2024 the best mouse traps review
Price: $21.99
(as of Nov 21, 2024 17:12:07 UTC - Details)
Warranty & Support
Feedback
d-CON No View, No Touch Covered Mouse Trap, 1 Trap (Pack of 6)
Discreet covered trap that conceals the dead mouse 100%.
Safer than traditional mouse traps & much easier to use – just bait, twist and set!
Safe around children & pets
No messy cleanup. Just dispose of the entire trap.
Ideal for: kitchens, bathrooms, bedrooms, pantry, and living rooms.
Reviewer: MingShu
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Best Solution for Mice Control
Review: I started using this product when we lived in the woods, I LOVED not having to look at nor touch the dead mice. I noticed mice activity in our garage recently and immediately remembered this product -- and it's still the best. I caught mice THE VERY FIRST NIGHT I put them out, and I am ecstatic to report that a small group of them has been promptly annihilated (I counted 7). Thank you d-CON! Just make sure to put them in plastic grocery bags and tie up tightly before putting them in your trash bin...otherwise it will smell awful.
Reviewer: Kristin M. Tripp
Rating: 1.0 out of 5 stars
Title: 5 out of 6 traps malfunctioned, and no refund.
Review: Iâve used this product successfully in the past so when some mice recently moved into my pantry, I placed an order for six of these. They should be easy enough to useâjust bait with pb, twist the top until it clicks into the set position, then leave them for the mice to find.This time, though, three of the traps would not stay set. They just straight up wonât click into position. The rest did but if you touch themâeven very carefullyâthey go off, and then wonât click back into the set position. Which, if you need to slide one out from behind the fridge to see if itâs been sprung (they hadnât), means youâre down another trap.Iâm down to one out of the original six still in useâthe first three were unusable from the get go, then two more broke by setting themselves off. So far none have caught any mice. And yes, Iâm sure the mice are still in residence, as evidenced by the turds left in the general vicinity of the traps.I opted to go the route of calling the company to see about a refund. I spoke with a very nice lady at a D-Con call center who got my order information then told me that she would email me so that I could then reply with photos of the code on the packaging.Itâs been over a week: no email, no refund, and no dead mice. I am a dissatisfied customer. Two thumbs down, do not recommend.
Reviewer: KBryan
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Effective
Review: Great to use with pets & small children in the home.
Reviewer: JG
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Worked in a few hours, but I did make a modification
Review: For the past three years, after never seeing a mouse in my house for more than 12 years, I've had an annual invasion as winter approaches. For the last two, I used humane, live traps. The humane trap locks the mouse inside after it reaches the trap's back end, where the bait is; the weight of the mouse tips the trap toward that end, which triggers the open door on the front end to come down and latch securely. They worked well the last two years, but this winter, after leaving them out each night, baiting them faithfully, and doing everything the way I had done it previously, I would find them emptied of bait each morning but with doors still open and no mice inside. I'm guessing that the mice I have this year weigh less and/or are faster than the ones who've invaded in the past, so that their weight isn't heavy enough to trigger the traps to tip and the doors to close, or they're sufficiently fast that they can make it back out before the door closes. Two weeks of bait devoured every night and no mice trapped -- added to the extreme unease I felt when I found that the creatures had actually begun gnawing on the plastic traps, as if to mock me -- made me reconsider my hesitation about using traps that would kill the mice.The major appeal of these No View, No Touch traps was that I wouldn't have to see or touch the dead mice. As it turned out, that was both an advantage and a disadvantage, The disadvantage came when, four hours after I set the traps, one trap showed that a mouse was caught: I couldn't tell whether it was a false alarm or there really was a mouse inside, even after twisting the trap so that the entryway was back open and then peering inside. I did weigh it on a kitchen scale, and it weighed almost an ounce more than the three still-empty traps, so I'm pretty sure it did contain a mouse.As for the modification: I had read on other reviews that mice would sometimes tip over the trap and gnaw through the thin paper sticker that covers the bait at the bottom of the trap, or would gnaw through the equally thin paper sticker at the top of the trap, thus managing to eat the bait without getting trapped. To make the traps harder to tip over and gnaw through, after filling each bait area with peanut butter, I wrapped pieces of cardboard in foil and taped them down over both stickers -- the one at the top and the one at the bottom of the trap. I also rubbed a tiny bit of peanut butter at the entryway and a tiny bit inside the trap, in case the cardboard/foil/tape masked the smell of the peanut butter in the bait area.As I said, four hours later, I (think I) trapped a mouse. I'm not sure if that was the only one, so I've left the other three traps baited and set, and put a couple dabs of peanut butter nearby, so if the other traps remain empty and untriggered, I can at least know whether see whether something is still eating the peanut butter.Update: Something ate the peanut butter. I left the traps baited and set, and three days after catching the first mouse, I caught two more. Ordering more of these traps now.
Reviewer: Cassandra Brown
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title: As described, but not working
Review: As described, but don't seem to be working for me. Baited with peanut butter, set, and placed around the apartment, but none have gone off yet and there are definitely mice running around.
Reviewer: Kmcdonald
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Quick, easy, humane, effective.
Review: My saving grace!! Nothing else worked (that I was comfortable with using....) that was somewhat humane, non-chemical, and was easy to deal with the aftermath. Literally, the first night I used these, I caught the "Marauding Mice Gang of Three"...ha ha....apparently, three mice were having their way in my kitchen on a regular basis and they were quickly dispatched using these traps. I used peanut butter and one, two, three....GONE. Never had a problem again since. That was about 3 months ago and counting. I don't know what took me so long other than I am a softie at heart and last summer used a humane/non-kill trap and would transport them to a neighborhood park a mile or two away but somehow they or their relatives kept coming back. So after some major aggravation over finding mouse droppings in my kitchen drawers, I'd had enough and I just couldn't take it anymore. Killing them was the only option but I didn't want it to be messy or painful (for either of us). These seem to work immediately and you simply discard the entire trap when it shows that there is a mouse inside on the indicator. I couldn't bear to see anything too graphic like a snap trap, so this has solved both problems for me of finding something at least quickly humane and with tidy results. I won't use anything else. If I see any future signs of mice again, I will buy these immediately.
Customers say
Customers like the ease of use, disposal, and design of the pest control device. They mention it's convenient and fits into low-clearance spaces. However, some customers have reported that the traps don't catch any mice, are not worth the cost, and are of low quality. They also say they're disappointed with the durability and disagree on its functionality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews