Picture this: you’re relaxing at home on a perfectly quiet Florida evening, watching your favorite show, winding down for bed. Then, there’s a knock at the door. You answer, and it’s not a neighbor or DoorDash delivery; it’s a gator.
Sounds nuts, but lately, these stories keep popping up, and they’re hitting closer to our Englewood neighborhood for anyone’s comfort.

On May 5, 2026, just up I-75 in Tampa, a homeowner’s doorbell camera caught an alligator seemingly knocking at the front door. The footage went viral, and luckily, nobody opened up. The gator eventually wandered off, a little too close for comfort.

And the encounters don’t stop there. Down south in Ave Maria, Florida, Kayla Burress thought someone was breaking into her house late one night. She checked her porch and found two massive alligators violently fighting, the lanai screen completely wrecked, metal and mesh twisted everywhere. She’s warning neighbors now: be careful with your kids and pets. You never know what you might find outside.
According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), they consider any gator at least four feet long and threatening to people, pets, or property a nuisance. And it’s mating season, April through September, which means gators get more aggressive, and their fights can get brutal. Bigger ones will even eat the smaller ones; that’s actually a major cause of adult alligator deaths.
Wildlife officials say these gator run-ins aren’t rare when breeding season’s at its peak, so don’t let your guard down.
And, as always, it’s wise to check the door before answering, especially during alligator mating season.








