Help Identify a Spider

Two fanged spider shown up-close.Need help identifying a spider? If so, then take a look at our collection of spider pictures to see if it looks like yours.

You can also look through the comments below to see if any of the images match your spider.

Don’t see your spider? feel free to upload your photo here and we’ll attempt to id it, and if we can’t, then perhaps one of the visitors can after we post it.

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  1. Rich Serlo says:

    I live in Mount Pleasant PA and I am not sure what type of spider this is, can you help me identify it?

    PS This spider is about 4″ to 4 1/2″ across from side to side

    black spider

  2. cathy says:

    Hi, I found a large spider in my back yard in San Diego CA, I almost walked into it’s web..What kind of spider is this and is it harmful..

    orb weaver

  3. Diane Rowe says:

    I encountered a spider yesterday that was like nothing I’d seen before. About the size of a dime, it had a large abdomen which was pumpkin colored, and the legs were striped and somewhat fat. Normally I leave spiders alone, knowing they are beneficial to my small patio garden, but this guy was on the ceiling of the covered patio and running fast in my direction as I sat there. I touched the ceiling with the tip of my cane and this guy came down in a controlled fall really fast. I’m not usually scared by spiders, but this one had attitude. He literally RAN under a pot, and I admit that I sprayed the area with some Raid. I have not seen it since but can’t get it out of my mind, especially after seeing TV coverage today of the “Brown Widow”. Can you help identify, and should I be concerned?

  4. dave smith says:

    really beautiful -light green and yellow with black segments on legs. Brunswick county north Carolina about 100 yards into woods along intracoastal waterway. huge disorganized web spanned 15′ or more. spider tip of leg to tip of leg at least 2.5″ to 3″. dragged photo from desktop to here, but can’t see it?

    light green and yellow spider

  5. Chelsea says:

    I saw a spider today spinning a web on my front porch. It has the body shape of a black widow, but it is brown. The abdomen has a black spot with a yellow ring around the black spot on the underside. No other marking or patterns. Just one black spot with bright yellow ring around it. The spider was about the size of a nickel.

    3 spiders

  6. psetoman says:

    sorry for double posting here is another picture if the first one isn’t good enough
    on one forum they told me its orb weaver but i don’t think so.

    harry spider

    i’m keeping him in plastic cd box and i’m afraid to take him out :(
    btw i’m from europe

  7. Christine Velazquez says:

    this spider has made a home in the handle of our family sea doo. It has a large web and it is about the size of a quarter. I have been looking on line to help identify it and no luck so I am hoping you can help. I live in Norwalk California.
    Thanks.

    brown spider

  8. Jen says:

    Lyle,

    The picture you sent in appears to be a black Trap-Door Spider.

    The bite of the Trap-Door Spider is of low risk (non toxic) to humans. It is a non-aggressive spider – usually timid but may stand up and present it’s fangs if harassed. Rarely bites – but if so it can be painful.

    You said that the spider you found reared up on his hind legs, so this sounds like it defiantly may be it.

    Hope this helps!

    Jen

  9. Jen says:

    Hi Christa,

    The picture of the spider you sent looks like a Hobo Spider to me.

    Although the bite of the hobo spider is initially painless, the bite can be serious. After 24 hours, the bite develops into a blister and after 24-36 hours, the blister breaks open, leaving an open, oozing ulceration.

    Typically when the venom is injected, the victim will experience an immediate redness, which develops around the bite. The most common reported symptom is severe headache.

    Other symptoms can include nausea, weakness, fatigue, temporary memory loss and vision impairment. In any case, first aid and medical attention should be sought, if bitten, as and when any adverse health effects are observed.

    Hope this helps!

  10. Diana Beckett says:

    This morning I found a spider about 3″ in diameter. It had a black head with bright yellow spots on the head and a brown rear. The legs were bright blue, about 2″ long. Can someone tell me what kind of spider this is? I kept spraying it but it wouldn’t die, so I took a push broom to knock it off the top of the garage door, then took the back of the broom and had to hit it about 1/2 dozen times to kill it.

    Much thanks,
    Di

  11. kid says:

    dark-orange and black straps on legs,black body,very dark orange line on butt,4 small eyes,5-7 in. long found in trash can inside house stood still didn’t have camera.

    sorry,thanks

  12. Dennis says:

    My daughter lives in Atlanta on a 16 acre wooded lot and appreciates seeing the many different plants, animals, and insects that inhabit or visit her homesite. Her home has an architectural feature called a loggia that extends about 60 feet off the kitchen area. She can sit comfortably under the loggia year round, rain or shine, cold or hot, by using heaters and fans, and can view the grounds to see hawks, owls, deer, and many species of birds. The home is on the Chattahoochee River so this adds an additional feature of diversity. She recently noticed a spider who stretches a new web every night between the stucco wall and a ceiling beam, and would like to know the genus and species so she can learn more about him. Many thanks.

