What can I use to keep dogs out of my yard? Here’s What to Do Next

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To keep dogs off your lawn, try spraying a mixture of water and baking soda on your lawn, which will neutralize the smell of dog urine so that dogs are less likely to come back. You can also spray your lawn with vinegar to keep dogs away, but use it sparingly since it might damage your plants. Also, try planting some lavender or prickly shrubbery around the perimeter of your lawn to act as a natural dog repellent. For more tips from our Veterinary co-author, like how to work with your neighbor to keep their dog off your lawn, scroll down!

  • Tesha Miller “I just read this article so I havent tried it, but I like the idea of using vinegar or baking soda. They are cheap and natural. I will definitely be trying them, since our neighbors completely ignore the fact that we love and take care of our yard and we dont want their dogs to pee in it! “…” more
  • Dog Repellent Sprays

    There are numerous dog repellent sprays on the market. Many are meant to protect humans from dog attacks, but others are suited for yards and contain scents that dogs dont like. These dog repellents come in both granule and spray forms.

    Critter Ridder is an organic dog repellent put out by the maker of Havahart traps (humane traps used to relocate live animals). Available in both granules and sprays, Critter Ridder works as a dog repellent because it gives off a smell of black pepper, which canines find offensive. Havahart also offers Cat & Dog Granular Animal Repellent. One major selling point of this product is that it is supposed to be long-lasting (up to 60 days).

    Liquid Fence works on a different principle from many other dog repellents. It depends on the fact that dogs seek out areas with familiar smells to do their business. Liquid Fence masks those smells. So instead of repulsing dogs with offensive odors, this product removes the welcoming odors and helps to keep dogs from peeing and pooping in your yard. Be sure to get the Liquid Fence specially formulated for dogs.

    Certain types of fertilizers can actually attract dogs, especially ones that contain bone meal, fish, and blood. The smells of these products can bring in curious canines who might be interested in eating the fertilizer.

    To avoid unintentionally drawing dogs to your lawn, try switching to a plant-based fertilizer. Its smells shouldnt be as appealing to canines.

    Why You Want to Keep Dogs Off Your Lawn

    You love patting your neighborhood dog on the head as it strolls by. Regardless, you still might want to keep it off your lawn. As precious as our furry best friends are, they can still cause a great deal of damage to the grass you work hard to maintain.

    Perhaps the most common reason you’ll want to repel dogs is to keep your front lawn free of poop.

    Dog piles in your front yard are unattractive, smelly, and ultimately bad for the grass. Dog poop contains high nitrogen levels, which can leave fertilizer-like burns on the lawn. Dog urine is similar in its high nitrogen content. Dogs repeatedly mark their territory in the same spot, which causes severe burns to specific areas of your yard.

    Dog waste can cause more than just damage to the eye – especially if you have children or pets of your own exploring the yard.

    Canine feces contain parasites and harmful bacteria while also attracting disease-carrying flies. According to WSU’s Water and Natural Resources Program, dog feces can contain parasites like salmonella, campylobacter, giardia, roundworms, coccidia, and parvovirus.

    Keeping dogs from pooping on your lawn is critical to the health and safety of your guests, family, and turf.

    Digging is an instinctual canine behavior dating back to ancient wolves. Dogs dig to pursue a smell, bury toys, or create a refreshing bed in the dirt. Dogs also kick up grass after pottying to mark their territory.

    These behaviors are as innate to dogs as they are harmful to grass, so you’re justified in your desire to keep your yard dog-free.

    What can I use to keep dogs out of my yard?

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  • Now that you understand why it’s important to keep dogs off your lawn, we’ll go over some commercial and DIY products to do the trick. We’ll also list a few canine-repellent plants you can add to your garden to double down on reinforcement.

    Nature’s MACE is an animal repellent brand accredited by the Better Business Bureau.

    The company sells Dog MACE animal deterrents to help you keep pets and stray dogs off your lawn. According to the company’s website, Dog MACE is “100% biodegradable, fully natural, and incredibly easy to use.”

    The product comes in granular pellets, liquid concentrates, and ready-to-spray solutions.

