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Rat Trap Placement Outdoors: The 9 Spots That Actually Catch Rats

Rat Trap Placement Outdoors: The 9 Spots That Actually Catch Rats

By Zivaska · 9 min read · Updated May 2026

You can buy the best rat trap on the market and still catch nothing for a week. The reason is almost never the trap. It is placement. Rats have specific movement patterns, and your trap has to be on the path they actually take, not the path you think they take.

This guide is built from thousands of real customer outcomes from across Canada. By the end you will know the rule that explains 90 percent of rat movement, the 9 highest-success outdoor placements, and the 3 mistakes that quietly kill your catch rate.

The one rule: rats are wall-followers

Rats are not adventurous animals. They have terrible eyesight. They navigate by touching one side of their body against a vertical surface as they move. This is called thigmotaxis. In practice it means rats run along walls, fences, baseboards, foundation edges, hedge bases and pipe lines. They almost never cross open ground.

The rule: Place your trap directly against a wall or fence, with the long axis of the trap parallel to that wall. The rat should walk into one of the tunnel openings without ever leaving the wall.

If you take nothing else from this article, take that one rule. It is the single biggest lever on your catch rate.

WRONG: RIGHT:Wall Wall ────────────── ────────────── [▒▒▒ TRAP ▒▒▒] [▒▒▒ TRAP ▒▒▒] ────────────── rat path → ────────────── ← rat path (rat will not cross open ground (rat enters the to reach the trap) trap automatically)

3 placement mistakes that cost you catches

Mistake 1: trap in the middle of the floor. A trap on the floor of a garage with nothing nearby is invisible to a rat. They will not detour off their wall route to reach it.
Mistake 2: trap facing the wrong way. If your trap has tunnel openings on the short ends, those openings must point along the wall, not into the wall. The opening pointed into the wall is useless.
Mistake 3: only one trap. A single trap on a property with active rats catches one rat in 14 days. Four traps on the same property catch four to eight rats in 5 days. Coverage compounds.

The 9 best outdoor placements

1. Along the foundation wall under a deck

Decks are the single most common rat shelter in BC and Ontario. Place traps directly against the foundation wall, just inside the deck perimeter. Two to four traps per deck depending on size.

2. Behind garbage and recycling bins

Bins are a food source. Place one trap behind each bin, against the wall the bin sits against. The space between the bin and the wall is a high-traffic runway.

3. Inside the bin enclosure

If your garbage is inside a strata or commercial enclosure, place traps along the inside perimeter walls. Two traps per enclosure for residential, four for commercial.

4. Along the fence line, at corners

Rats follow fences corner to corner. Place traps at the 90-degree corners, with the tunnel parallel to either fence. A corner trap covers both runways.

5. Inside shed corners

Sheds are rat hotels. Place one trap in each interior corner, against the wall. A 4-pack covers a typical 8×10 shed.

6. Along the laneway near compost or chicken coops

Compost bins and chicken feed are rat magnets. Place traps along the building wall closest to the compost, never on the compost itself.

7. In the crawl space, along the perimeter wall

Crawl spaces are dark, dry and protected, exactly what a rat wants. Walk the perimeter and place traps every 8 to 10 feet along the foundation wall. Mark each location.

8. Behind outdoor HVAC units and condensers

The space behind a condenser is warm and sheltered. Place a trap between the unit and the wall, parallel to the wall.

9. Inside the garage, along the wall the door slides against

Garage door tracks are rat highways. Place traps along the side wall, near where the track ends, not under the track itself.

Which direction the trap faces

For dual-tunnel traps like the Zivaska, the two openings should be aligned along the rat’s path of travel. If the rat is moving along a wall left to right, one opening faces left and one faces right, parallel to the wall.

For single-entry traps, the opening should face the direction the rat is coming from. The single biggest mis-orientation we see is the opening pointing into the wall. That makes the trap dead weight.

Seasonal adjustments

Spring (March to May)

Rats expand their range as the weather warms. Add traps to garden areas, near sheds and along fence lines. This is the season to clear an emerging population before it breeds.

Summer (June to August)

Garbage activity is at peak. Triple-check placements near bins, compost, BBQ grease, and outdoor pet food. Bait with peanut butter or bacon.

Fall (September to November)

Rats migrate indoors. Move some outdoor traps to garage, basement and crawl space placements. Stock more traps in expectation of activity.

Winter (December to February)

Activity concentrates around warm shelters: HVAC, decks against the house, attic entries. Re-bait less often (rats are less active), but do not remove traps.

Multi-trap layouts for a property

Single-family home with garage, shed and back deck

4-pack minimum. Two traps under the deck along the foundation, one in the shed corner, one inside the garage along the wall. Add two more if compost is on site.

Restaurant or food business

10 traps minimum. Two behind every dumpster, two along the kitchen baseboard inside the bin enclosure, two along the alley wall, four along interior baseboards behind the line.

Warehouse

25 traps as a starter program. Place every 8 to 10 feet along dock-bay walls, every 12 feet along interior perimeter walls, and pairs at every loading-bay corner.

Strata or multi-building property

50+ traps. Place two traps per garbage room, two per parking-level corner, four per laneway, plus a monitoring grid in any common storage area.

How often to check and re-bait

Check every 24 to 48 hours during active infestation. Bait does not need refreshing daily, but a stale bait drops your catch rate after 5 to 7 days. Re-bait weekly even without a catch.

Keep traps set for 14 days after the last catch. Rats live in colonies and one catch usually means more nearby.

Ready to place real traps?

The Zivaska dual-tunnel design works in every placement in this guide.

Shop Outdoor Rat Traps →

FAQ

Can I just throw a trap on the lawn?

No. Rats do not cross open ground. A trap on a lawn catches nothing. Place against a wall, fence, or other vertical surface.

How far apart should I place traps along a long wall?

Every 8 to 10 feet for active infestation. Every 12 to 15 feet for prevention or monitoring.

Do I need to wear gloves when handling the trap before placement?

It helps but it is not required. Rats are not as scent-sensitive as deer or coyotes. A quick rinse of the trap before first use removes manufacturing residue.

Can I place a trap directly in the path of my dog?

Only if the trap is the enclosed dual-tunnel type. Even then, train your dog to ignore it or place it in a space the dog does not access.

How long until I should expect a catch?

With correct placement and good bait, most customers catch within 24 to 72 hours. If you have no catch after a week, you have a placement problem, not a trap problem. Re-read the rule.

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