25 Types Of Stink Bugs You Should Know

There are many types of stink bugs, some worse than others. In this guide, we explore the world of these little beetle-like insects, both good and bad!

One of many types of stink bugs, appearing to have a brown body sitting on a plant with a white flowerbud

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It stinks when you find stink bugs in your garden, especially if you squish them! These insects in the order Hemiptera (family Pentatomidae) release a foul smell to keep predators away when they’re injured or squished. They’re unpleasant in the garden, especially since they can damage your plants. There are several types of stink bugs you might spot in your garden that you should keep an eye out for.

A single stink bug can’t cause too much damage on its own. But that’s the downside: they’re usually present in great numbers since they lay many eggs at once. They feed on plant juices and other plant parts, and if left untreated, you’ll likely see lots of damage.

Not every stink bug will ruin your garden, however! Some predatory species will lend a helping hand by eating many other insects considered pests in your garden, like caterpillars and beetle larvae. It’s super important to know which bugs want to help and which will hinder, so let’s look at the types of stink bugs you might find in your garden.

How to Identify Stink Bugs

Close up of a group of stink bugs on a brown surface.
Brown marmorated stink bug, Halyomorpha halys.

Stink bugs come in various colors and patterns, so how are you supposed to tell which is which? It’ll certainly come down to memorizing each species in the order Hemiptera and family Pentatomidae, but you’ll know those are stink bugs on your plants when you see their shield-shaped bodies and sucking mouthparts. In fact, stink bugs are also called shield bugs because of their shape.

Much like shields from the days of yore, their shield-shaped bodies have variations, which will help you identify specific species. Some types of stink bugs are round, while others are elongated. The “shoulders” could be rounded or have spikes that jut out to the side or forward toward the head. The bottom of the shield-shaped body may be pointed, round, or flat. The stink bug’s back could be flat or have a cool and threatening spike, kind of like a shark.

Some types of stink bugs resemble many other insects considered true bugs. Learn which species live in your area and what they eat or live on to help you narrow down the species. It’s also important to note that many nymphal stages (stink bug children and teens, essentially) don’t resemble the adult stink bugs they become.

Solid-colored stink bugs are often multicolored until they become adults, or green ones may start out black and red. Some have a life cycle that includes five nymphal stages called instars. Sometimes you can’t know until they grow up!

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Stink Bug Pests

Most types of stink bug in the family Pentatomidae consume plant juice with their sucking mouthparts and are bad news for your garden and other plants nearby. If you don’t try to control them, they’ll quickly multiply and hurt your plants. These insects don’t typically ruin entire plants or fruit, leaving a soft spot where they’ve fed. They commonly cause cosmetic damage like bruises or discoloration.

This is bad news for farmers because stores typically don’t want “ugly” fruit, but it might not affect home gardeners as much. However, stink bugs can carry diseases that infect plants, and this is where the real damage happens. Some of the listed pest species occasionally eat other pest insects, but not enough to be considered garden allies.

Black and Red Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a Cosmopepla lintneriana appearing to have a black body with red markings on its back sitting on a vibrant green leaf
Black and red stink bug, Cosmopepla lintneriana.

Also called the twice-stabbed stink bug, Cosmopepla lintneriana insects are no more than six millimeters long and have a notable black and red pattern that’s easy to identify. These insects are black with a red line and diamond at the top of their shield and two red spots in the center. You can find them throughout North America and part of Mexico, feeding on asparagus, oat, and mint seeds.

Black Stink Bug

A black Proxys punctulatus appearing to have a solid body sitting on a vividly green leaf with spines on the edges
Black stink bug, Proxys punctulatus.

With pointed shoulders and little spikes all over its back, the species Proxys punctulatus looks like it’s ready to puncture you with its angular body. It’s solid black with a white spot and white and black legs. It’s one of the common types of stink bugs throughout the southern US down to Brazil and the Caribbean islands.

