The cheapest way to get rid of rodents and pests

Rebecca Rutt
by Lovemoney Staff Rebecca Rutt on 16 October 2012  |  Comments 24 comments

It's the time of year when unwanted pests start to venture inside, so how can you make sure they stay out?

The cheapest way to get rid of rodents and pests

As the cold weather sets in and an extra blanket gets put on the bed, many unwelcome visitors may begin to join you in your home.

Be it rats, mice, fleas or bed bugs, October is the most common month for these unwanted pests and rodents to start heading inside.

More than a quarter of us have also seen a rise in the number in the house in the past five years, according to research from LV=.

Now, even writing this I'm feeling a little squeamish and unfortunately our flat is not mice-proof. Last year we had several invading the place.

Although my first reaction was to hire an army of cats to come in and do the job, my housemates thought otherwise and we tried a variety of different methods to encourage the little beasts out of our home.

This was a costly experiment, and I still favour the cats idea, but while looking into how best to de-rodent our house, I found several cheap and free ways to get the task done.

Damage to your house

Along with being really annoying, pests can also be destructive. 21% of homes have been damaged by rodents or pests and it's cost a total of £500 million in call-outs to pest controllers to get the situation under control.

The most common forms of damage, which 94% of pest controllers see on a regular basis, are chewed cables, followed by damage to attic insulation, which is reported by 93%. Households also suffer due to pests eating clothes or carpets, gnawing pipes and ruining furniture.

Worryingly, 53% of the pest inspectors have seen cases where pests have caused structural damage to a house.

What can you do to get rid of them?

The most important thing is to act fast. The longer you leave the infestation, the worst the problem will get and they can spread at an alarmingly fast rate.

Before you call up the rat man (or woman), check your home insurance as you might already be covered. It’ll be in the small print. Some policies will cover you up to a certain limit and depending on the type of rodent. This should be listed in the policy.

Local council help

Every local council will have its own pest control branch and these vary in the types of services they provide. On the whole you should be covered for help with the following beasties: rats, mice, wasps, fleas, cockroaches, bedbugs, carpet beetles, pigeons and ants.

Now out of this list we’ve had ants, wasps and mice in our house, but as it’s a rented house our landlord (after a lot of persuasion) eventually sorted the problem out for us. If you’re not able to do this, the council should be able to help, but depending on where you live the services and prices will vary.

Contact the environmental health department and it’ll let you know what services it will provide. There will be a charge for using the council’s services, but this is typically a lot cheaper than paying for a private company to do the job – although get a few quotes before you go forward with anything.

For example, in my borough of Harringey it’s £113 for someone to treat a whole house for a mice infestation, or £31 for those who qualify for a specific list of means-tested benefits. But in Basingstoke, where my parents live, the local council will provide free rat removal services for those aged over 60 or in receipt of income support or housing benefit. Everything else you’ll need to go to a private company for.

DIY-treatments

If you’re not happy paying for a private company to come in, or you’d prefer to try to sort the problem out yourself first, there’s a lot of information available.

A word of warning, last year we at first bought some humane mouse traps to get rid of our little friends. These weren’t cheap and we spent one evening watching a mouse run around the traps with absolutely no interest in them whatsoever.

The Directgov website has a list of common pests and how to identify them, along with advice on how to rid your home of them.

When you’ve identified the pest, it’s then easier to control and eradicate them from your house. You can also do several pre-emptive things. For example, with mice and rats you need to make sure there aren’t any access points such as holes or gaps around wires, put covers on drains and keep your garden free of food debris.

Five methods for removing pests from your house

1) Remove moths from your home by placing moth balls made from sandalwood and cedar among your clothes. You can buy these at a local hardware store. They'll cost around £2 for 20.

2) A mixture of 50-50 water to vinegar should deter ants from entering your house. Spray the mixture across all surfaces the ants have been seen and repeat until they disappear. Lemon juice is supposed to work in the same way.

