The 1-minute kitchen scrap hack I use every July to keep spiders out of my house

Spider outside window
Close up of a small spider (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Every summer, as temperatures soar and windows crack open for cooler night air, spiders start making their way inside. While most people rush to buy pricey chemical pest sprays or essential oil diffusers, I've relied on the same zero-cost trick for years: citrus peels.

I save the skins whenever I use lemons, limes, or oranges for cooking or drinks, then use them to spider-proof my entire home. It works better than anything I've ever bought, it costs nothing, and it actually makes my home smell fresher.

Here's exactly how to do it to get the best results, and enjoy a spider-free home this summer.

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1. Prep your peels

Save citrus peels whenever you use lemons, limes, or oranges. The key is preparing them correctly so you deter spiders without accidentally inviting ants inside. Give each peel a quick rinse under cold water first. This removes any sticky, sugary fruit juice that ants find irresistible. You want the citrus oil, not the residue.

I keep a small container on my kitchen counter during summer and toss peels in as I use them. By the end of the week, I have enough to treat my entire home.

2. Buff your entry points with the textured side

Take a peel (you want these as fresh as possible, so try and use them within a week for best results), and press the exterior textured side firmly against your windows and entry points. I rub them directly along my windowsills, door thresholds, and skirting boards where spiders typically enter.

This pulls double duty. Citrus oil is a fantastic natural degreaser, so as I'm rubbing the peels, I'm lifting away summer dust and grime while depositing a microfilm of limonene — the compound in the zest that spiders absolutely despise.

This method is great because your home is actually getting cleaner while you're protecting it from spiders, rather than applying something you'll have to clean up later anyway. Plus, it acts as a natural air freshener.

3. Make a perimeter spray for hard-to-reach areas

For hard-to-reach places where a physical peel won't work, like dark closets, behind furniture, and tight corners, I make a quick infusion spray. Just drop your used peels into a spray bottle, fill it with warm water, and let it sit overnight. For extra potency, you can use white vinegar instead of water.

Mist this into corners and dark areas once a week to maintain an invisible, fragrant barrier all summer. It smells fresh; it's completely natural; and spiders absolutely hate it.

Why this actually works

Spiders don't actually smell through a nose — they use tiny, sensitive hairs on their legs to "taste" and "smell" the surfaces they walk on. Because of this unique anatomy, they are violently repelled by a natural compound called limonene, which is found in citrus zest.

Unlike essential oil diffusers that just scent the air, rubbing a fresh peel directly onto surfaces creates a literal barrier at your home's entry points.

When a spider tries to crawl across your windowsills or squeeze through a door gap, they hit that potent citrus oil leg-first. To them, it's the human equivalent of walking through a cloud of tear gas, forcing them to turn right around before they ever step foot inside.


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Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.

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