They target cotton, soybeans, and citrus. They eat insect larvae that feed on cotton, but that’s only so they can have more cotton to themselves!

Blue Shield Bug

A strong and shiny Blue Shield bug holding on to a slim and green leaf with a lawn in the background
Blue shield bug, Zicrona caerulea.

These shiny insects in the family Pentatomidae are pretty enough that you’d want to keep them around, but they’re pests in grasslands and woodlands where there’s low vegetation. You can find Zicrona caerulea throughout Britain and North America, where trees are scarce. It has a blue-green metallic body with black accents.

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

A large Halyomorpha halys with a broad and rough back appearing to have a brown color with certain markings
Brown marmorated stink bug, Halyomorpha halys.

A bug so terrible they turned it into a four-letter word (BMSB), you don’t want to see the marmorated stink bug around! Halyomorpha halys is native to eastern Asia but has traveled the world and established itself throughout Europe, eastern North America, Australia, and Chile by hanging out on imported goods. It’s a highly invasive species that overwinters in structures, so you might find them in your home once it gets cold.

It’s larger than most types of stink bugs, growing up to 17 millimeters in length. It has a mottled coloration of light and yellow-brown with red stripes and a white band along its legs and on its five-segmented antennae, but its five nymphal stages give it a lot of variation throughout its life cycle. It loves fruit trees and vegetables, making it a problem in many orchards, farms, and backyards.

Brown Stink Bug

A close-up of a brownish stink bug resting on a green leaf, with sunlight highlighting the insect's textured back.
Brown stink bug, Euschistus servus.

You might mistake Euschistus servus, known as the brown stink bug, for the brown marmorated stink bug at first since their mottled brown appearance is similar. However, brown stink bugs have a more yellow-gray tone to them and lack red.

You can find Euschistus servus seasonally throughout the US and Canada, but the brown stink bug hangs around all year long in the southern states since the weather is warmer there. They like to eat seeds, grains, nuts, and fruits and will eat weeds while overwintering. Their favorite food is peaches, so keep an eye out for them on your peach trees!

Conchuela Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a Chlorochroa ligata appearing to have a solid brown color with bright yellow lining on its back
Conchuela stink bug, Chlorochroa ligata.

The species Chlorochroa ligata should theoretically be easy to identify, but the fact that different stages can look like two species makes it difficult! They’re either light green with a yellow dot and shield outline, or black with a red dot and shield outline. Actually, the “black” is dark green, but it often looks black.

These types of stink bugs have rounded shoulders, and the bottom of the shield has a crescent shape. They live throughout North America and have an interesting diet of cotton, grapes, mesquite, mustards, peas, prickly pear, sage, tomatoes, and yucca.

Dusky Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a young Dusky Stink Bug appearing to have distinct markings on its back while sitting on a bright green stem
Dusky stink bug, Euschistus tristigmus.

This is another mottled brown stink bug that can be tricky to identify, but Euschistus tristigmus tries to make it easy with its noticeably pointed shoulders and narrow head. The coloration is similar to the brown marmorated stink bug, but it’s much pointier.

Remember how we said location is often a determining factor? This one is picky, living on apple, cherry, peach, pear, and plum trees in the eastern portion of North America.

Edessa Bifida

A closeup shot of two Edessa Bifida insect mating while hanging on a plant with bright green stems
Edessa bifida stink bug.

This bug doesn’t have a nickname, but the white heart-shaped dot on its back would make “love bug” a contender if it weren’t for its tendency to destroy cotton field crops! You can find it in the southern US down to northern South America. Aside from the white heart, the brown V and green shoulders and triangle will make this one easy to identify.

Elf Shoe Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a Menecles insertus head appearing to have a distinct brown color with patterns, sitting on a green leaf in the warm light
Elf shoe stink bug, Menecles insertus.