  13. laurie says:

    #1305 Seriously spread the word, this is only a harmless garden spider. seriously, mostly Orange with psychedelic white markings on thorax, stripped legs and a orb web, is a common garden spider. Oh and though yours is gray#1320, yours is also a garden spider in colors to blend with your area.

  14. laurie says:

    #1306 Looks like a type of camel spider…….might try looking up cave spider and scorpion spider too. All aggressive though so watch out.

  15. laurie says:

    #1113 try looking up “daddy long leg” in the images section, see if these pictures match what your seeing. SOme of the versions of this kind of harmless spider are very wierd looking.

  16. laurie says:

    I am one of those wierd spider people. I can answer more of you than I have found answers from here. #72 no worries that IS NOT a brown recluse. A brown recluse has a dark violin shape on its head, to where the base of the violin shape covers the eye area and then progresses to the smaller part of the violin and the handle of the violin shape becomes a line that runs the remainder of the length of the spiders head. the thorax or body of a brown recluse is very plain and not very hairy at all. #87 please watch out for those brown widows!

    Apparently they are less aggressive (I used to live in SOCAL) but VERY prolific, which means they bread like mad and you have a huge problem before you even realize you need to watch out for that!! #95 looks like a fat garden spider but a better picture might tell a different story.#77 harmless version of a yellow garden spider that we have here in the states. #73 Also another harmless garden spider (lots of those in the USA and outside in a lot of fascinating patterns, but the color and stripes as well as the size (large for most areas of the states)range right about the quarter size! #1 Looks like a version of a jumping spider, you can tell because the two eyes in front are larger for better depth preservation and the rear legs are also slightly larger. #67 When I lived in SOCAL I wondered about that one too.

    I think its just a different version of the more norther garden spider, looks a lot like ours just more red. Those hairs on its legs look a lot like they are meant to irritate though(much like a tarantula which also live in Cali), so I don’t suggest picking it up. #69 I know yours looks sinister and it might be in some rare cases, but I have looked that one up before and came up with a fairly positive match to “brown house spider” Apparently non-aggressive, but slightly venomous, meaning MIGHT make you sick if you were unhealthy, very young, or old. Hope this helps and puts peoples minds at ease

  17. nicole d says:

    i was bite by a spider a couple of years ago and want to know if anybody might be able to tell me what kind of spider it could be. i got bit when i was sitting on my couch, i guess it came up from between the cushions. it started out with two black puncture wounds and it felt like a cigarette burn, then the area swelled up to the size of a quarter and was rock hard and very painful. it eventually got to the point to where it was the size of a grapefruit and had a rock hard center the size of a baseball, it was really really painful and i could barely sit.

    i could not afford medical help so i had my friend try to squeeze the poison and pus so the swelling would go down which left a quarter size hole! i treated it the best i could. you can now feel an indention where i was bit since my muscle and tissue never heeled completely. can anyone please tell me what kind of spider could have done this? i looked everywhere after i was bit and could not find anything!

  18. Merrill says:

    Hi. I live in SOUTHEAST FLORIDA.

    HUGE (at least size of a quarter, maybe silver dollar)

    REDDISH BROWN

    Makes web. I saw a silk strand that was about 20 feet high across my yard that attached itself between 2 trees (1 palm tree, the other is like a ficus bush – same leaves – but a huge tree – the silk strands actually go onto my house, down to a fence, and back again.

    This is the LARGEST web I’ve ever seen, and the largest spider I’ve ever seen here.

    Spider was not hairy, not really shiny either. i only see it at night. It has GIRTH, like it is heavy, fat, stout, whatever.

    I cannot get a picture because I am immobilized with fear.

    PLEASE assist. Serious case of arachnophobia.

    THANK YOU!

  19. Mandie says:

    #1316 and 1318…. I live in Arkansas and these are common house spiders down here but they are what we call wolf spiders. They can be anywhere from a half an inch to over 2 inches and are hairy. They are a good spider to have around because they eat the really dangerous spiders like the brown recluse. They are venomous but only cause a local reaction (unless allergic) each person’s reaction is different but like any spider bite….it will cause redness and discomfort. If you have this type of spider and would like to rid your home of them. We use Ortho Max Home Defense and you can purchase it at your local walmart. I hope that this helps. I would suggest that if you have small children that you do rid your home. They may have a worse reaction to the bite if bitten.

