The best homemade weed killer: no poison (dries everything in 2 hours)

A homemade weed killer can damage weeds, but the claim “no poison (dries everything in 2 hours)” is misleading. Even natural ingredients can be harmful to plants, soil, or wildlife, and quick wilting doesn’t necessarily mean the weed is dead.

A common homemade recipe is:

Ingredients

  • 1 gallon (3.8 L) white vinegar (5% acetic acid)
  • 1 tablespoon liquid dish soap

Directions

  1. Mix the vinegar and dish soap.
  2. Spray directly onto weed leaves on a warm, dry, sunny day.
  3. Avoid spraying plants you want to keep, as this mixture is non-selective and can damage almost any plant it touches.

About adding salt:
Many recipes include salt, but it’s generally not recommended. Salt can remain in the soil and make it difficult for desirable plants to grow for a long time.

What to expect

  • Weeds may wilt within hours, especially in sunny weather.
  • Deep-rooted or perennial weeds often regrow because the roots survive, so repeated treatment or physical removal may be needed.

For long-term weed control, mulching, hand-pulling, hoeing, or targeted commercial herbicides (used according to the label) are often more effective, depending on where the weeds are growing.

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