It’s unclear how Menecles insertus got such a cute nickname. Perhaps it’s because their light brown legs have dark brown “shoes!” If you can’t see its feet, it will be hard to tell from the other mottled brown stink bugs with striped edges. Sound familiar yet?

Expect to see this one hanging out on fruit trees in most parts of the US and some parts of Canada. It’s more commonly found in the southern states.

Euschistus Quadrator

Close-up of a shield-shaped brown beetle on the bark of a tree, appearing to bask under the bright and warm sunlight
Euschistus quadrator.

This stink bug might lack a nickname because of how difficult it can be to identify. It prefers legumes like clover and vetch, but it also likes cotton, soybeans, and corn. That gives it plenty of food choices, but you can find it on a wide variety of plants it doesn’t prefer, so it’s hard to narrow down where exactly you’ll encounter it. At least it has a specific location in Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Georgia, and Florida!

It’s also difficult to identify because it has the common stink bug pattern that makes it look like the elf shoe stink bug and brown marmorated stink bug, but this one has pointy shoulders with black tips. However, the young nymph stage starts out as brown and red, then develops black and white, then turns lime green and brown before settling into its color palette of browns.

Green Burgundy Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a Banasa dimidiata appearing to have a shield-like body with green markings sitting on a stem
Green burgundy stink bug, Banasa dimidiata.

Banasa dimidiata is green and burgundy and is classed among other arboreal stink bugs or tree stink bugs. Surprised? It’s mostly green, and the burgundy color forms a green triangle in the middle. The shoulders are rounded, and it has a bright red head and antennae.

It’s mostly found in Oregon on cane berries, English holly, lilac, mountain ash, and arborvitae. Other Banasa stink bugs, like the jade stink bug mentioned later, prefer conifer plants like juniper.

Green Stink Bug

A Chinavia halaris bug appearing to have a bright green body sitting on a sturdy green leaf with a dark background
Green stink bug, Chinavia halaris.

The green stink bug can be difficult to identify online and in person! It’s scientifically called Chinavia halaris, as well as Chinavia hilare, and was once classified as Acrosternum hilaris (or hilare). These common insects are on the larger side, growing up to 19 millimeters long, and are solid green with either yellow spots or a yellow-hued green. This mostly depends on whether or not you’re looking at adult stink bugs or a green stink bug nymph.

Green-colored stink bugs are easy to confuse, so it’s down to location, plants, and size when identifying. It’s the most common type of stink bug in the US, so you can find it in most states, especially the southeastern United States, as well as in the southern parts of Canada. It prefers young trees, shrubs, weeds, and vines, but once these plants mature, it heads for soybeans.

Harlequin Bug

Close-up of a harlequin bug with distinctive red and black markings perched on a vibrant yellow wildflower.
Harlequin bug, Murgantia histrionica.

It’s pretty easy to identify Murgantia histrionica from the beginning since its eggs are striped with white and black markings, and the adult harlequin bug has a cool black and red pattern. Its body is almost a perfect oval, and it has pretty short antennae.

The harlequin bug is almost exclusive to Mexico and the southern US and loves cruciferous vegetables of any kind, from cabbage to mustard to radish and anything related to them. If those aren’t available, however, they’ll settle for almost anything. Nightshades (potatoes, tomatoes, etc.), okra, beets, beans, and fruit trees are usually their next pick.

Mormidea Lugens

A closeup shot of a Mormidea Lugens appearing to have distinct markings on its back sitting on a vivid green leaf
Mormidea lugens.

This stink bug lives mostly in eastern North America, with a few sightings in California, and can also be found in Mexico and the Caribbean islands. The shield shape has a rounded point, and it’s medium brown with tan lines on its back. You can find it in most grasses like timothy grass, deer-tongue grass, or sedge.

Redbanded Stink Bug

A closeup shot of the Piezodorus guildinii appearing to have a green back with red and brown markings, with the insect sitting on a bright green textured leaf
Redbanded stink bug, Piezodorus guildinii.

