You can make a simple homemade herbicide, but it’s important to know up front: most DIY mixes are non-selective (they kill any plant they touch) and can also harm soil life and nearby plants if used carelessly.
Here are a few commonly used options, from mild to stronger:
1) Vinegar-based herbicide (most common)
Good for: weeds in cracks, driveways, paths (not deep-rooted weeds)
Ingredients:
- White vinegar (5–10% acidity; higher acidity = stronger effect)
- A few drops of dish soap
How it works:
Vinegar dries out plant leaves, and soap helps it stick.
How to use:
- Spray directly on leaves in full sunlight
- Avoid spraying nearby plants (it will damage them too)
2) Salt + vinegar mix (stronger, but risky)
Good for: areas where you want nothing to grow back (path edges, gravel)
Ingredients:
- 1 liter vinegar
- 2–3 tablespoons salt
- A few drops dish soap
Warning:
Salt can make soil sterile for a long time, so don’t use it in gardens or near crops.
3) Boiling water (safest option)
Good for: weeds in pavement cracks
- Just pour boiling water directly onto weeds
- Works instantly on small plants
- No chemical residue
4) Alcohol spray (fast drying)
Good for: small, young weeds
Ingredients:
- Rubbing alcohol (isopropyl)
- Water (1:1 mix)
Spray leaves lightly in sunlight.
Important tips (this matters more than the recipe)
- Spray on a dry, sunny day (sun boosts effectiveness)
- Target only the leaves (avoid soil and nearby plants)
- Young weeds die much easier than mature ones
- Reapply after a few days if needed
Reality check
Homemade herbicides are:
- ✔ Cheap and easy
- ✔ Good for small-scale weed control
- ❌ Not as effective as commercial systemic herbicides (which kill roots)
- ❌ Can damage soil if overused (especially salt-based ones)
If you tell me where you want to use it (garden, lawn, driveway, crop field, etc.), I can suggest a more targeted and safer method for that situation.