June 23, 2026 5 min read

🕷️ Quick note: This post is general information, not medical advice. For concerns about a tick bite, rash, fever, or allergic symptoms, contact your child's clinician.

Whether you live in the Northeast or are headed this way for summer adventures, this summer is a good one to ensure that you are tick-smart and ready to protect your kids and family.

Ticks are part of outdoor life in much of America, but especially the Northeast. Some years are worse than others, and this year is expected to be a bad one. When tick populations surge, it's not just a bite risk. Ticks can spread infections like Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses, and certain species (including the lone star tick) have been linked to alpha-gal syndrome, a potentially serious allergy to red meat and other mammal-derived products. Alpha-gal syndrome has been present in the American Southeast for some time, but it is spreading rapidly in the Northeast as well, becoming so prominent that vacation destinations now advertise "alpha-gal friendly" menus.

The good news: the most effective prevention strategies are straightforward, evidence-based, and recommended by mainstream health authorities. And one of the easiest upgrades you can make to a kid's outdoor "uniform" is also one of the most overlooked: pants.

Why ticks are more than just a nuisance

Ticks don't jump or fly—they crawl. They typically start low (grass, leaf litter, brush) and move upward until they find skin. That's why the places we hike, play, garden, and even many backyards can be high-risk exposure zones.

Tick bites can lead to:

  • Lyme disease, most common in the Northeast and Upper Midwest (often from deer ticks). Symptoms can include fever, fatigue, headache, and a rash; early treatment matters.
  • Other tick-borne infections that can also cause fever and significant illness.
  • Alpha-gal syndrome (AGS) in some people after certain tick bites (most often associated with lone star ticks in the U.S.). AGS can cause allergic reactions that may be severe and can be long-lasting. This allergic reaction isn't immediate. It occurs a few hours after eating the meat or animal product, as it is related to digesting the animal protein.

Because kids spend so much time close to the ground—and because ticks can be tiny (nymph ticks can be about the size of a poppy seed)—prevention is a "layers" game: clothing + repellent + checks + quick action.

The clothing strategy: pants are prevention

If ticks have to crawl to reach skin, your goal is to make that crawl harder and easier to spot.

1) Choose pants over shorts in tick country

When your child will be in tall grass, brushy edges, leaf litter, or wooded trails, pants reduce the amount of exposed skin and create a barrier ticks have to cross.

Practical tips:

  • Lightweight joggers, hiking pants, or thin "play pants" can be more comfortable than you remember.
  • Light-colored pants can make it easier to see ticks before they reach skin.
  • Smooth, tighter-weave fabrics can be harder for ticks to grab than loose knits.

2) The sock move that really helps: tuck pants into socks

It's old-school, and definitely doesn't look "cool", but it's still one of the most effective  tricks: tuck pant legs into socks so ticks can't crawl straight up the leg unnoticed.

If your kid refuses the full tuck, try:

  • Tall crew socks over leggings
  • Joggers with snug cuffs + higher socks
  • A "trail rule" for hikes only (not every playground trip)

3) Closed-toe shoes beat sandals in high-tick areas

Ticks tend to start low. Closed shoes plus crew socks reduce easy access.

4) Consider permethrin-treated clothing (for clothes, not skin)

Regions with mosquito-borne illnesses know that permethrin is a critical tool to stop disease transmission from insects. Permethrin is most often used to treat bed-nets in those regions, and the same compound is recommended for treating clothes and gear in the US to reduce the likelihood of disease transmission. You can purchase pre-treated clothing, or buy a spray that allows you to treat your own clothes.

Important:

  • Permethrin is for clothing/gear—not for skin.
  • Follow label directions carefully; store it safely away from children and pets.

Repellent, done the official way

Most reliable recommendations emphasize using EPA-registered insect repellents and using them according to the label. Options commonly recommended for tick protection include DEET and picaridin (and other EPA-registered ingredients).

A few parent-friendly reminders:

  • Put repellent on exposed skin and on clothing as directed (but don't apply under clothing).
  • Apply it to your own hands first, then rub onto your child's skin—especially for younger kids.
  • Avoid hands, eyes, and mouth; be careful around the face.
  • Wash treated skin with soap and water after coming indoors.

Many natural bug sprays do not have strong evidence that they are actually effective. If you want a natural bug spray, look for EPA-registered products that are proven to work, like ones that contain Oil of Lemon Eucalyptus.

The after-play routine that matters most

Do a tick check every day during peak season

Medical guidance emphasizes checking the whole body after outdoor time. For kids, pay extra attention to:

  • Hairline and scalp
  • Behind ears
  • Underarms
  • Belly button
  • Waistband area
  • Behind knees
  • Between legs

Ticks often wander before attaching—so checks catch them early.

Shower or bathe soon after outdoor time

A quick rinse can help remove ticks before they bite and makes checks easier.

Clothes: separate, hot, and fast

Ticks can hitchhike on clothing. A practical approach:

  • Change clothes soon after outdoor play.
  • Put dry clothes directly in the dryer on high heat for 6-10 minutes (as fabric allows). This is the most effective way to kill ticks, per CDC guidance. Washing alone isn't enough—ticks can survive cold and warm water cycles, and even hot water doesn't kill all of them. Heat from the dryer is what does the job. Given that frequent high-heat drying isn't great for clothing longevity, we recommend having a dedicated outfit or two for hiking that can take more of a beating.

What to do if you find a tick

  1. Remove it promptly with fine-tipped tweezers (steady, straight pull).
  2. Clean the bite area with soap and water.
  3. Watch for symptoms (fever, rash, unusual fatigue) and contact your clinician if anything looks off.
  4. Consider taking a photo and noting the date/location of exposure—helpful for medical conversations.

If you're worried about alpha-gal syndrome or severe allergy symptoms at any time (hives, swelling, trouble breathing, vomiting, dizziness), seek urgent medical care.

A kid-friendly "tick season outfit" checklist

  • Lightweight pants
  • Socks (tall enough to cover ankles)
  • Pants tucked into socks for hikes/brushy areas
  • Closed-toe shoes
  • EPA-registered repellent used per label
  • Tick check + bath/shower after outdoor time

Bottom line

In a heavy tick year, prevention doesn't have to mean keeping kids indoors. It means getting a little more intentional—especially about what they wear from the waist down. Pants, socks, and a smart repellent routine are simple, science-backed steps that can meaningfully cut risk.

If you want one takeaway to remember: ticks crawl—so dress kids like you're putting up a barrier, not just covering skin.