These green stink bugs, Piezodorus guildinii, get their name from the noticeable red band that goes across the top of the shield and along the edges. Spotting them can be a bit complicated, though, since some don’t develop that handy identifier. The tip of the shield comes to a “squoval” point, or a rounded square edge.

This stink bug has a major pest status in Central and South America on important agricultural crops. No one spotted it in the US until the 1970s, and it wasn’t considered a problem until the early 2000s. You can find them in the southern US on legumes of any kind, and they are a major problem for soybean farmers.

Red-Shouldered Stink Bug

A shot of a Thyanta custator appearing to have a wide and green back with hints of red, laying somewhere sunny
Red-shouldered stink bug, Thyanta custator.

Thyanta custator, or the red-shouldered stink bug, is easily confused with Piezodorus guildinii and the two even occasionally share the same nickname of redbanded stink bugs. They’re either solid lime green with reddish-brown feet and antennae, or they have a red line across their shoulders. They have gray eggs, which makes identification much easier.

You can find them in most parts of Canada and the US but they are more common on the eastern side. They aren’t picky eaters, and they are the most common stink bugs found on beans, corn, peaches, pistachios, and cereal crops like wheat.

Rice Stink Bug

A clsoeup shot of a Oebalus pugnax appearing to have a brown form looking almost cream under the bright sunlight
Rice stink bug, Oebalus pugnax.

Oebalus pugnax loves rice and is a major pest of agricultural crops like rice throughout the US, Brazil, and the Caribbean islands. They are common stink bugs found in the southern states, but they’ve been seen in eastern states and as far west as Arizona. It also likes rice relatives like corn, sedge, and Johnson grass. It has an elongated arrowhead-shaped body and is mostly solid straw-colored, tan, or light brown, with a triangle in a lighter shade on its back.

Say’s Stink Bug

A shot ofa vibrant and green Chlorochroa sayi appearing to sit on a deep green leaf with spiky edges
Say’s stink bug, Chlorochroa sayi.

Chlorochroa sayi is yet another you might confuse with other bugs, mostly other stink bugs, thanks to its solid green color with a red outline and dot, although the secondary color may be yellow instead of green. You’ll usually find it in the western part of the US from California to Texas with some sightings in Idaho.

It’s a major pest of agricultural crops like legumes and grasses, including alfalfa, barley, oats, red clover, wheat, rye, and weeds. If nothing else is available, you might find it in vegetable gardens.

Southern Green Stink Bug

A closeup of a Nezara viridula  appearing to have a bright green body walking on a wooden surface
Southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula.

Nezara viridula could earn a medal for being the world’s most hated stink bug. It’s a pest in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and South America. It prefers fruit and ornamental plants and trees, field crops, weeds, and vegetables (that’s pretty much everything you can grow!).

It’s a bright yellow-green, although some may be darker shades. It has five-segmented antennae. Eggs are light yellow or pink, and nymphal stages are black and red.

Beneficial Stink Bugs

Not every type of stink bug in the family Pentatomidae is bad news. Some species prefer to target pests and other insects with their sucking mouthparts instead of plants!

These assassin bugs go after caterpillars and beetle larvae. Some of them will still cause plant damage, but it shouldn’t be enough to ruin your garden, and you can consider keeping these around for pest control purposes.

Anchor Stink Bug

A small Stiretrus anchorago insect appearing to have elaborate patterns on its back walking on a delicate and thin blade of a grass-looking plant
Anchor stink bug, Stiretrus anchorago.

It’s pretty easy to spot Stiretrus anchorago thanks to the distinctive anchor shape on the bottom of the shield. You can find them on soybeans, pole beans, and potatoes, feeding on crop pests and other insects.

Florida Predatory Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a Euthyrhynchus floridanus appearing to have vibrant markings on its black while dangling on a bright green plant
Florida predatory stink bug, Euthyrhynchus floridanus.

