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Connecticut pest control application log template

Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection is the official starting point for Connecticut pesticide licensing and recordkeeping questions. PestLog provides a standard pesticide application record template for Connecticut; verify the current retention period and any reporting duties with the regulator before relying on any template.

At a glance
RegulatorConnecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection — Pesticides Program
RetentionConnecticut DEEP guidance says pesticide application businesses must maintain application records for at least five years from when the record is made or amended.
Who should verify dutiesConnecticut pest-control businesses, certified applicators, and license holders should confirm recordkeeping duties with Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection before relying on any template.
ReportingConnecticut operators should verify whether pesticide use reports, incident reports, or category-specific submissions apply through Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.
Template statusPestLog standard recordkeeping template
Record fields to verify
Regulator fieldPestLog fieldNotes
Connecticut supervisor and commercial operation identityApplicator, supervisor, certification number, company profile, and customer fieldsConnecticut records identify the commercial supervisor, commercial operation, and operator context.
Connecticut pesticide kind, amount, acreage, date, place, pest, crop, and siteProduct, amount, area treated, treatment date, service address, application site, target pest, and notesConnecticut distinguishes place as street address and site as the specific structure or property area treated.
Connecticut written instructions and termite graph support when applicableJob instructions, attachments, customer notes, and termite inspection diagram uploadsDEEP suggests retaining written instructions and termite reinspection information with permanent records.
Visible pesticide application log template
Customer name
Service address
Application date and time
Applicator and license number
Target pest
Product and EPA registration number
Dilution rate and amount used
Application site and method
Weather conditions
Customer signature or no-signature reason

The visible template is informational. PestLog users can capture these fields, attach photos, record signatures, and export reports from inside the app.

What is different in Connecticut

Connecticut five-year retention

Connecticut pesticide application businesses keep records for not less than five years from the date the record is made or amended, whichever is later.

Connecticut site specificity

Connecticut guidance says records must identify both the place and the specific site treated, such as the room, yard area, or bait-station location.

Connecticut inspection access

DEEP may inspect pesticide storage areas and pesticide application records at reasonable times under the pesticide control program.

What PestLog captures

PestLog records pesticide applications, service addresses, customer signatures, photos, chemical inventory usage, reminders, and PDF exports for $29/month after the free trial.

Connecticut FAQ

How long should Connecticut pesticide application records be kept?

Connecticut DEEP guidance says pesticide application businesses must maintain records for at least five years from when each record is made or amended.

What Connecticut details should a pesticide log include?

Connecticut records should capture supervisor and operation identity, pesticide kind and amount, acreage if applicable, date, street-address place, specific treated site, pest, and crop or site treated.

Does PestLog replace Connecticut DEEP guidance?

No. PestLog organizes Connecticut application records and exports, but DEEP guidance, statutes, regulations, and current inspection instructions control final duties.

Sources and disclaimer

Last reviewed: 2026-06-12. PestLog is not a regulator and does not provide legal advice. Verify current requirements with the official sources below.