Types of Flies

I used to think a fly was a fly until one landed on my arm at a lake and left a welt. That was a deer fly, not the harmless one buzzing around my kitchen. The two looked nothing alike once I paid attention.

Flies are one of the largest insect groups on earth, with more than 150,000 known species. Some are familiar, like the housefly. Others are bright metallic bottle flies, blood-feeding mosquitoes, or long-legged giants. A few bite, a few carry disease, and others turn out to be useful.

Below you will find the main types of flies, what sets each one apart, and where they live. The charts group them by family, then by size, biting habits, and habitat. You can match a fly to its name in a few steps.

Types of flies and their names

All true flies belong to the order Diptera. The name means “two wings,” and that is the key trait. A fly has one pair of wings. Its hindwings have shrunk into tiny knobs called halteres, which help it balance in flight.

Scientists sort flies into families by body shape, mouthparts, and life cycle. A few families cover most of the flies you will meet. The table below lays out the main ones so you can place a fly before you name it.

FamilyScientific familyKey traitExamples
House & stable fliesMuscidaeDrab gray bodies; the classic indoor flyHousefly, stable fly
Blow & bottle fliesCalliphoridaeShiny metallic blue or greenBlue bottle, green bottle
Horse & deer fliesTabanidaeLarge, with painful biting mouthpartsHorse fly, deer fly, yellow fly
MosquitoesCulicidaeSlender, long legs; females feed on bloodCommon mosquito
Hover fliesSyrphidaeBee or wasp mimics that hover in placeFlower flies, drone fly
Crane fliesTipulidaeVery long legs; large but harmlessGiant crane fly
Fruit fliesDrosophilidae, TephritidaeTiny; drawn to fruit and cropsCommon fruit fly, medfly
Robber fliesAsilidaeBristly aerial predators of other insectsGiant robber fly

Within those families sit tens of thousands of species. The chart below lists common and notable flies, with the family each belongs to, its size and colors, and a feature that helps you tell it apart.

Common fly typeFamilySizeMain colorsDistinct featureWhere found
HouseflyMuscidaeSmallGray, blackThe common indoor pestHomes & farms
Fruit flyDrosophilidaeTinyTan, yellowDrawn to ripe fruitKitchens
Blow flyCalliphoridaeMediumMetallic blue/greenFeeds on decaying matterCarrion
Flesh flySarcophagidaeMediumGray, stripedLarvae feed on carrionGarbage areas
Horse flyTabanidaeLargeBrown, blackPainful biting mouthpartsNear livestock
Deer flyTabanidaeMediumYellow, blackColorful eyes; bites peopleWetlands
MosquitoCulicidaeSmallGray, brownFemales feed on bloodStanding water
Crane flyTipulidaeLargeBrownVery long legs; harmlessGardens & grass
Hover flySyrphidaeSmall–mediumYellow & blackBee mimic; hovers in airFlowers
Robber flyAsilidaeMedium–largeGray, blackCatches prey in flightOpen sunny areas
BotflyOestridaeMediumHairy brownParasitic larvaeMammals
Tsetse flyGlossinidaeMediumBrownSpreads sleeping sicknessAfrica
Black flySimuliidaeTinyBlackHump-backed biting flyRivers & streams
Sand flyPsychodidaeTinyPale brownCan spread leishmaniasisTropical regions
Drain flyPsychodidaeTinyGray, fuzzyBreeds in drainsBathrooms
Stable flyMuscidaeMediumGrayBiting housefly relativeFarms
Kissing flyRhiniidaeMediumMetallicOften mistaken for beesTropical habitats
March flyBibionidaeMediumBlackSwarms in springMeadows
Dance flyEmpididaeSmallBlack, grayCourtship “dance” flightWoodland edges
Bee flyBombyliidaeSmall–mediumHairy brownLong proboscis; bee-likeFlower gardens
Scorpion fly*Mecoptera (not a fly)MediumYellow-blackTail curls like a scorpionForest plants
Phorid flyPhoridaeTinyBrownRuns in a zigzagDecaying material
Eye gnatChloropidaeTinyBlackDrawn to eyes and fluidsHumid climates
Hessian flyCecidomyiidaeTinyDark grayWheat crop pestFarm fields
Gall midgeCecidomyiidaeTinyOrange, brownForms plant gallsShrubs & crops
Olive fruit flyTephritidaeSmallBrown, clear wingsOlive pestMediterranean
Mediterranean fruit flyTephritidaeSmallYellow-brownMajor fruit pestOrchards
Apple maggot flyTephritidaeSmallBlack, banded wingsInfests applesOrchards
Phantom crane flyPtychopteridaeMediumBlack & orangeLong, dangling legsWet habitats
Fungus gnatSciaridaeTinyBlackLives in moist soilHouseplants
MidgeChironomidaeTinyGrayMosquito-like but does not biteLakes & ponds
LovebugBibionidaeMediumBlack, red thoraxFlies in mating pairsSoutheast U.S.
Blue bottle flyCalliphoridaeMediumMetallic blueLoud, buzzing flightGarbage & carrion
Green bottle flyCalliphoridaeMediumMetallic greenUsed in maggot therapyDecaying matter
Yellow flyTabanidaeMediumYellow-orangePainful biteSwamps
Window flyScenopinidaeTinyBlackFound on windowsIndoors
Soldier flyStratiomyidaeMediumBlack, metallicWasp mimicCompost & flowers
Black soldier flyStratiomyidaeMediumBlackKey composting speciesOrganic waste
Kelp flyCoelopidaeSmallBrownLives on seaweedBeaches
Dung flyScathophagidaeSmallYellow-brownLives around manurePastures
*The scorpion fly and the “lantern fly” are not true flies. Scorpion flies belong to the order Mecoptera. The name “lanternfly” usually means a planthopper in the order Hemiptera, so the row above lists the phantom crane fly (Ptychopteridae), which is a real fly. True flies all sit in the order Diptera and have a single pair of wings.