Euthyrhynchus floridanus is predominantly found in Florida but can also be spotted in other states in the southeast. These predatory stink bugs eat a host of pests and many beetles, including velvetbean caterpillars, leaf beetles, walnut caterpillars, various weevils, the Colorado potato beetle, and some moths.

The best part: they eat southern green stink bugs! They vary in appearance, ranging from dark green to black and having either three red dots or a red lower half.

Perillus Strigipes

A shot of a Perillus Strigipes insect's back appearing to have bright greed patterns while standing on a vibrant green leaf somewhere dark
Perillus strigipes.

This stink bug is easy to recognize thanks to the diamond-shaped red or orange lines on its back. It can be found in the eastern part of the US and as far west as Texas. It has the typical predatory stink bug diet of caterpillars and beetles.

Rough Stink Bug

A shot of a Brochymena quadripustulata insect appearing to have a brown and rough body sitting on a woody stem surrounded by bright green foliage
Four-humped stink bug, Brochymena quadripustulata.

Scientifically known as Brochymena quadripustulata, rough stink bugs closely resemble the brown marmorated stink bug, but you can tell the difference because the rough stink bug has bumpy shoulders. It’s also called the four-humped stink bug because there are four distinct humps between its neck and shoulder.

The rough stink bug also has red dots all over its mottled brown body that is perfect for hiding among tree bark. Rough stink bugs eat caterpillars and beetles but also like to eat the leaves and seeds of many species of trees. Their feeding habits don’t usually cause enough damage to be considered a threat.

Spined Soldier Bug

A closeup shot of a Podisus maculiventris appearing to have a dark brown body while laying on a deep green leaf with a smooth and waxy surface
Spined soldier bug, Podisus maculiventris.

If you see stink bug eggs lined up perfectly in two long rows, it’s probably the Podisus maculiventris species, known commonly as the spined soldier bug. The adult spined soldier bug is light brown with subtle purple undertones and spiky shoulders that point outward.

The spined soldier bug is a predator that enjoys about 90 different types of insects, including beetles, corn borers, moths, armyworms, cabbage loopers, and various caterpillars. Spined soldier bugs feed on plant juice when insect pests aren’t around, but they cause very little plant damage.

You can find the spined soldier bug in most parts of North America, Mexico, and the Bahamas. Spined soldier bugs are attracted to solanaceous species, and they can take out various garden pests.

Two-Spotted Stink Bug

A closeup shot of a Perillus bioculatus appearing to have bright red and black markings on its back laying on a green leaf
Two-spotted stink bug, Perillus bioculatus.

Perillus bioculatus, known as the two-spotted stink bug, has two distinct patterns that are quite similar, featuring a keyhole shape in the center of the shield, often with reddish-orange markings. One is black and red, and the other is brown, black, and tan with multicolored legs. If you see them together, you might mistake them for different bugs!

They have the typical diet of caterpillars and beetles. They’re native to North America but can now be found in northern India and eastern Europe.

Frequently Asked Questions

What bugs are mistaken for stink bugs?

Insects like kissing bugs, boxelder bugs, and western conifer seed bugs are mistaken for species of stink bugs because they stink when you squish them! However, they have no relation to stink bugs.

Are stink bugs harmful?

Stink bugs don’t often bite and aren’t considered to be harmful, although you may find their odor to be offensive.

What is the difference between a stink bug and a shield bug?

There is no difference—they’re called stink bugs because of their smell and shield bugs because of their shape.

What purpose do stink bugs serve?

Predatory species of stink bugs clean up the caterpillars and beetle larvae that are harming your veggies. Pest stink bugs are mostly a nuisance for destroying crops, but wounded crops help feed other insects like ants and wasps.

Should I worry about stink bugs?

Stink bugs can’t cause structural damage, and only cause cosmetic damage. So, you really only need to worry if the bugs multiply faster than you can control them.

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