You can make a simple homemade herbicide using common household ingredients, but it’s important to know up front: most DIY weed killers are non-selective (they kill any plant they touch) and can also damage soil health if overused.
Here are the most effective homemade options:
1) Vinegar-based herbicide (most common)
Best for: young weeds, cracks in pavement, driveways
Ingredients
- 1 liter white vinegar (5–10% acidity; higher acidity works better if available)
- 2–3 tablespoons dish soap
- Optional: 2–3 tablespoons salt
How it works
- Vinegar dries out plant leaves
- Soap helps it stick to the plant surface
- Salt dehydrates the plant further (but see warning below)
Instructions
- Mix all ingredients in a spray bottle or garden sprayer.
- Spray directly onto weeds on a hot, sunny day.
- Avoid spraying nearby plants you want to keep.
2) Salt + vinegar “strong” mix (use carefully)
Best for: driveways, gravel paths, places where nothing should grow again
Ingredients
- 1 liter vinegar
- 1/2 cup salt
- 1–2 tablespoons dish soap
⚠️ Warning: Salt can make soil infertile for a long time. Use only in areas where you never want plants to grow again.
3) Boiling water (safest option)
Best for: cracks, small weeds, eco-friendly control
Instructions
- Pour boiling water directly on weeds
- Repeat if needed
This kills plant cells instantly and leaves no chemical residue.
4) Vinegar + lemon juice (mild version)
Best for: light weed control
- 1 liter vinegar
- Juice of 2–3 lemons
- Optional dish soap
Less harsh than salt mixtures but also less powerful.
Important tips for effectiveness
- Apply on sunny, dry days (rain reduces effectiveness)
- Spray directly on leaves, not just soil
- Weeds may need 2–3 treatments
- Young weeds die much easier than mature ones
Big caution (important)
Homemade herbicides:
- Don’t distinguish between weeds and crops
- Can harm soil microbes
- Salt-based recipes can make land unusable for months or longer
If you’re dealing with a garden or farmland, a manual removal or mulching strategy is often better long-term.
If you want, tell me where you’re planning to use it (garden, driveway, farm, etc.), and I can suggest the safest and most effective option for that exact situation.