hours, nest temperature, entry orientation, and scent material are reassessed. Forcing the timeline compounds the problem.
- Documentation of each site visit with timestamped photos is provided to the homeowner — this forms part of the MNRF-compliant job record.
Health & Safety
Health Risks Specific to Kit-Present Infestations
Kits contaminate attic space faster than adult raccoons — they cannot leave the nest to use latrines, meaning droppings accumulate concentrated in one area and penetrate insulation rapidly.
Baylisascaris procyonis (Raccoon Roundworm)
Raccoon roundworm eggs are shed in all raccoon faeces — including kits. Eggs become infective within 2–4 weeks and remain viable in soil and insulation for years. Human infection via ingestion or inhalation causes severe neurological damage. HEPA vacuum removal is mandatory — standard vacuums aerosolise eggs.
Leptospirosis
Leptospira bacteria is present in raccoon urine and spreads readily through wet insulation. Kit-present nests accumulate concentrated urine as kits cannot move away from the nest site. Transmission to humans can occur through skin contact with contaminated material, causing flu-like symptoms that progress to organ failure if untreated.
Insulation Saturation & Mould Risk
A litter of 4–6 kits confined to one nest location for 6–8 weeks saturates a 4–8 sq ft zone of insulation with urine and faeces. Saturated fibreglass batts lose up to 80% of their R-value and create a moisture reservoir that promotes mould growth — a secondary remediation issue separate from wildlife removal.
Regulatory Reference
What Is Legal — and What Isn't
Ontario’s Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act is explicit on kit-present situations. Homeowners who act without understanding these rules face penalties — even when acting in good faith.
| Action | Legal Status | Notes for Homeowners |
|---|---|---|
| Sealing entry points with kits confirmed inside | Illegal | Constitutes abandonment causing death — FWCA offence, fines up to $25,000. |
| Relocating a mother raccoon more than 1 km away | Illegal | Ontario prohibits relocation beyond 1 km regardless of nuisance status. |
| Physically moving kits yourself | Caution | Legal on your own property, but human scent increases abandonment risk significantly. |
| Trapping the mother for longer than 24 hours | Illegal | Ontario requires same-day release or humane euthanasia — prolonged captivity is prohibited. |
| Installing a one-way door with kits confirmed out | Legal | Permitted once all kits are confirmed mobile and relocated via reunification protocol. |
| Passive exclusion — blocking entry while nest is empty | Legal | Only legal when nest is confirmed empty by a licensed operator — not by visual inspection alone. |
| Humane exclusion using one-way doors (no kits) | Legal | The MNRF-preferred method for adult raccoon removal — no trapping required. |
Toronto Intelligence
Kit-Present Intrusion by Toronto Neighbourhood
Based on our service calls since 2018, these Toronto areas consistently produce the highest rate of kit-confirmed intrusions — driven by housing stock age, tree density, and proximity to ravine systems.
The Annex & Seaton Village
Critical Risk
Pre-1940 Victorian housing with exposed soffit joints. Dense canopy cover from Taddle Creek ravine system. Highest kit-confirmed call volume in our service area — March to June.
Riverdale & Leslieville
Critical Risk
Semi-detached housing with shared soffits allows single females to use adjacent attic spaces. Ravine access from Don Valley creates year-round wildlife corridors.
North York (Willowdale)
High Risk
1960s–70s bungalows with aging fascia systems and mature tree cover. High suburban raccoon population density amplified by accessible green bin infrastructure.
East York & Beaches
High Risk
Etobicoke (Humber Valley)
High Risk
Scarborough (Bluffs Area)
Moderate Risk
Our Proven Process
6-Step Raccoon Removal Process
No traps hidden in walls. No poisons. No guesswork. Every step is documented with photos so you know exactly what was done — and why.
1
Timestamped Photo Report — Inspection Day
GPS-tagged photos of every entry point, the nest location, kit age estimation, and all visible damage to insulation, vapour barriers, and structural elements. Formatted for submission to Intact, Aviva, Wawanesa, and most major Ontario home insurers.
2
Licensed Operator Certificate
Our MNRF operator licence number and job-specific documentation confirms the removal was conducted legally and professionally. Insurers increasingly require this before approving wildlife-related claims — verbal confirmation is not accepted by most adjusters.
3
Monitoring Log — Full Timeline
GPS-tagged photos of every entry point, the nest location, kit age estimation, and all visible damage to insulation, vapour barriers, and structural elements. Formatted for submission to Intact, Aviva, Wawanesa, and most major Ontario home insurers.
4
Damage Assessment Report
Written summary of insulation saturation zone, estimated R-value loss, structural damage to fascia or soffits, wiring exposure risk, and mould likelihood rating. Includes square footage estimates matching the format required by most insurer restoration vendor networks.