Ground Bee

Anthophora sp. / Colletes sp.

Small fuzzy bee nesting in bare soil, spring only

Ground Bee: Individual

Individual

Ground Bee: Swarm

Swarm

Ground Bee: Nest / Hive

Nest / Hive

Ground Bee: Wing / Body Pattern

Wing / Body Pattern

What It Is

Ground bee is the common name for a group of solitary or semi-social native bees that nest in bare soil rather than in structures. Several species fit this category in Southern California, including digger bees in the genera Anthophora and Colletes. Despite the appearance of a colony when many are active at once, ground bees are not colonial: each female digs her own burrow, provisions her own larvae, and operates independently. Dozens of individual bees may choose the same patch of bare ground, making the site look organized when it is actually concurrent independent nesting. Size: roughly 1/2 to 3/4 inch, comparable to a medium honeybee but noticeably fuzzier.

How to Identify

Ground bees are fuzzy throughout the body, resembling small bumblebees, and are typically yellow-brown or black with pale banding. Behavior is the clearest identification signal: in early spring, males emerge before females and hover in low, rapid groups a few inches above the soil surface near the nest area. This hovering (frantic, low-altitude, directly above bare ground) is what homeowners notice first and find alarming. The nest itself is small soil mounds with a central entry hole, roughly the diameter of a pencil, in bare or sparsely vegetated ground. Multiple mounds in the same patch are typical. Activity is concentrated in spring and ends within 4 to 8 weeks.

Behavior and Risk

Ground bees are gentle. The alarming low hovering is done entirely by males, and male ground bees cannot sting. Females can sting but are extremely reluctant to do so, and unprovoked stinging is rare. The practical risk from ground bees in a yard or garden is essentially zero. Normal foot traffic near the nesting area does not trigger a defensive response.

How to Handle

If ground bees are nesting in a low-risk area of your lawn or garden, the most effective response is to wait. The nesting cycle ends on its own, typically within 4 to 8 weeks, and the activity stops completely. If the nesting site is in a high-foot-traffic area, covering the soil with a layer of mulch or planting dense ground cover after the season ends will discourage nesting the following spring. Do not apply pesticides to an active ground bee nesting site. These are native pollinators with genuine ecological value, and their presence is brief.

Quick comparison

Ground bees hover low over bare soil in spring and nest in the ground. Honeybees nest inside structures (walls, tree hollows, attic voids), and show steady two-way traffic at a specific exterior gap. If bees are hovering over a dirt patch in your yard in March or April, they are almost certainly ground bees. If bees are entering a structure through a gap in the building's exterior, those are honeybees and you should call us.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are ground bees dangerous?

No. The hovering swarms that alarm homeowners are males, and male ground bees cannot sting. Females can sting but rarely do, and unprovoked stinging away from the nest is uncommon. Walking near the nesting area does not trigger a defensive response. Ground bees are among the least risky insects a homeowner will encounter in a Southern California yard.

Does Beecasso remove ground bees?

Ground bees are native pollinators with no hive or colony. Their nesting season is brief and ends on its own, typically within 4 to 8 weeks. If you are not sure whether what you are looking at is ground bees or something that requires professional attention, send us a photo and we will identify it for free.

What does a ground bee nest look like?

Small mounds of loose soil with a central entry hole, roughly the diameter of a pencil, in bare or sparsely vegetated ground. Multiple mounds in the same patch are common. The holes are clean and distinct. Activity at the holes, including bees entering and exiting, is visible during warm daytime hours in spring. The mounds are low-profile and easy to miss until you are looking for them.

Is a ground bee the same as a yellowjacket?

No. Ground-nesting yellowjackets and ground bees are frequently confused because both use in-ground entry holes. Ground bees are fuzzy, gentle, and active in spring. Yellowjackets are smooth, bright yellow-black, aggressive, and most active in late summer and fall. If activity at a ground hole is happening in late summer, or if the insects are smooth and bright yellow rather than fuzzy, step back and do not disturb the site. That is a yellowjacket situation and requires pest control.

Bees are hovering low over my lawn near holes in the ground. What is happening?

In spring, this is almost certainly ground bees. The low, rapid hovering directly above ground-level holes is characteristic of male ground bees searching for emerging females. It looks frantic and alarming but poses no risk; males cannot sting. The activity is brief, typically 4 to 8 weeks, and stops on its own. If the same behavior is happening in late summer or fall, it may be ground-nesting yellowjackets, which are a different situation and require pest control.

Not sure what you are dealing with?

Send us a photo from a safe distance, we identify it for free.

Back to Identify Guide

What our customers say

★★★★★
We had a fantastic experience with Beecasso. Scouting bees had gone into our dryer vent and we wanted someone to humanely them out as soon as possible before the rest of the hive arrived. We called five or six places and they were one of the only ones that was able to come out that day, which we deeply appreciated, and they were very reasonably priced. CEO Steve Downs was incredibly nice and patient over the phone in helping assess the situation and calm my anxiety. Jerry and RJ who came to our place were incredibly nice, answered all our questions, and did a great job in quickly and humanely getting the bees out of our dryer vent and covering the all nearby vents. The bees moved to the vents of our neighbors so they came back out the next day to do the same thing for our neighbors. We will definitely call them in the future if we have any bee issues and would highly recommend them to others!
Team K. · Verified Yelp review · May 2025
★★★★★
Two reasons I recommend this company: 1. Effective! Over a year ago, we had a massive bee hive that had started in a whole under the roof. They took care of the problem and bees have not come back 2. Very responsive! We had a second bee swarm starting yesterday and they came out the same day and took care of it.
Shari D. · Verified Yelp review · Apr 2025
★★★★★
Their team responded in less than 48hours. They removed my invasive beehive in less than an hour and cleaned up after themselves, all at a fair and reasonable price. Workers were efficient and respectful.
James R. · Verified Yelp review · Jul 2024
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