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Testing: 8 Odd Ways to Get Rid of Ants

Filed Under: Know-How

The summer months can often mean an influx of unwelcome guests. No, we're not talking about visiting relatives...we're talking about ants. And if you're not into chemical sprays (which rarely seem to work anyway), it might be time to try a homemade approach. Here are 8 ways to get rid of ants using common items available right in your cupboards.

get-rid-of-antsDerrick Coetzee, flickr


In my old apartment, I lived below a frat guy who never had time to clean his place. I didn't really discover this until I had to ask him for a flashlight one day. When he opened his door, an empty bag of potato chips rolled across the floor like a tumbleweed. He was living in a wild west of his own bachelorhood.

The big problem came when he moved out. The ants that had been feeding in his apartment, now without a food source, started to crawl in through the odd crack in the ceiling, the tops of the windows...really anywhere they could. So, I had an ant problem. Chemical sprays seemed to work for a little while, but were a temporary fix. It would kill the immediate invasion of ants, but not the second and third fronts. I also didn't like the idea of my house carrying the scent of eu de Raid (or the idea of my pets or guests breathing in the fumes).

I kept a list of the different natural methods I used to get rid of ants, all culled from internet message boards and advice-giving friends. Here's what worked...and what didn't:

- Mint leaves. Did you know that an ant can carry up to 50 times its own weight? Oh yeah, they can totally carry crushed mint leaves too. The thinking here is that the ants object to the mint's scent compounds...but maybe mine wanted to make mojitos in their little ant colony? I don't know.
- Cayenne pepper. The capsaicin in cayenne pepper is an irritant to ants, making them stay away. So, I sprinkled cayenne pepper around a particularly active spot near the floorboards. This worked for a day, but then Roscoe (my cat) tried to "clean up" the pepper. I had to stop this little experiment.
- Baby powder. The cornstarch in baby powder (I generally don't buy the kind that contain talc) is another irritant to ants. Like the cayenne pepper, I sprinkled it around a particularly active area and waited. The ants did appear to go away, but at least two guests had thought I had spilled flour and tried to helpfully sweep it up.
- Cornmeal. This is going to sound a bit gruesome: Cornmeal makes ants explode. They take the grains home, eat them and then presumably drink some water. The grains expand inside the ant, and then boom, tiny fireworks. Did I see this happen? No. There was remarkably less cornmeal by the end of the first day, but the ants kept returning to bring home more cornmeal. I had effectively made an ant feeding trough. Forget this idea.
- Cinnamon. The ants walked around any area that had been dusted with cinnamon, but didn't avoid the area entirely. (My house did smell lovely, though.) Many people swear by this one, so I'm wondering if they're using a really strong, fresh batch of ground cinnamon. But for me, no dice.
- Bay leaves. Like the issue I ran into with cinnamon, the ants walked around any area that had a crushed bay leaf near it, but ultimately did not avoid the area entirely. Again, I'm wondering if fresh bay leaves would be more effective (since they do smell stronger, and ants allegedly hate their scent) than dried.
- Vodka. A 3-to-1 ratio of vodka to water, poured into a spray bottle, was recommended to me by a friend. I sprayed this all over the kitchen. While it did kill the ants, the kitchen also smelled of vodka, giving guests the wrong impression.
- Dish liquid and water mix. This is, hands-down, the most effective way to get rid of ants. I used about two tablespoons' worth diluted in a pint of water. Transfer the solution into a spray bottle. Spritz near windows, doors and cracks, but don't wipe it away. This apparently destroys the scent trail that alerts more ants to come on down. Then, spray any roaming ants with this solution to, well, kill them (and okay, then wipe the ants away). It works surprisingly fast.

Want more tips for getting rid of household pests? Check out...
The Daily Fix: Get Rid of Aphids Naturally
The Daily Fix: Get Rid of Fruit Flies
Mosquito Prevention: The 10 Most Bizarre Tips

Have an outdoor ant problem? Watch this video on how to use citrus oil to take back your garden...



  • girlturtle

    i need to know of a way to get rid of ants, but not hurt my bee hives... any suggestions?

    Reply
  • FuNkeE

    Soap and water, or Vinegar and water. Either works great, BUT, both are short term solutions.
    The vinegar can actually be used as a cleaning agent as well.
    At least you won't have the smell of chemicals, AND, use it enough, and the ants will eventually move elsewhere.
    (It took me two months of every other day spraying in my kitchen before they never came back.)

    Reply
  • Pink

    WD40 works great can even spray on food counter but just leave overnight and clean throughly in the
    morning

    Reply
  • enuj

    if you can find their hill, pour a few pots of boiling water down the hole. it's mean but effective.

    Reply
  • Lillie

    I have used liquid Tide and poured it into the ant mound an it kills them dead!

    Reply
  • edgar cayce

    boric acid; very cheap; works 100%

    Reply
  • T-Tat

    The best and cleanest way to rid your home of ants is Windex. Spray it and it will not only kill the ants, but they will not come back.

    Reply
  • supra

    Eucalyptus oil spray works on the spot. When you spray it, the ants writhe and die immediately, and it confuses the scent trail they lay down into your home

    Reply
  • CarlyQ

    Woke up one morning to find a highway of ants from my kitchen window, across the floor, up the countertops and into my kitchen cupboard where they were feasting on the residue of my honey jar (my home is spotless - how they found this overnight is beyond me).

    I threw the jar outside, lid popped off, and mopped up the hundreds of ants in my house.

    Next day: the jar was FULL of ants. Thousands of them. Dead, of course. Best of all, I inadvertently wiped out the entire colony by giving them a sticky feast they couldn't get enough of.

    Had to deal with the wasps then, though.

    Reply
  • Steve

    Borax is used by professionals to kill ants, roaches, and other crawling insects. Use clothes detergent containing borax and you will kill the entire colony. It gets on their feet and they carry it back home to the rest of the little creatures. It makes them sleepy and they stop eating and die.

    Reply
  • Milord

    Windex sprayed along ant paths will destroy the scent trail, kill the ants it hits and also clean those dirty fingerprints you left while squashing them with your thumb!
    Untreated diatomaceous earth (NOT the kind used in pool filters) is a pet-freindly contact killer for ants and other pests.

    Reply
  • Karen

    Prevention helps: keep food in sealed containers and sit the cats food in a larger dish of water. Ants will not cross the water to get to the food.

    Reply
  • Shirley

    I used sliced cucumbers. We had ant hills and some were in the basket we have geraniums in. I sliced up the cucumber and put it around and in 2 hrs they were GONE!!

    Reply
  • richard Byrne

    I pour a cup of gas down the ant hole, outdoors of course, it works great.

    Reply
  • Tom

    I spray them with a solution of lysol and water which I also use to clean my kitchen. Kills the ants and they don't go near that spot again!

    Reply
  • Veronica

    Can't see fresh bay working either. The ants and aphids love hanging out in my pot of it all day long. :(

    Reply
  • 76 Comments / 4 Pages
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