Spray Mix Calculators DIY Weed Killer Recipe Calculator

DIY Weed Killer Recipe Calculator

Scale homemade weed killer recipes to any batch size — vinegar, salt, dish soap, or plain boiling water. No commercial herbicide products required. Enter your batch size and get exact ingredient amounts instantly.

⚠️ Non-selective: These recipes kill or damage any plant they touch, including grass and garden plants — not just weeds. They work best for driveways, sidewalk cracks, gravel paths, and garden bed edges where you want everything cleared.

On this page: Recipe Calculator · How these recipes work · Application tips · When to use a commercial product instead · FAQ

Calculator

Vinegar Recipe, Boiling Water & Strength Comparison

Choose a method: Vinegar Spray for a scalable vinegar-salt-soap recipe · Boiling Water for a chemical-free area-based method · Compare Strengths to see vinegar concentration side-by-side.

Enter your target batch size, choose a vinegar strength, and toggle optional ingredients to see exact amounts.

No chemicals at all — just boiling water. Best for small areas like cracks and gravel.

See how much undiluted vinegar you'd need at each common strength for the same batch size.

Need a sprayer? A garden spray bottle works well for spot treatment, or a handheld pump sprayer for larger areas.

Vinegar vs. salt vs. boiling water vs. commercial herbicide

Each method has a different speed, cost, and soil impact. Use this table to decide which fits your situation before mixing anything.

Method Speed of visible effect Kills roots? Soil impact Best for
Vinegar (20%) 2–4 hours in sun Rarely Minimal, breaks down in days Young weeds, cracks, edges
Vinegar + salt 2–4 hours in sun Sometimes, on shallow-rooted weeds Persists weeks to months Areas where nothing should grow back
Boiling water Minutes to hours Rarely None — water only Single weeds in pavement cracks
Commercial systemic herbicide 3–14 days Usually yes Varies by product label Established perennial weeds, large areas

For systemic control of established weeds, see the Herbicide Mixing Calculator.

How homemade weed killer recipes actually work

Unlike commercial systemic herbicides that travel through a plant's vascular system to kill the roots, homemade recipes are almost entirely contact-based — they damage whatever plant tissue they touch on the surface, without being absorbed and carried downward.

Vinegar (acetic acid)

Vinegar works by rapidly drawing moisture out of leaf cells through its acidity, causing visible wilting and browning within hours on a sunny day. Household vinegar (5% acetic acid) is mild and often only damages the surface of soft, young growth. Horticultural vinegar (20%) and industrial vinegar (30%) are significantly stronger and can fully desiccate top growth on contact — but neither reliably kills the root system of an established perennial weed, which is why regrowth within 1–2 weeks is common.

Salt (sodium chloride)

Salt kills through osmotic stress: it pulls water out of plant cells and disrupts the soil's ability to hold moisture available to roots. This makes it more persistent and more damaging to soil long-term than vinegar alone — salt doesn't break down quickly and can prevent anything from growing in treated soil for an extended period, sometimes a full season or longer depending on rainfall and soil drainage.

Dish soap (surfactant)

Dish soap doesn't kill weeds on its own — its role is purely mechanical. Many weed leaves have a waxy or hairy surface that causes water-based sprays to bead up and roll off before they can act. A small amount of soap breaks that surface tension, helping the vinegar (and any salt) spread into full contact with the leaf surface and stay there longer.

Boiling water

Boiling water works through pure heat — it cooks plant cell walls on contact, causing immediate wilting. It has no chemical residue and no soil persistence, making it the gentlest option for surrounding soil, but it cools rapidly once poured, which limits how deep its effect reaches into root systems.

Application tips for better results

Common mistakes that make homemade weed killer fail

Diluting the vinegar

A common instinct is to treat vinegar like a commercial concentrate and dilute it with water before spraying. This is almost always the wrong move — vinegar's acetic acid concentration is already the active ingredient, and watering it down weakens the burn effect rather than making it spread further. Apply vinegar undiluted, straight from the container.

Spraying on a cloudy or cool day

Vinegar and boiling water both rely on rapid moisture loss to damage weed tissue. On a cool, overcast day, plants lose moisture far more slowly, and the same recipe that works in an afternoon of full sun may show little visible effect at all. Save treatment for a clear, warm day whenever possible.

Expecting one application to finish the job

Because these recipes act on contact rather than systemically, they often only damage the above-ground growth. A weed that looks dead after a day may resprout from an undamaged root within a week or two. Plan on checking back and reapplying rather than treating it as a single fix.

Treating a weed that's about to go to seed

If a weed has already flowered and is close to seeding, killing the visible plant may not stop it from spreading — seeds that have already formed can still mature and drop even after the parent plant has wilted. For weeds at this stage, removing and disposing of the plant entirely is more effective than spraying alone.

What to expect: timeline for results

Patience matters with homemade weed killer — the visible timeline is different from what most people expect from a spray bottle.

When a commercial herbicide makes more sense

Homemade recipes are a reasonable choice for small spot treatments, cracks, gravel, and situations where you want to avoid synthetic chemicals. But they have real limitations worth knowing before you commit a whole afternoon to a recipe that may not finish the job:

If you decide to use a commercial product, our Herbicide Mixing Calculator handles label rate, GPA, and tank mixing for any registered herbicide.

Frequently asked questions

Does homemade vinegar weed killer actually work?

Yes, but with limitations. Vinegar is a contact herbicide — it burns the leaves and stems it touches but doesn't travel down to kill roots. It works well on young annual weeds and often requires repeat applications for established perennial weeds with deep root systems.

What is the best vinegar to water ratio for weeds?

Most homemade recipes use undiluted vinegar rather than a vinegar-to-water ratio — diluting vinegar with water reduces its acetic acid concentration and weakens the effect. Horticultural vinegar (20% acetic acid) used straight from the container is the most common effective strength for home weed control.

Why add salt to vinegar weed killer?

Salt draws moisture out of plant tissue through osmosis, adding a second mode of action alongside the vinegar's acidic burn. However, salt persists in soil far longer than vinegar and can harm grass, garden beds, and any future plantings in the treated area — use it only where you don't intend to grow anything afterward.

Why add dish soap to a weed killer spray?

Dish soap acts as a surfactant, breaking the surface tension of the spray so it spreads evenly across waxy or hairy leaf surfaces instead of beading up and rolling off. A small amount — about 1 tablespoon per gallon — is usually enough.

Is the boiling water method effective on weeds?

Boiling water is effective on young weeds in cracks, gravel, and pavement, where it can fully saturate the limited root zone. It's less effective on established weeds with deep or extensive root systems, since the water cools quickly and may not penetrate far enough underground.

Is homemade weed killer safe for pets and kids?

Vinegar-based recipes are generally safer than synthetic herbicides, but full-strength horticultural vinegar (20-30%) can still irritate skin and eyes on contact, and boiling water poses a burn risk. Keep pets and children away from the treatment area until it has dried, and store concentrated vinegar out of reach.

Will homemade weed killer harm my grass or garden plants?

Yes — vinegar and salt-based recipes are non-selective and will damage or kill any plant they contact, including grass and garden plants. Apply carefully with a targeted sprayer nozzle and avoid windy conditions that could cause drift onto desired plants.