3) If you're ok with using mouse traps, put chocolate, not cheese, inside them. Apparently mice prefer the sweeter things in life and also have a taste for peanut butter.

4) A homemade fruit fly trap, made from a rotten piece of fruit placed in a large jar with a funnel at the top (made from a piece of paper) is a quick and cheap way to remove the pests from your house. Vinegar also works.

5) Pets can be a pain when it comes to fleas and they need regular treatments from the vet. Flea eggs can lay dormant for several months before hatching so it may take a while for you to notice the problem. Keeping surfaces clean and regularly washing bedding on a hot cycle should keep the problem at bay. A mixture of lemon juice and water, which you can lightly apply to your pet's skin, is also meant to be a good repellent.

If you have any good DIY tips for ridding your house of pests please leave them in the comment box below.

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Comments (24)

  • finnol49
    Love rating 22
    finnol49 said

    These days we have electronic rodent repellers. They either work by emitting a supersonic (to us) noise or by being plugged into the mains & using the property's electrical circuits to generate a frequency that is unpleasant or lethal to pests.

    We found that the best mouse traps are the old fashioned type, baited with chocolate (see above) or banana. On a lighter note, I saw two pest control vans outside our local HSBC business branch. We assume that they have mice or rats as they are located near the river.

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • muira
    Love rating 30
    muira said

    wonder if these lethal electronic repellers would work at the houses of parliament

    there are some real big pests in there,and handily located near a river

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • somean49
    Love rating 6
    somean49 said

    One thing the Direct.gov website does not mention as a deterrent for rats is thirst. We have had an infestation owing to a builder's carelessness. The local authority pest controller told me that rats need to drink three times their body weight each day (not surprising as they dribble urine constantly as they run) We stopped leaving water in the saucers of indoor plants, soaking dishes overnight and so on. Together with a clever device fitted into our waste pipe which allows things out but prevents their return, we seem to have got rid of the vermin. Fingers still crossed though.

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    That would be ULTRASONIC, not Supersonic. Unfortunately those devices are not effective on Jehovas Witnesses.

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • jonnie2thumbs
    Love rating 90
    jonnie2thumbs said

    HSBC? -, that will be rats then :P

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    It's bad enough when the mice have a litter of six, without giving them ultrasound to check the sex of the little ones... ;)

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • edwardmk2879
    Love rating 57
    edwardmk2879 said

    I recommend electronic bug zappers if you get a moth infestation. Mothballs do not cut it at all. Buy a bug sucker device and suck up religiously every night any moth you can find. Go room by room. Keep all the doors shut to stop the little buggers from spreading to other rooms. Watch out if you have wool carpets, as they will destroy areas under any low cupboards or furniture pieces that are never moved around.

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Grobbendonk
    Love rating 26
    Grobbendonk said

    We developed a rat problem in our area when the local authority reduced the rubbish collection to fortnightly. Tried all sorts of traps, and had varying levels of success with them. The best one, by a long shot, is an ancient design, and rather expensive, but keeps the area completely clear of rats. The only down-side is that sometimes she brings us the corpses as "presents" and sometimes causes collateral damage (birds)

    Report on 16 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • nickpike
    Love rating 270
    nickpike said

    Cornwall stopped subsidising, and now we have to employ private companies at full rate. Didn't get my rates reduced though.

    Why did all the councils who lost millions of pounds of our money by saving with Icelandic banks get away with this totally? I researched these banks for my savings and steered well clear.

    Report on 17 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • coloratura
    Love rating 61
    coloratura said

    I've spent years and years trying to get rid of my little pest and have tried all sorts of different deterents but he still keeps invading the house......guess that's men for you !!! (Just thought I'd bring a little levity into this rather itchy conversation).

    Report on 17 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • alexms
    Love rating 8
    alexms said

    After 'humanely' trapping mice etc, don't forget to kill them. If you put them in the garden they will be back in the house faster than you.

    Concerning chocolate etc, if it's too soft the mouse / rat will not set off the trap. Cheese has more consistency and needs a good pull, releasing the spring.

    You don't mention rats, but you can get rat-sized mouse traps, which work well, though I've never seen one for sale in the UK. Maybe they are too dangerous; it is designed to crush a rat.I bought mine in Congo. Try online?

    You don't mention cats. I've been told that cats are considered wild animals under UK law, while dogs, pigs, horses etc are officially farm animals. This means that a cat has the right to roam, but you do not have to report killing it as it has no formal commercial value.

    So it seems to me that a cat is allowed to come into your garden, but when it gets there you area allowed to kill it and not mention it to anyone. Does anyone know if this is correct?

    Report on 17 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • madz
    Love rating 2
    madz said

    We live in a well build up area of central London...the perfect breeding ground for mice!

    About a year ago we refitted our kitchen (ourselves), I found piles of mouse poo and a few corpses. When the walls were bare, I stuffed steel wool down all of the gaps and a bit of render on top to keep it in place. I also used that expanding foam stuff for larger gaps.

    I keep checking under the cupboards every few months for more signs of poo but so far so good!

    Report on 17 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    Councils which deposited with Icelandic banks are being paid out. I suppose they will have to find excuses not to spend that money on services they reduced......

    Report on 17 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • oldhenry
    Love rating 265
    oldhenry said

    You will find that there are all sorts of laws against cruelty that will catch you out.

    The RSPCA person told me I would be prosecuted for drowning a rat - as it is unnatural. I can shoot it with my .22 happily. If you catch vermin, including squirrels, in a cage like trap youhave to kill them somhow and drowning seemed pretty good to me. So I shoot them in the head. That is if my cat does get hold of them first but they get a quicker death from me.

    I also use rat poison in trays in sheds . Ths is effective but needs to be kept out of teh way of pets/children.

    Report on 17 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • browncoatemsy
    Love rating 5
    browncoatemsy said

    Cats are domestic pets and covered by animal cruelty & welfare legislation. It is an offence to trap, injure, or kill them. There is no need to inflict suffering on people's pets EVER.

    The main difference between cats and dogs is road accicents - you must report hitting a dog but it is not required to report hitting a cat.

    Report on 18 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • jennysue19
    Love rating 5
    jennysue19 said

    I sincerely hope oldhenry has an appropriate permission for whatever firearm he is using. Having seen the tragic results of people's pets being shot with air pistols and rifles which are not covered by legislation, I don't think he should be dispatching squirrels this way, rats OK.

    A few years ago, I had a dispute with a neighbour over the actions of one of my cats (sadly now both succumbed to sickness/old age) Malibu loved sunbathing on the tops of cars. Unfortunately he picked a new Mercedes convertible and left a few claw marks in the soft roof to say thank you when he left. Without checking with a solicitor, the owner put letters through my door threatening all kinds of things. Cats are regarded in this instance as being uncontrollable wild animals and the owner cannot be held liable. I do think it is wrong to run over a cat and simply drive away to leave the poor animal in agony and the owner wondering what has happened to it. However I feel sorry for cats kept indoors for the whole of their lives and never knowing the pleasures of a life free to come and go. I think it is healthier for the cat to give it outside access and I think the RSPB hugely exaggerate the numbers of birds caught by well-fed domestic moggies,

    Report on 20 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • rbgos
    Love rating 81
    rbgos said

    Adrian Wapcaplet: SIMPSON'S INDIVIDUAL EMPEROR STRINGETTES - JUST THE RIGHT LENGTH!'

    Mr. Simpson: For what?

    W: Uhmm...Tying up very small parcels, attatching notes to pigeons' legs, uh, destroying household pests...

    S: Destroying household pests?! How?

    W: Well, if they're bigger than a mouse, you can strangle them with it, and if they're smaller than, you flog them to death with it!