    Dog MACE Product Available Sizes Average Cost Active Ingredients
    Ready-to-Use Spray 40 ounces treats 1,000 square feet 1 gallon treats 3,000 square feet $20-$30 Castor oil Garlic Cinnamon Potassium sorbate Sodium lauryl sulfate
    Granular Formula 2.5 pounds treats 1,400 square feet 6 pounds treats 3,500 square feet 22 pounds treats 14,000 square feet $22-$100 Peppermint oil Cinnamon oil Citronella oil Dried blood Garlic White pepper
    Liquid Concentrate 40-ounce container makes 5 gallons and treats 15,000 square feet 1-gallon container makes 16 gallons and treats 48,000 square feet $30-$85 Castor oil Garlic Cinnamon Potassium sorbate Sodium lauryl sulfate

    Repellex makes animal repellents for dogs, cats, deer, rabbits, moles, and squirrels. The brand’s website says Repellex “keeps animals off your lawn without harming them” and “controls pests without endangering your environment.”

    Repellex’s dog repellent comes in a spray, granule, and tablet form. The ready-to-use spray formula contains several spices, including cinnamon and garlic. The granular and tablet formulas are made of capsaicin, a component of chili peppers.

    Repellex Dog and Cat Repellent Available Sizes Average Cost Active Ingredients
    Ready-to-Use Spray 32 ounces treats approximately 500 square feet $13 Cinnamon Mint White pepper Garlic
    Systemic Granular 1.5 pounds 3 pounds $18-$25 Capsaicin
    Systemic Tablets 50-count150-count300-count $20-$100 Capsaicin

    Go Away! by Bonide is a cost-effective and accessible animal repellent.

    Since 1926, the Bonide brand has developed organic pest control products that are now available in hardware stores and garden centers across the U.S.

    Bonide’s dog repellent is available in a granular formula made of spices that irritate pups’ noses to keep them away.

    Go Away! Rabbit, Dog, & Cat Repellent Available Sizes Average Cost Active Ingredients
    Granular 1-pound container treats up to 300 square feet 3-pound container treats up to 900 square feet $10-$20 Red cayenne pepper Cinnamon oil Thyme oil

    I Must Garden was founded in 2004 by an avid gardener frustrated with animal repellents on the market. She developed products dedicated to helping fellow gardeners protect their plants through safe, all-natural pest control.

    I Must Garden’s liquid spray repellent stops dogs from chewing on your plants, and the granular formula keeps them from digging holes in your yard.

    According to the company’s website, its products are completely biodegradable and contain “natural ingredients and botanical oils that smell and taste bad” to dogs.

    Available Sizes Average Cost
    Liquid 32-ounce container treats 1,000 square feet 1-gallon container treats 4,000 square feet $13-$25
    Granular 2-pound container treats 150 square feet 20-pound container treats 1,500 square feet $19-$40

    Active Ingredients

  • Garlic
  • Citronella oil
  • Cedar oil
  • Thyme oil
  • Geranium oil
  • White pepper
  • Potassium sorbate
  • Xanthan gum
  • Peppermint oil
  • Lemongrass oil
  • Clove oil
  • Castor oil
  • Cinnamon oil
  • Wintergreen oil
  • Citric acid
  • Fuller’s Earth
  • You can make your own dog deterrent at home using a few of the ingredients in standard commercial products. Dogs’ senses of smell are approximately 100,000 times more powerful than ours, so filling your yard with harsh, irritating scents is a harmless way to keep canines away.

    You can scatter or spray these substances around your lawn and flower beds to deter pesky pups:

  • Cayenne Pepper – Mix one teaspoon of cayenne pepper with about 10 ounces of water. Spread the mixture around problem areas using a spray bottle. Be wary not to use this remedy excessively; cayenne powder can irritate a dog’s eyes, nose, and skin.
  • Vinegar – Mix vinegar with water and use a spray bottle to spread the solution around the perimeter of your yard. Avoid spraying the liquid directly on your grass; instead, form a “scent fence” around your lawn.
  • Coffee grounds – Sprinkle coffee grounds around your garden to repel dogs with the robust and bitter fragrance.
  • Baking soda – Mix a cup of baking soda with a gallon of water and spray on areas where dogs are urinating. The solution will decrease the urine’s scent, making dogs less likely to continue marking there.
  • Orange and lemon peels – Scatter citrus peels around your flower beds. The intense fragrance will overwhelm dogs’ noses and discourage them from visiting.
  • Adding aromatic plants to your garden is another home remedy to try. This method gives you the chance to grow some new greenery while keeping dogs out of your garden.