  20. Ryan says:

    I was bit by a brown recluse 13 years ago, and have had severe arachnophobia since. I’ve been working hard to deal with it, and can normally handle a run in or 2, but after finding 4 of these spiders in 2 days, I will not go to sleep…. I’m just too scared!

    I even know its not a poisonous spider, but I have lived here 12 years, and never seen such a huge spider- and to find 4 of them in 48 hours is just too much for me!

    can anyone help me identify it?

    It is probably 1.5-2″ in diameter- maybe a hair more. I’ve found them in 4 different rooms including 2 bathrooms, a hall, and the living room. they do not have webs and have all been found on the floor, suggesting they are all hunter spiders. They all appear to be the same type.

    Killing them is difficult- a book or box won’t kill them- instead they curl up “dead” for a few moments and then run away. To kill them I’ve had to step on them and rub my foot around, crunching and crushing. I put a dead one in a cup and it looks to be a hard outer shell- no hair even on the legs. Because of the “crushing” required to kill them, its tough to get a good pic of them, but I’m sending in what I have.

    I am located in Cincinnati, OH

    tan spider

  21. Cynthia McAlex says:

    I’ve been seeing a spider in my back yard that has black and whit furry stripped legs and also has a red spot on its back. Is it poisonous? I live in Carpinteria, CA (near Santa Barbara). Thx, Cynthia

  22. Nealy says:

    Ok I used to live in a house in Fl that had spiders running everywhere. I would cover my face up at night b/c they were always out and HUGE. My dad said they were wolf spiders and I’ve been freaked out by them ever since. So I now live in TX and have been in this house for 2 years and have never seen any spiders until this week. I have a 4 mo old son and the first spider was in his room. It looked like he had been stepped on b/c it was curled up and didn’t run off when I got close to it. Well I just found another one. I was walking out of my bathroom and my pant leg caught it and moved it across the floor. I thought it was a piece of dog food but it was another spider. Same kind but smaller. So I need to know what kind of spider this is b/c it reminds me of the Wolf Spiders in Fl and I hate being surprised by spiders. Thanks.

    wolf spider

  23. Florence says:

    The red picture is the initial reaction to the bite. I didn’t know if it was a bite at first as I don’t remember the bite. However, the same night I noticed the red area I saw a small hairy brown spider in my room. Immediately when I noticed the red area I took this first picture. It was slightly tender to very firm pressure and HOT to the touch.

    That was last Thursday night. By Monday the area increased to the size of black outlined area in the 2nd photo. It became more red, more swollen, inflamed and very HOT to the touch! I’m a nurse and had 4 more nurses I work with look at it and at that point it looked like it could have been a cellulite.

    I went to the MD and they were concerned. They had me outline it and started me on low dose oral antibiotics.

    By yesterday (Wednesday), the area had turned to the color in the 2nd photo and has become increasingly PAINFUL!!! I have some intermittent shooting pains up and down my leg. It is very painful to touch and you can see what now looks very clearly like a spider bite (two little open holes) in the center. The area isn’t really hot any more but BLANCHES and feels soft/boggy and is warm to the touch (and of course painful)!

    WHAT COULD HAVE BIT ME???

    I live in Minnesota but recently traveled to Puerto Rico for 1-week 3-weeks ago. We kept our luggage on the floor of our room and perhaps something crawled in and we accidentally brought it home with us?

    The spider I saw (and killed) in my room the night I noticed the bite was a spider I have never seen in my home before.

    DESCRIPTION OF THE SPIDER:
    It was small, dark brown (could have been black but seemed like a very dark brown) and FURRY. I don’t remember any patterns on it at all. It’s legs were not as skinny and long as the spider pictures it slightly resembles but the closest to what it was looks similar to photos/postings# 28 and #183.

    ANY THOUGHTS? INFORMATION? SUGGESTIONS? ETC.??? (Besides go to the doctor which I am doing today!!!)

    THANK you SO much for your time!!!

    ~Florence

    bite on leg

  24. Paula says:

    Rachel (#27) That looks an awful lot like a rabid wolf spider. I live in CT and they’re in my house all the time. They are very fast-moving, but being a catch-and-re leaser, I make the effort to keep up. I have found one that was bigger than the one you posted outside in stacks of cardboard.

    stripe spider

    I live in southeastern CT and these beauties like to build extravagant webs across doorways and between support columns holding up the porch roof. I found this one today in a web that it built kiddie-corner between a bush and the driveway. The web actually extended about 3 feet into the driveway. The abdomen is about 1/2 in. long and the markings are reddish-brown with a few white specks, and striped legs.

