Pest x crop · Mealybugs on basil
How to get rid of mealybugs on basil
What mealybugs look like on basil
White cottony tufts in the joints between basil stems and leaves; pink soft-bodied insects under the wax; sticky honeydew on lower foliage.
For the full set of mealybugs damage symptoms across host crops, see our Mealybugs identification page.
Why basil attracts mealybugs
Basil is a documented mealybug host on supermarket-supplied indoor pots, where the soft stems and warm humid conditions suit mealybug reproduction.
Severity for this combo: High — act quickly. When to act: Year-round on indoor basil. Outbreaks typically start with one infested transplant from a supermarket or garden centre.
Step-by-step control protocol
This is the integrated-pest-management protocol — non-chemical control first, biological and organic options second, conventional sprays only as a labelled last resort. Total cycle: about three weeks for most home cases.
- Confirm the pest. Inspect the plant — look for white cottony tufts in leaf axils, leaf undersides, and stem joints. If unsure, photograph the affected area and open Growli for instant species ID.
- Isolate where possible. Move container-grown basil away from healthy plants. For outdoor beds, mark the affected row so you can monitor it daily.
- Apply non-chemical control first. Dab visible adults with a cotton swab dipped in 70 percent isopropyl alcohol
- Add biological or organic spray. Dab adults with rubbing alcohol on a cotton swab; rinse the plant under a tepid sink shower; spray insecticidal soap weekly for three weeks. Avoid systemic insecticides on edible herbs.
- Repeat on schedule. Most mealybugs protocols need repeating every 5-7 days for three weeks to catch each new hatch. A female lays 300-600 eggs in a cottony ovisac. Crawler-stage nymphs hatch wax-free and mobile — this is the only stage when contact sprays really work. Adults are protected by their wax coat.
- Monitor and prevent recurrence. Inspect basil weekly for the rest of the season. Quarantine new plant arrivals for 3 weeks before mixing with your collection
Best biological control for mealybugs on basil
For greenhouse, polytunnel, conservatory, and indoor production on basil, biological control gives long-term suppression without the residue or pollinator harm of synthetic sprays:
- Cryptolaemus montrouzieri (mealybug destroyer) — release larvae rather than adults for indoor use; adults disperse
- Leptomastix dactylopii — parasitoid wasp specific to citrus mealybug
- Chrysoperla carnea (green lacewing) larvae — generalist predator that eats mealybug crawlers
Organic spray options
Horticultural oil and insecticidal soap work best during the crawler stage, when nymphs have not yet built their wax shield — apply every 5-7 days to catch successive hatches. Neem oil disrupts moulting. Systemic insecticides are sometimes used in commercial nursery production but are not appropriate for edibles or indoor herbs.
Prevention going forward
- Dab visible adults with a cotton swab dipped in 70 percent isopropyl alcohol
- Quarantine new plant arrivals for 3 weeks before mixing with your collection
- Wash leaves and stems under lukewarm water in a sink or shower
- Prune out and bin the worst-affected stems
- Unpot suspect plants and inspect roots for white waxy root mealybug colonies
Common mistakes when treating mealybugs on basil
- Spraying once and walking away. A female lays 300-600 eggs in a cottony ovisac. Crawler-stage nymphs hatch wax-free and mobile — this is the only stage when contact sprays really work. Adults are protected by their wax coat. A single spray misses everything that hatches afterwards — plan a 3-week protocol.
- Confusing the species. Basil hosts several similar-looking pests. Confirm before treating; the wrong protocol wastes weeks. Open Growli for a confirmed ID.
- Spraying in midday heat. Insecticidal soap and horticultural oil burn leaves above 30 degC and on drought-stressed plants. Apply at dawn or dusk.
- Mixing biological control with broad-spectrum sprays. Pyrethroids and neonicotinoids wipe out predator releases. Use one strategy at a time.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I get rid of mealybugs on basil?
- Dab adults with rubbing alcohol on a cotton swab; rinse the plant under a tepid sink shower; spray insecticidal soap weekly for three weeks. Avoid systemic insecticides on edible herbs. A female lays 300-600 eggs in a cottony ovisac. Crawler-stage nymphs hatch wax-free and mobile — this is the only stage when contact sprays really work. Adults are protected by their wax coat.
- What do mealybugs look like on basil?
- White cottony tufts in the joints between basil stems and leaves; pink soft-bodied insects under the wax; sticky honeydew on lower foliage.
- When should I treat mealybugs on basil?
- Year-round on indoor basil. Outbreaks typically start with one infested transplant from a supermarket or garden centre.
- Why are mealybugs attracted to basil?
- Basil is a documented mealybug host on supermarket-supplied indoor pots, where the soft stems and warm humid conditions suit mealybug reproduction.
- What is the best biological control for mealybugs on basil?
- Cryptolaemus montrouzieri (mealybug destroyer) — release larvae rather than adults for indoor use; adults disperse. Dab adults with rubbing alcohol on a cotton swab; rinse the plant under a tepid sink shower; spray insecticidal soap weekly for three weeks. Avoid systemic insecticides on edible herbs.
- Will mealybugs on basil spread to other plants?
- Yes. Mealybugs from basil typically migrate to nearby susceptible hosts — see the affected-crops list on the main mealybugs page. Quarantine, sticky traps, and weekly inspections of neighbouring plants are essential.
- Are pesticides safe to use on basil?
- Insecticidal soap, horticultural oil, neem oil, and Bti are the safest options for edible and indoor basil. Always read the product label and follow manufacturer's PPE, dosage, and re-entry guidance. Pesticide approvals change — confirm via the UK HSE pesticide register or US EPA before use.
Sources
Combo-specific guidance sourced from US Cooperative Extension publications (UC IPM, NC State, UMD, UMN, Penn State, CSU, UF/IFAS EDIS), Clemson HGIC fact sheets, Royal Horticultural Society guidance, and Cornell NYS IPM Biocontrol fact sheets. Reviewed by the Growli editorial team in May 2026.
Keep going
- All crops affected by mealybugs
- Mealybugs — full kill protocol (article)
- How to grow basil — full guide
- Basil plant-care reference
- Basil companion plants
- All 8 garden pests covered in this guide
- Garden pest identification — complete article
Treat mealybugs on basil with Growli
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