This is another viral “home hack” that’s partly based on real behavior of ants—but it’s usually exaggerated.
What the claim means
People often say things like:
“Ants can’t stand salt / baking soda / vinegar / coffee, so sprinkle it to keep them away for good.”
The idea is that certain household substances either:
- disrupt ant scent trails, or
- create a barrier they avoid
Does salt actually keep ants away?
Not reliably.
- Ants may avoid a thick, dry layer of salt temporarily
- But they usually walk around it or re-route quickly
- It does not eliminate the colony
- Moisture can dissolve it and make it ineffective
So it’s more of a short-term deterrent, not a permanent solution.
What does work better (real pest control basics)
1. Clean scent trails
Ants follow pheromone trails. You can disrupt them with:
- Vinegar + water spray
- Soap water
2. Remove food sources
- Keep sugar, crumbs, and pet food sealed
- Clean sticky surfaces immediately
3. Seal entry points
- Cracks in walls, doors, windows
- Pipes and floor gaps
4. Use proper ant baits (most effective)
- Ants carry poisoned bait back to the nest
- This targets the colony, not just visible ants
Why salt “feels” like it works
- You see fewer ants temporarily
- The trail gets disrupted briefly
- It creates a psychological impression of success
But the colony remains active elsewhere.
Bottom line
Salt is not a “keep ants away for good” solution. At best, it’s a temporary disturbance, not a real control method.
If you want, I can show you a cheap, homemade ant bait recipe that actually wipes out colonies instead of just repelling them.
