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How to Make a Cockroach Trap | DIY That Catches Tonight

A duct tape strip or a jar coated with petroleum jelly baited with basic kitchen scraps will trap cockroaches overnight using simple household supplies.

Professional sprays carry chemicals you might not want near your family. The answer is a homemade roach trap that works on the same principle as the expensive hardware-store models—attract, trap, dispose. You can build one in about three minutes with supplies already in your pantry and junk drawer.

What You Need For The Two Most Effective Traps

Both common designs rely on the same trick: present food the roach can smell, then give it a surface it cannot walk back out of. The table below shows the basic setup for each method.

Trap Type Barrier Surface Best Bait Catch Limit
Duct Tape Sticky adhesive Onion wedge, dry bread, snack chip (solid only) Every roach that steps onto the tape sticks
Jar With Petroleum Jelly Slippery interior walls Banana, beer-soaked bread, red wine Fills until roaches can climb out over each other
Coffee Can With Oil Sprayed cooking oil inside Scrap food, biscuit crumbs Fills until the surface is covered
Margarine Container Butter or margarine smeared at the rim Dissolved biscuit in water Moderate; shallow containers reduce escape risk

How To Build A Duct Tape Cockroach Trap

The duct tape method is the fastest trap you can make—no cutting, no mixing, no waiting for bait to dissolve.

Cut a strip of standard duct tape about six inches long. Fold the edges under so the tape lies flat on the floor, sticky side up. Place a small piece of solid food—a thumbnail-sized wedge of onion, a corner of bread, or a dry cracker—in the center. Wet or greasy bait will loosen the adhesive, so keep the bait dry. Set the trap along a baseboard, under the refrigerator, or on top of a kitchen cabinet where roaches travel at night. Check it the next morning. If you caught cockroaches, slide a piece of paper under the tape, lift it carefully, and either release the roaches at least 100 feet from your house or dispose of the tape in a sealed garbage bag.

How To Build A Jar Trap (More Capacity)

A petroleum-jelly jar trap catches multiple roaches in a single night and works for weeks with periodic bait replacement.

Take a glass mason jar or a plastic margarine container. Use a pipe cleaner or long-handled brush to spread a thin layer of petroleum jelly on the inside walls, starting about an inch below the rim and working down. The jelly must cover the whole circumference—any dry path is a roach escape route. For a metal coffee can alternative, spray the inside walls with cooking oil instead. Place bait at the bottom: a slice of banana, bread soaked in beer, enough red wine to drown arriving roaches, or a plain biscuit moistened with water. Position the jar where cockroaches hide—inside a dark closet, behind the washing machine, under the kitchen sink. Check daily. Dispose of captured roaches by releasing them outside or spraying them with soapy water before dumping the contents.

Where To Place Traps (And Where People Go Wrong)

Cockroaches follow walls and edges, not open floor space. Place every trap against a baseboard, at a cabinet corner, or behind an appliance. Roaches also travel at countertop height—put a duct tape strip on top of the refrigerator. If you only set one trap on the floor, you will catch a few stragglers and call the method a failure. Set three to five traps across the kitchen, pantry, bathroom, and garage on the first night. Check them before breakfast and reset any that got knocked over or covered in dust.

For a full pest-control strategy including professional-grade bait stations and insect-growth regulators that work alongside these DIY methods, check out our tested roundup of the top cockroach traps—these store-bought options cover the gaps homemade traps miss.

FAQs

Can I use peanut butter as bait in a cockroach trap?

Peanut butter works as an attractant but spoils quickly and can leave a sticky mess on tape or inside a jar. Stick to dry solids for tape traps and moderately moist foods like banana or bread for jar traps to avoid cleanup issues.

Why are cockroaches avoiding my homemade trap?

Roaches avoid traps that smell like people, cleaning products, or other roaches. Wear gloves when handling bait, place traps in dark undisturbed areas, and avoid setting them where you recently sprayed cleaner. Moving the trap six inches can change results overnight.

How long do homemade roach traps stay active?

Duct tape traps lose stickiness in dust and humidity after one or two nights. Jar traps with petroleum jelly remain effective for weeks if you replace the bait every two to three days and wipe out dead roaches promptly to prevent odor buildup.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.

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