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Using eucalyptus oil to repel household pests: what the experts say
BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM
You might already have eucalyptus oil at home, maybe for the diffuser or a bundle you hang in the shower. It also happens to be something pests avoid. The scent is sharp and herbal, nothing like what rodents or crawling insects encounter in the wild, and that unfamiliarity alone makes them steer clear. The catch is that the way most people first reach for it, soaking cotton balls and placing them near problem spots, doesn’t hold up. There’s a better method, and it’s not complicated.
The cotton ball mistake
It makes sense as a first instinct: soak a few cotton balls in eucalyptus oil, tuck them near where you’ve spotted activity, and let the scent work. The problem is it fades faster than you’d expect. Pest management expert Jim McHale warns that once the smell weakens, you’ve left rodents a ready-made pile of soft nesting material right where they were already comfortable. A diluted scent won’t move pests that have already settled in.
The right way to wield eucalyptus
McHale recommends an oil-based solution applied at the entry points and pathways pests use to get inside, not near where you’ve already spotted them. A five percent solution in those spots can deter rodents and crawling insects, which a 2014 study on eucalyptus as a natural repellent confirmed. You’re putting the scent where they’d have to cross it, before they’re already in.
Apply it every day. Without consistent reapplication, the scent fades and takes the deterrent effect with it. Walk the perimeter of your home first and seal any gaps or cracks you find, because the oil works best when there are fewer ways in to begin with.
A note on safety
Pure eucalyptus oil is toxic to pets and young children. Always dilute it before use, and keep treated surfaces out of reach until dry. If you have animals in the house, this is the part to pay attention to.
When to bring in a professional
Natural deterrents are most useful early, when a small problem is still containable. Once pests are well-established, eucalyptus won’t cut it. At that point, live trapping and exclusionary methods are more reliable options.
And regardless of where you are in the process, McHale’s broader advice holds: pest control works better as a combination than as a single fix. Removing food sources, sealing entry points, and eliminating nesting spots all matter alongside the deterrent. Eucalyptus is one useful piece of the solution, but it won’t resolve everything.
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