    (Monty Python - String)

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Drama Queen
    Love rating 0
    Drama Queen said

    The only thing that worked to keep out the rats from our house was an electronic deterrent. And we tried poisons, traps, getting in an expert and a cheap electonic deterrent none were very good. We have ended up with a Pest Bye (not cheap but they work) on each floor and at last a rat free house

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Quarket
    Love rating 25
    Quarket said

    I had an interesting experience with some rats in our garden. My wife is a keen bird watcher and put a tray underneath one of the bird feeders in a tree to catch all of the seed that the birds scatter around. I mounted one of these cheap intercom cameras from Aldi next to the feeder so that she could watch the birds feeding and the camera had an option to use its PIR device to detect movement making a bell call sound indoors and automatically switching the TV to the SCART that it was plugged into. We left it on that setting one night and after it got dark while watching TV, the bell went off and found that a pair of rats were going onto the tray and helping themselves to seed from the feeder. I bought a rat trap which I only used once because it really was dangerous and the spring was strong enough to brake your fingers and not easy to set up without falsely triggering it. After it became dark (to avoid birds being killed) I put the trap out on the tray with some cheese on it and waited for the bell to ring and decided to watch the execution live.

    What followed amazed us. The rats in the pitch dark sniffed the cheese on the trap and sniffed all of the metal parts of the trap where there was a high degree of tension. They then very carefully avoided the trap which was right underneath the bird feeder and continued to feed from the feeder. This went on for about 10 minutes and we just couldn't believe what was happening. My wife wouldn't watch at first because she didn't want to see them harmed but she started watching after about 5 minutes and it appeared that my carefully devised plan was in tatters.

    I wondered how I could trick them into the trap and thought that if I gave them a fright they might loose their composure and jump into the trap and then remembered that the intercom was two way allowing me to talk through the camera. So I pushed the talk button and shouted **** OFF RATTY!!! At which point both rats scarpered avoiding the trap of course.

    I have a new respect for rats and believe that they are probably a lot more intelligent than we think, but that doesn't increase their charm as far as I am concerned, so I invested in a .22 air rifle which did the trick after a lot of patience. There mistake was to start showing themselves during daylight. I found on both occasions that the pellet didn't finish them off by the way, I had to do that with my foot, so its not for the squeamish.

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Talent
    Love rating 77
    Talent said

    Neat, cheapo, washing up liquid gets rid of ants. It kills them instantly on contact and they will not cross a line of it. Make a note of their run, there is always a line of them going back and forth between the food source and the nest. You may have to watch for a while. Any odd ones running around are foragers looking for a food source. When you find the nest, soak the area with neat liquid. Squirt it into cracks in walls or holes into cavities. Pour it down between paving slabs where you see small mounds of earth they have excavated. A couple of pints should do the average house external groundwork.

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • marram
    Love rating 46
    marram said

    electricblue - you spelt Jehovah's Witnesses wrong! And a firm 'no, thank you'. is quite sufficient to get rid of them. Unlike rats and mice.

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • marram
    Love rating 46
    marram said

    Talent - we used to pour boiling water down the ants' nests, and failing that, bleach. Once the Queen has gone the rest disperse.

    I once got a huge wasps' nest in my shed. I was going to get rid of it, but time passed and I didn't get round to it. Then the wasps deserted the nest - and I had an amazing science lesson for my class of 7-year-olds!

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • ManyDollarz
    Love rating 0
    ManyDollarz said

    Cheapest way to get rid of rodents is... become an MP, and then, like good old Gordon Brown did, claim for £352 to call out Rentokil to deal with an infestation of mice at his Fife property, courtesy of the kind tax payers.

    Report on 23 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • keengreen60
    Love rating 3
    keengreen60 said

    Fruit flies are lovely! Please don't kill them, just usher them out of your house - they do no damage - except to what's in your fruit bowl maybe, but usually only if the skin/peel is already damaged. Fruit flies have an important role in being food for bats and insectivorous birds.

    If we want bird and bat populations to be damaged, reducing their food sources is one sure way of decreasing their numbers. Indescriminate insect 'zappers' on patios are also to blame for diminishing populations of insects, some regarded as beautiful.

    Report on 24 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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