  25. Lyle Willits says:

    Hello, I live in Decatur, Alabama and crossed paths with this bad boy on my garage floor tonight. It had been raining for days, so he/she may be looking for a mate or food. Not sure what kind of spider, looks like some kind of trap door or funnel web spider. Head and legs are glossy black and abdomen is kinda grayish. He’s pretty aggressive with long fangs as he will hinge up on his rears if provoked. any guesses?

    trap door spider

  26. Christa says:

    There were several of these spiders in a cabin I was in while staying in Cloud croft, New Mexico. I didn’t see any webs. They were mostly on the walls and ceilings in the bathroom. The picture I am sending was one that trapped himself in a container under a bathroom sink. I would like to know what it is and if it is dangerous.
    Thanks!
    Christa

    tan spider

  27. Joyce Young says:

    My husband found a spider on my hibiscus tree, that we have sitting outside for the season. This spider is about a quarter in size, has a black back with yellow marking on the back. It’ legs close to the body are orange, but close to the ends, they become striped and are either yellow and black stripes or a off white with black stripes. We live in the state of Iowa. We have never seen a spider like this before can anyone help to identify it?

  28. Ashley Pruitt says:

    i don’t have a bite but i caught a spider yesterday and its black with gold rings around the legs and a strip of gold on its head and its fuzzy but it would fight in the palm of my hand and it has fangs but i don’t think its a tarantula but probably related so any one

  29. Carrie says:

    My mother lives in northern Maine (roughly 3 hours south of the Canadian border) and these spiders are all over! They have really intricate, huge webs under the eves of her house. There’s probably a dozen outside her kitchen window, ranging from much smaller than a dime to almost the size of a cherry tomato with legs. All of them have the creepy smiley face on their back. The one in the picture had a body about the size of a thumb nail, not including her legs.

    I’m just curious what they are and if they are poisonous. I’ve googled like crazy and found nothing even close!

    orb weaver

  30. David says:

    Hello, I found this spider in mid-Michigan. I’ve never seen one before but I found this crawling up the side of my home late at night. I’ve included a picture. It appears to be carrying an egg sack unless I’m mistaken. It’s a whitish clear color on the legs with red stripes, couldn’t see the abdomen due to the egg sack. Thanks for any information, I’ve lived in Michigan my whole life and never seen this before.

    -David

    yellow spider

  31. Kevin says:

    This is on my back porch tonight. I live in Chesapeake, VA
    Should I kill it?
    Taken on two different cameras and the date is off on the one
    But this is aggressive as it starts down towards me each time I went out to take pics
    THANK YOU

    brown and black spider

  32. Rusty says:

    i felt somthing touching my arm while sitting in a chair watching the tv, got up and turned on the light and saw it was a spider so i put it in a jar, snapped some pics then put it in my fish tank where my fiddler crab ended up with it. when he grabbed it with his claws and squished the abdomen i think eggs came out, but what ever he and the other fish had a nice snack. just wondering what kind of spider it was and do i need to be concerned.

    i live in watertown, sd. thanks

    brown spider

  33. Deana says:

    Can you please tell me what kind of spider this is?!?! I am deathly afraid of spiders and i have never in my life seen one this big!! Its looks like a dark brownish almost black color…n i think it has a little dark reddish orange on it but its hard for me to get close to it. If u need a better picture i will take another. I had to get this 1 off my chat site i posted it on n i also have another one ill be sending also. I checked out your site from my phone since i don’t have a computer an wished i could of commented on it…i had a hard time looking at thee pictures and reading

    black spider

  34. Jen says:

    Hi,

    I live in Fort Collins, CO and I’ve seen these spiders all over inside my house. This one is in the window. Can you please tell me what it is and if it is harmful? I have an 8 month old son, so I am concerned.

    Thank you!

    Jen

    big black spider

  35. Angel Fitzwilliams says:

    Can you please identify the spider in this picture. I live in Northwest Florida. I first saw this spider yesterday morning in a web is had woven spanning from the antennae of a vehicle to the opposite side of the hood, in a triangular shape, vertically. It stayed in the web all day yesterday, and this morning it still remains in the same spot. I have small children and have never see a spider this big in our hard. The body alone is about 3/4 inches. It may be harmless, but it is scarey looking, and I don’t want to take any chances of one of my children being bitten, if it is harmful. How long do they stay in one spot.
    Thanks,
    Angel

    Two Spiders

  36. Eric says:

    This spider is one of many that start showing up in my house in the early fall, they all look the same just some are bigger than others. This is a smaller one. Please help

    Thanks!

