🐭 Snap to it! The ultimate mouse trap for a pest-free home!
This 20-pack of mouse traps features a high-strength plastic design for durability and reusability. With a quick-trigger mechanism and non-toxic safety features, these traps are perfect for effective pest control in various settings, ensuring a clean and safe environment for your family and pets.
Item Weight | 800 Grams |
Number of Pieces | 20 |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 4.3"L x 2"W x 2.2"H |
Target Species | Mouse |
Is Electric | No |
Material Type | Plastic |
Style | Modern |
Color | black-20PCS |
K**A
Much better than wood mousetraps.
The old type wood base mouse trap let the mice lick the peanut butter fight off and never triggered. Not with these. They step on a plate to get to the bait and the job is done. Great design and super easy to use.
E**L
Easy and clean
Easy set traps and cheap enough to throw away after use.
A**E
Mouse Traps
These traps were easy to bait, use and remove the mouse easily w/o touching the bar that kills them. That are better than what I thought they would be. Was successful the very first night .
K**R
Rodent control
Effective traps against house mice, easily baited and reset. No need to touch or handle dead mice as a simple squeeze releases them into the garbage. Although they are hard plastic they have good strength and reusability. Bait cup is removeable to fill and easy to put back . Bait, set, catch, dispose of mouse, bait, set, wash hands, wait for next catch. Simple and worth the very reasonable cost and quick delivery. Recommend.
N**W
Do not buy - do not work
I have an infestation of mice at my cabin. I do not like killing creatures but they’re too destructive so I purchased these traps. I should’ve listened to the reviews. These do not work!!! Now I feel even more guilty as I have mice running around missing tails and having injured feet!Do you know what it’s like to be awoken from a sound sleep by a tortured mouse? His foot caught in one of these and trying to break free? Squeaking and dragging the trap around on the tile floor until you finally get up to go downstairs to see what the ruckus is and then seeing its beady eyes looking up at you? Now what to do? You get a bag, a broom, and go back only to find that it’s managed to escape and is now once again roaming your house? Yea, this SUCKS!!!
M**T
Caught a lot of mice the first night
Living in a rural area, mice are a part of life. We recently had some activity in the house 🤢 and had tried various things to keep the mice away without risk of poisoning our dog, without success (including using wooden mouse traps, bucket traps, etc).I received the traps this afternoon and set 5 up, an hour after dark I checked the traps and found three of them tripped and had caught a mouse.I then emptied and rebaited the three traps (untripped traps did not have the bait missing) and left them for twenty minutes, checked them again and found another tripped and caught a mouse. Rebaited, and caught another 20 minutes after that.Managing a bunch of traps regularly isn't my idea of a good time, but these are really easy to set (unlike wooden traps) and are very effective at catching mice that have foiled my other attempts.
M**E
Works as intended! A must-have if living in the country
I've been buying these for several years; living in the country near farm fields there is a high population of mice that is a constant issue to be dealt with, they are determined to get in the house. I have these traps out around my home all year round, they are effective and so easy to empty and reset. Over time, due to continued exposure to rain/snow/ice, the springs will deteriorate, but it takes a long time. Also, if you have a local possum, sometimes your traps will disappear before you can empty it, as Mr. Possum takes the entire trap with the mouse body in it to eat for dinner! On average, I buy a box of traps every 3-4 years. Well worth not hearing skittering mouse noises in my ceiling every night!
A**R
Doesn’t work as is
Seems easy to use. Seems like a great value for the money.Set several traps in areas I know mice are at night in my apartment.Used chicken flavored temptations cat treats as bait. I had used peanut butter a couple months ago in humane mouse traps…caught one mouse first night. Never caught one again. Eventually checked trap….all pb was gone. It makes zero sense. They’d have to be IN the trap to eat it! But that’s beside the point.I used cat treat with these traps because years ago I lived in a gross city apt that had tons of mice. I had two cats at the time. One cat was just really bad at being a cat so mice could just sneak by her. The other was athletic, crazy, and pretty smart. But he LIKED the mice. Wtf. I caught mice running right in front of him at night and they’d hop in his food bowl to eat. And he’d just sit there cocking his cute little crazy head. It was clear the mice were comfortable with him.ANYWAYYY. I had car treats back then. Put them in traps in that apartment. Caught mice daily.No cats nowadays. New apartment. Smarter mice.I bought cat treats to bait these traps since PB somehow failed(did it though? We’ll never know) and they had no iterest on the bird food they were originally after from my pet birds, no interest in any nuts, they just weren’t going for the traps. So I tried the treats when I got these traps. There’s been a lot of mouse activity in my apartment at night so I figured I’d start catching tons of them.Wrong. I didn’t catch anything with these traps. After a few days I finally decided I should swap for different bait, clearly these mice didn’t like cat treats.Guys. They love temptations chicken cat treats.The way these traps are designed, the bait holder is apparently super easy to just reach in and grab the bait without setting off the trap.TEN TRAPS. TEN. Not set off, bait missing. So the bait was not at all the problem.Tonight I set up one of these traps but didn’t put the cat treat in the bait holder. I dropped it as far back into the trap as I could without interesting with the mechanisms.I placed the trap, got ready for bed, hit the light s and SNAP!Not ten minutes after the trap was set in this way, I caught a mouse.Now I feel horrible. I never wanted to resort to traps that kill, but they’re becoming a HUGE problem. I mean, I haven’t slept in my bedroom for days now because they keep digging tunnels in the dirt of the big planter behind my headboard that I cannot move (the plants climb the walls and cross the ceiling and make a huge vine curtain at the end of the bed, it’s amazeballs…) and they also seem to be living in the ceiling. I live in the basement converted to an apartment of my landlords home, and it has those hideous drop ceilings. The mice have woken me up at night running across these ceiling tiles to squeak and fight and run back and forth. And the other night I heard them scuffling about SOMEWHERE (ceiling?? Wall??? Planter???? I dunno where they were!)ANYWAYYYYYYYYSSSSSS I feel terrible but o don’t know what else to do at this point. This poor dead mouse is so tiny.But I want to sleep in my room again. I need therapy.So ok yeah, it’s a good value. Obviously it does kill the mouse. But I recommend not using the bait spot unless your bait is realllllly sticky and hard to remove. Otherwise, they can just yoink the bait without setting the trap off.Chuck the bait to the back of the trap if you’re a terrible person like me.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
4 days ago