    The following plants are fragrant and pleasing to humans, yet stinky and overwhelming to dogs. Plant a few throughout your flower bed to pack a perfumey punch.

  • Citronella is often used as an insect repellent, but the flowering variety of the plant has a citrusy, floral fragrance that dogs detest.
  • Lavender plants have a distinct smell that is soothing to humans and irritating to canines.
  • Curry Plants have a spicy aroma that is often used to deter cats and dogs.
  • If commercial repellents and DIY remedies haven’t done the trick, you can try several other methods to salvage your lawn care efforts.

    If you know your neighbor’s dog is the culprit behind your littered front lawn, the first thing you should do is talk to them about it.

    Chances are, the dog’s owner isn’t intentionally letting their pet trash your lawn. They might not know their pup has been exploring the neighborhood or simply don’t understand proper pet owner etiquette.

    Nicely ask the neighbor to pick up their dog’s droppings. If confrontation isn’t an option, you can put up a sign in your yard asking passersby to clean up after their pets. You can also put out a container of pet waste bags so that people have no excuse not to pick up the poop.

    If you’ve asked around the block and no one knows the repeat offender, you can contact animal control services to report a stray dog.

    Putting a fence around your yard is a more expensive method of keeping dogs off your property.

    Installing a fence can cost thousands to tens of thousands of dollars, depending on the size of your yard. Fencing may be a viable option if you’d like to put one up for other reasons like gaining some privacy or giving your pet a safe space to roam.

    If keeping dogs off your lawn is your main objective, you should first try different, lower-cost options. Even if you stake a fence around your yard, determined canines could still jump over it or dig under it.

    If you’re still having trouble with dogs and other animals wrecking your lawn, try a motion-activated sprinkler tool like the Critter Ridder. This small machine uses an infrared sensor to detect nearby animals and “releases a startling surge of water to scare them away.”

    Other motion-activated animal repellent tools emit high-frequency noise to frighten animals without harming them. These products are often designed to repel deer, raccoons, and rodents, but they can also irritate and deter dogs. Human ears can’t detect the sounds generated, making these gadgets less startling than sprinkler sensors.

    Home & Lawn Pest Control : How to Keep Dogs Out of Your Yard

    With the ASPCA estimating about 75 million owned dogs in the United States, there’s no doubt that we love our furry friends! Unfortunately, not all dogs are the product of loving homes. Wild or stray dogs that roam freely can prey on livestock or family pets, become a danger to people or cause extensive damage to your property. Some may even carry the dreaded rabies virus.

    Feral dogs live wherever there is habitat and a food source, most commonly in parks, under abandoned buildings and in rural wooded areas. These roving Rovers generally patrol at night and during the early morning hours.

    So, what can you do about nuisance dogs that invade your property? Many areas offer trap, neuter, and adopt programs or trap, neuter, and release programs to help control the stray dog population. Your local humane league, SPCA, veterinarian, or similar organization will be happy to give you additional information about these programs and methods.

    When trapping, make sure to use a live animal cage large enough to hold the dog. To entice the dog into entering the trap, use a “mouth-watering” treat like dog food, any beef product, raw chicken, or sardines. You could also light up your BBQ and cook something very fatty – bacon, tripe, or hamburger, for example, to try and bring the dog to you. Then just place a piece in the trap. The dog will find it difficult to resist something that tasty!

    Once you catch the dog, be careful with it! Unfamiliar dogs may be frightened and could be dangerous to handle. Make sure to check in with your local animal control authorities or your local animal shelter for information on what to do with the animal.