Largest fly species

Most large flies live in warm regions and belong to a few heavy-bodied families. The biggest true fly is the mydas fly of Brazil, which can reach a body length of about 7 cm. Crane flies look even larger because of their long legs, though their bodies stay slim.

The table below ranks the largest flies by size. Keep in mind that leg span and body length tell different stories, so a crane fly can span a hand while weighing almost nothing.

SpeciesFamilySizeWhere found
Mydas fly (Gauromydas heros)MydidaeBody up to ~7 cmBrazil
Timber flyPantophthalmidaeBody up to ~8 cmTropical America
Giant crane flyTipulidaeLeg span up to ~10 cmNorth America, Asia
Robber fly (large species)AsilidaeUp to ~3 cmOpen sunny areas
Horse flyTabanidaeUp to ~2.5 cmWorldwide, near livestock

Smallest fly species

At the other end are the phorid flies, fungus gnats, and midges, many smaller than a sesame seed. The smallest known fly is a phorid, Euryplatea nanaknihali, at about 0.4 mm. Its larvae develop inside the heads of tiny ants.

Small flies are easy to overlook, but they matter. Fungus gnats swarm around houseplants, fruit flies appear near ripe produce, and midges rise in clouds over lakes at dusk. Most of them do not bite, even the ones that look like mosquitoes.

Biting flies and disease

This is the part that matters most for health. A small number of flies bite, and a few of those can carry disease. The risk depends on where you are. The same fly can be harmless in one region and a concern in another.

The table below sorts well-known flies by whether they bite and what health concern they raise. For most people, the everyday housefly is a nuisance rather than a danger, though it can still spread germs from waste to food.

FlyDoes it bite?Main health concern
MosquitoFemales biteCan spread malaria, dengue, Zika, and West Nile, depending on the region.
Tsetse flyBitesSpreads African sleeping sickness in parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
Sand flyBitesCan spread leishmaniasis in tropical and subtropical areas.
Black flyBitesSpreads river blindness in parts of Africa and Latin America.
Horse & deer flyBitesPainful bites; they rarely spread disease to people.
HouseflyDoes not biteCarries germs on its body and can contaminate food.
Crane flyDoes not biteHarmless. It does not bite, sting, or carry disease.

Helpful flies you might not expect

Not every fly is a pest. Flies are the second most important pollinators after bees. Hover flies do much of that work in gardens, and their larvae eat aphids. That makes them a quiet ally for anyone growing vegetables.

Other flies clean up after us. Black soldier fly larvae break down food waste and manure, and farmers now raise them as animal feed. Green bottle fly maggots are even used in medicine to clean dead tissue from wounds, a practice called maggot therapy.

Common flies around the home

A few flies turn up indoors more than any others. The housefly comes through open doors and breeds in waste. Fruit flies appear near ripe or fermenting fruit, while drain flies and fungus gnats breed in damp drains and potted soil.

Most home infestations trace back to moisture and food. Clear the breeding source and the flies fade within a week or two. A drain fly problem points to a slow or dirty drain, and a cloud of fungus gnats usually means a houseplant is being overwatered.

Types of flies by habitat

Where you are shapes the flies you see. Kitchens draw houseflies and fruit flies, farms draw biting stable flies, and wetlands fill with mosquitoes and midges. The table below pairs each habitat with the flies you are most likely to find there.

HabitatFlies you’ll find there
Homes & kitchensHousefly, fruit fly, drain fly, fungus gnat, phorid fly
Farms & livestockStable fly, horse fly, dung fly, deer fly
Water & wetlandsMosquito, midge, black fly, crane fly
Gardens & flowersHover fly, bee fly, soldier fly
Carrion & wasteBlow fly, blue bottle, green bottle, flesh fly, black soldier fly

FAQs

How many types of flies are there?

There are more than 150,000 known fly species in the order Diptera, and scientists keep finding more. Most fall into a handful of families you can learn to recognize.

What makes an insect a true fly?

A true fly has one pair of wings, with the hindwings shrunk into tiny balancing organs called halteres. Mosquitoes, midges, and gnats are all true flies, while scorpionflies and lanternflies are not.

What is the largest fly?

The mydas fly, Gauromydas heros, is the largest. Its body can reach about 7 cm, with a wingspan near 10 cm, and it lives in Brazil.

What is the smallest fly?

The smallest is a phorid fly, Euryplatea nanaknihali, at about 0.4 mm. That is smaller than a grain of salt.

Which flies bite people?

Several flies bite people: mosquitoes, horse flies, deer flies, black flies, sand flies, stable flies, and tsetse flies. With mosquitoes, only the females bite.

Do crane flies bite or sting?

No. Crane flies look like giant mosquitoes, but they do not bite, sting, or carry disease. The adults barely feed at all.

Are any flies helpful?

Yes. Hover flies pollinate plants, and their larvae eat aphids. Black soldier flies break down waste. Green bottle fly larvae are even used to clean wounds, a practice called maggot therapy.

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