
What Are Armyworms and Why Do They Eat My Grass?
April 21, 2026It usually starts with something small.
A few brown, cone-shaped bags hanging from a branch. Maybe your evergreen looks a little thinner than usual. Nothing that feels urgent. Most homeowners assume it’s minor or something that can wait.
But with bagworms, waiting is exactly what turns a manageable issue into serious damage.
In Oklahoma, one untreated season is often all it takes for bagworms to spread, strip plants, and permanently change the look of your landscaping.
What are the signs of a bagworm infestation?
Bagworms are easy to miss early on.
They build protective cases, or “bags,” made from bits of leaves and twigs from the plant they’re feeding on. That’s why they blend in so well, especially on evergreens like junipers, cedars, and arborvitae.
Early bagworm infestation symptoms often include a thinning appearance in certain areas of the plant. As feeding continues, you may notice browning sections, bare spots, or entire branches losing their needles or leaves.
As the infestation grows, those small bags become more visible. They hang from branches and can quickly multiply across the plant.
By the time most homeowners clearly notice them, the damage is already underway.
What does bagworm damage look like?
Bagworm damage doesn’t stay subtle for long.
What starts as light thinning can quickly turn into large sections of brown, lifeless foliage. On evergreens, this is especially concerning because once those needles are gone, they often don’t grow back.
Common signs of bagworm damage include patchy browning, defoliation, and entire branches that appear dry or dead. In severe cases, the plant can look completely stripped.
One of the biggest challenges is how quietly this damage happens. There’s no obvious swarm or sudden movement. Just a steady decline that becomes more noticeable week by week.
How fast do bagworms spread?
Faster than most people expect.
Bagworms don’t just stay on one plant. As they mature, they can spread to nearby trees and shrubs, especially when plants are close together.
Each bag can contain hundreds of eggs. That means a small, overlooked issue one season can turn into a much larger infestation the next.
In Oklahoma, where warm weather supports active feeding, it doesn’t take long for populations to grow and move. What started on one shrub can easily affect an entire row of landscaping.
When should you spray for bagworms?
Timing is everything with bagworms.
The best time to treat is when they are young and actively feeding, usually in late spring to early summer. At that stage, they are more vulnerable and easier to control.
If you wait until the bags are large and well-established, treatment becomes less effective. By then, they are protected inside their cases, and the damage has already been done.
This is why homeowners who ask when to spray for bagworms often hear the same answer. Earlier is always better.
Once you can clearly see widespread bags, you’re no longer in prevention mode. You’re dealing with an active infestation.
Can a tree recover from bagworms?
Sometimes, but not always.
It depends on how severe the damage is and what type of plant is affected.
Deciduous trees, which lose their leaves each year, have a better chance of recovering if the damage is limited. But evergreens are much less forgiving. When needles are stripped, those areas often stay bare.
If a large portion of the plant has been damaged, recovery can be slow or incomplete. In some cases, the plant may not survive at all.
That’s what makes early bagworm control so important. Once the damage reaches a certain point, there’s no quick fix.
Why waiting one season can cause lasting damage
This is where most homeowners get caught off guard.
Bagworms don’t usually destroy a plant overnight. Instead, they weaken it over time while quietly increasing in number. By the end of the season, the plant is stressed, partially defoliated, and less able to recover.
At the same time, new eggs are already in place for the next season.
So when spring comes around again, the problem doesn’t start small. It starts bigger, spreads faster, and causes damage sooner.
That’s why one untreated season can have a ripple effect that impacts your landscaping long after the initial infestation.
Why DIY bagworm removal often falls short
Hand-picking bagworms is something many homeowners try.
It can help in very small, early infestations, but it’s rarely enough once the problem spreads. Missing even a few bags means leaving behind hundreds of eggs.
Store-bought sprays also have limitations. If they’re applied too late or don’t reach the right areas of the plant, they won’t fully control the population.
Bagworms require precise timing and thorough coverage. Without that, it’s easy to think the problem is handled, only to see it return even worse the next season.
What’s the best way to get rid of bagworms?
The most effective approach is early, targeted treatment.
Professional bagworm control focuses on treating at the right stage of the life cycle and ensuring full coverage of affected plants. It also includes monitoring to catch new activity before it spreads.
In Oklahoma, where bagworms are a recurring issue for many properties, having a plan in place before the season begins can make a significant difference.
If you’re already seeing signs of damage, acting quickly can help limit how far it goes.
Final thoughts: don’t give bagworms a head start
Bagworms are one of those pests where timing truly matters. Waiting even a few weeks too long can turn a small issue into widespread damage that’s difficult to reverse.
If your trees or shrubs are starting to thin, brown, or show signs of stress, it’s worth taking a closer look now rather than later.
At Champion Pest Control, we help homeowners identify bagworm activity early and apply treatments that protect your landscaping before the damage spreads. If you’re concerned about your trees or want to stay ahead of the season, schedule an inspection with our team and let us take a look.




