Most people set too few traps in the wrong places with the wrong bait. This guide covers everything that separates a 90% catch rate from catching nothing.
Mice run along walls using their whiskers for navigation. They WILL run into a perpendicular trap. They avoid a parallel trap or one in open space. This single rule explains 80% of failed trapping programs.
Place traps every 2–3 feet along every wall in an active area. Yes — 8–12 traps in a single room. Increase density near droppings, gnaw marks, and visible runways.
Place two traps side by side facing opposite directions in any active runway. A mouse jumping over the first lands on the second. Dramatically increases catch rate in confirmed runways.
Behind the refrigerator (always), inside cabinets under the sink, behind the stove, in the attic along top plates, in the basement along foundation walls, inside the void behind the dishwasher.
Most effective mouse trap bait. Use a pea-sized amount — the stickiness forces the mouse to work the trigger, ensuring a clean kill. Creamy slightly outperforms chunky. Reapply every 3–5 days as it dries out.
Nutella or similar products sometimes outperform peanut butter. The fat + sugar combination is highly attractive. Excellent alternative when mice seem to be avoiding peanut butter traps.
In fall and winter, mice actively seek nesting material. Tie a small piece of cotton ball or dental floss to the trigger. Mice working to free it trigger the trap — excellent for trap-shy individuals.
| Factor | Mice | Norway Rats | Roof Rats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trap type | Victor M040, T-Rex | Tomcat Rat, Victor Easy Set | Victor rat trap on beams |
| Neophobia | Low — investigate quickly | High — pre-bait 3–5 days | Moderate |
| Placement density | Every 2–3 ft | Every 15–30 ft | Elevated on beams and pipes |
| Quantity per room | 6–15 traps | 4–8 traps | 4–8 traps (elevated) |