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Cockroach Nymph vs Bed Bug: How to Tell the Difference
Small reddish-brown bugs get confused all the time — is it a baby cockroach or a bed bug? Here are the body-shape, antennae, and location tells that separate them.
A bed bug is flat, oval, and seed-shaped with short antennae and no spines, and it turns rust-red only after a blood meal. A cockroach nymph is more cylindrical and elongated, with long antennae and spiny legs, and it moves fast. Where you find it helps too: bed bugs cluster near where you sleep, while roach nymphs stay near food and water.
Flat, oval, seed-shaped, short antennae, found near the bed = bed bug. Longer body, antennae as long as the body, spiny legs, fast-moving, found near the kitchen or bathroom = cockroach nymph. The difference matters because the treatments are nothing alike.
Body shape is the fastest tell: bed bugs are flat and seed-shaped; cockroach nymphs are longer with very long antennae.
The quick tells
Check four things: body shape (bed bug flat/oval/seed-shaped; roach nymph elongated), antennae (bed bug short; roach nymph as long as its body), legs (bed bug thin and smooth; roach nymph long and spiny), and speed (bed bug slow; roach nymph fast).
Cockroach nymph vs bed bug
The color clue
Bed bug nymphs start out translucent to pale tan and turn rust-red only after they feed on blood — so a visibly blood-filled, reddish bug near a bed is a strong bed-bug sign. Cockroach nymphs are a uniform brown to dark color regardless of feeding. If the color came from a blood meal, you are looking at a bed bug.
Location usually settles it
Where you find the bug is one of the most reliable tells. Bed bugs stay close to their host — mattress seams, box springs, headboards, and cracks near the bed. Cockroach nymphs stay close to food, water, and warmth — the kitchen, bathroom, and around appliances. A small bug in the bed is far more likely a bed bug; one in the kitchen, a roach nymph.
If it’s a bed bug
Bed bugs need a completely different approach than roaches — and DIY usually fails. See the signs of bed bugs and our bed bug treatment options (heat, chemical, fumigation).
If it’s a cockroach nymph
Roach nymphs mean roaches are breeding indoors — see baby cockroaches for what that means, and identify the species on our cockroach types guide.
See our cockroach control →Roach nymph vs bed bug FAQ
Is it a baby cockroach or a bed bug?
Look at body shape and location. A flat, oval, seed-shaped bug with short antennae found near the bed is a bed bug; a longer bug with antennae as long as its body and spiny legs, found near food and water, is a cockroach nymph.
Do bed bugs look like baby roaches?
They can at a glance — both are small and reddish-brown — but bed bugs are flat and seed-shaped with short antennae, while roach nymphs are more elongated with very long antennae and spiny legs. Bed bugs also turn red only after a blood meal.
How can you tell bed bugs from cockroaches?
Bed bugs are flat, oval, slow, and live near where you sleep; cockroaches (and their nymphs) are faster, have long antennae and spiny legs, and live near food and water. Location and body shape are the most reliable tells.
Where do bed bugs and roaches hide?
Bed bugs hide in mattress seams, box springs, headboards, and cracks close to the bed. Cockroaches hide in the kitchen and bathroom — under and behind appliances, in cabinet cracks, and around drains.
Not sure what you’re seeing? We’ll identify it.
Call (559) 472-8200 or request a no-cost inspection — we confirm the pest and treat it the right way.