  37. sheryl says:

    this spider has been in my back garden in NY City (near Central Park) for most of the summer. It started out quite slim but now has really fattened up. It has a large circular web and has wrapped up two pin oak leaves with silk and hides between the leaves when disturbed. It is black with yellow markings on both the back and abdomen, and bands of black and yellow on the legs. Sorry about the poor picture quality. Does anyone know what it might be?

    black and yellow spider

  38. Emily says:

    Hi,

    I was brushing my teeth before bed and when i looked in the sink, I saw a strange spider on the counter. It was about an inch in length, with red bumpy legs, a whitish pearl like body, and a shiny black head. I can’t find what it is anywhere. We’ve also found A LOT of inch long all brown skinny spiders. NO WEBS?!

    i’d REALLY like to know what they are. any info.
    please help.

    i live in Lafayette, Indiana. in a new-ish house. maybe 10 years old.

  39. Samantha says:

    I found the same kind of spider as Ricky in number 67 I’m really interested in what kind of spider it is. I didn’t happen to get a pic though because I’m very scared of them. I wanted to know if i need to worry or if its just me being a scardie cat. haha.

    -Thanks,
    Samantha

  40. Sandra L Ross says:

    We have a statue of a fox on our front porch, between its (the fox) front legs is a funnel type web. I saw the spider out today. It is black with a white spot on the top of its abdomen. I live in Akron OH. Can you help me figure out what kind of spider this is?

    Sandra L Ross
    sandraross58 [at] gmail.com

    Thanks

  41. Carole says:

    Hi,

    My name is Carole Barth. I have never seen the awesome looking spider before. Can you I.D. it for me.

    Thank You,
    Carole

    strange spider

  42. Mystina says:

    Hello~

    I didn’t know the best place to find this spider (or find out if it is actually a spider) so I am sending it to you. It was found in a bathroom in Taiwan. It jumped from out from a bath towel and was about 3 inches long.

    Thanks so much for any help you can provide.

    black spider

    Mystina Zummach

  43. Shyann says:

    I just moved to Oregon from Georgia and have found that i have a visitor every evening when the sun starts to go down, i never see it during the day in its web which is a circular wheel web that is about a foot and a half off the ground outside my back door.

    I am allergic to a lot of insects and i was hoping someone could tell me if this spider is dangerous or not….if it is not i will obviously leave it alone because spiders are good for the environment but if it is dangerous then i NEED to get rid of it.

    The picture is of its underside because i am not bold enough to get close enough to it to get a picture of the top side not to mention it was only about 3 inches away from the wall.

    PLEASE HELP!!!

    yellow spider

    Thanks

  44. sunday says:

    we live on the boarder of california and oregon, near the coast. we are sorry to say that we killed a huge spider last week, that no one we have talked to, can identify. the spider was in our house, and fits the criteria of a tarantula…8 brown hairy legs, body was two parted, had no hair on it, grayish/brownish/slight greenish? the legs extended about the size of a wide mouth pint jar. it didn’t try to run, with screaming and the swings of a shoe coming at it. i have lived here 30 years and have never seen any spider like this. we have been to Aruba in the past year, and had a Belize resident visit us. so, we think there may be the chance it came in from one of those countries. the killing of it was reactionary…not necessary…any ideas on who this might be?

  45. Kathie says:

    I keep finding a type of spider outside my townhouse that is larger then one Ive ever seen (about 2″ long counting the legs) Its solid brown (best I can tell) the body is more long then round, and the center of the back is raised up into sort of a point. They build very strong webs, and when I knock them down, they’re back the next day. They’ve also covered my bushes with a web over the top of them. Do they bite, will they try to come into my house?

  46. Lorena Reedy says:

    misty #1291 your could be a Trap-Door Spider…low risk – non-aggressive

    Venom toxicity – the bite of the Trap-Door Spider is of low risk (non toxic) to humans. It is a non-aggressive spider – usually timid but may stand up and present it’s fangs if harassed. Rarely bites – but if so it can be painful.
    ——————————————————————————–
    Spider Identification – an adult is about 1 and 1/2 inches in body length – brown to dark brown in color – heavily covered with fine hairs. The male has distinct boxing glove-shaped palps, that is, the two “sensory feelers” at front of its head.
    ——————————————————————————–
    Habitat – this spider is a ground dweller, with a burrow retreat lined with silk of up to 10 inches in depth and around 1 inch in width – prefers nesting in drier exposed locations – often has a wafer-like lid on the burrow entrance. Trap-Door Spiders are commonly found in the drier open ground areas around the home.

    Hope this helps :)

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