The Smarter Way to Eliminate Rodents
The Smarter Way to Eliminate Rodents
PIR motion sensor. Instant kill. Auto-reset. USB rechargeable. No poison, no CO₂, no battery replacements — ever. Safe around kids and pets.
Built Different. By Design.
How Many Traps Do You Need?
Tell us about your space and we'll recommend the right number of traps to tackle your rodent problem effectively.
Step 1 — Where is your rodent problem?
Step 2 — Which areas have rodent activity? (select all that apply)
Step 2 — What type of outdoor space?
Step 2 — Indoor areas with activity
Step 3 — Outdoor space type
Every Method Compared — Honestly
See exactly how each rodent control approach stacks up on cost, safety, and effectiveness.
| Feature | Brighticonic | CO₂ Auto-Trap | Snap Trap | Poison | Glue Trap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auto-Reset | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ❌ Manual | N/A | ❌ Manual |
| Rechargeable | ✅ USB | ❌ CO₂ & refills | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Annual Cost | $0/year | $30–50/yr | Low | Medium | Medium |
| Non-Toxic | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ Poison | ✅ |
| Pet & Child Safe | ✅ Enclosed | Partial | ⚠️ Risk | ❌ Danger | ⚠️ Risk |
| Kill Type | Instant | Instant | Variable | Slow (days) | Suffering |
| Waterproof | ✅ IP44 | Partial | ❌ | Some | ❌ |
| Indoor + Outdoor | ✅ Both | ✅ Both | Indoor | Both | Indoor |
| Hands-Free | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | Partial | ❌ |
Built for Every Space That Has a Rodent Problem
Homeowners
Kitchen, garage, attic, basement. No-poison solution safe for kids and pets. Set it and forget it — auto-resets after every catch.
Farmers & Homesteaders
Barn, chicken coop, feed storage, garden sheds. Kills large Norway rats. IP44 waterproof for outdoor deployment year-round.
Property Managers
Multi-unit buildings, Airbnb, restaurants. Bulk deployment eliminates recurring pest control costs. Discreet and professional.
DIY Problem-Solvers
Tech-curious, handles it themselves. PIR sensor technology, rechargeable design, auto-reset mechanism — engineering-grade pest control.
The 5-Step Success Protocol
90% of trap failures aren't the trap — they're setup errors. Follow this and you'll catch rodents consistently.
Wear Gloves First
Your scent alerts rodents. Use the included nitrile gloves for handling the trap, loading bait, and positioning. This single step prevents the #1 silent failure mode. Before placing, also wipe the device thoroughly with a clean damp cloth to remove any human scent contamination transferred during unboxing or handling — even brief contact leaves enough scent to make rodents avoid the trap for days.
Load Bait Into the Top Dome Chamber
The bait compartment is the clear dome on the top of the unit — lift or twist it open to access the chamber. Apply a pea-sized amount of peanut butter or Nutella directly inside using a cotton swab, never bare fingers. The PIR sensor sits within this same chamber and detects the rodent's body heat as it reaches up toward the bait. Less is more: too much bait lets rodents nibble from the edge without fully entering the detection zone.
Place Flush Against a Wall — Secure in High-Traffic Areas
Rodents run along walls, never through the open. Place the trap opening perpendicular to the wall so rodents walk directly into the chamber along their natural path.
🔩 High-Traffic Locations (Barn Aisles, Warehouse Floors, Sheds): If the trap is in an area with foot traffic, livestock, or farm equipment, use the included screws to mount it securely to the wall or baseboard. This prevents accidental displacement, keeps the trap properly aligned along rodent run paths, and ensures the Hall safety sensor remains correctly engaged. A knocked-over trap won't fire — but it also won't catch anything.
Familiarization Phase — NO Bait for 3–5 Days (Critical)
Place the trap in position with no bait at all for the first 3–5 days. Whether it's on or off during this period doesn't matter — the goal is simply to let rodents get used to the new object in their environment. Rats practice neophobia (fear of new objects) and will avoid anything unfamiliar. Once they've accepted the trap as part of their surroundings, then add bait and activate. Skipping this phase is the #1 reason traps fail.
Activate & Monitor — Know Your Charging Schedule
After pre-baiting, turn the trap on. Check every 48 hours initially, then refresh bait weekly. The PIR sensor detects body heat and auto-resets after each activation — fully hands-free.
🔋 For Farmers & Outdoor Deployments: The 2200mAh battery delivers up to 60 days of standby on a full charge. In low-activity areas, recharge monthly. In high-activity seasons (harvest, grain storage, breeding periods), check the charge indicator every 2–3 weeks — frequent triggers draw more power per cycle. A 4-hour USB-C charge restores full capacity. Build recharging into your regular barn or shed walk-through routine so the trap is never caught dead in the middle of an active run.
Which Rodent Do You Have?
Different species need different baits and placement. Identify yours in 60 seconds.
- Size2–4 inches, small and quick
- DroppingsTiny, pointed, rice-grain sized
- WhereKitchen, pantry, cabinets
- Entry holesDime-sized (¼ inch)
- Best baitPeanut butter, Nutella, seeds
- PlacementBaseboards, behind appliances
- Size6–8 inches, slender, long tail
- DroppingsSpindle-shaped, ½ inch
- WhereAttics, trees, upper floors, vines
- Entry holesQuarter-sized (1 inch)
- Best baitPeanut butter, dried fruit, nut butter
- PlacementElevated surfaces, near roof entry
- Size7–10 inches, stocky, thick tail
- DroppingsBlunt capsule, ¾ inch
- WhereGround level, burrows, barns, sewers
- Entry holesHalf-dollar sized (2 inches)
- Best baitTallow/meat, grain + peanut butter + anise
- PlacementGround-level walls, near burrows
The 5 Best Baits — Ranked
Pea-sized amount, applied with a cotton swab. Pre-warm slightly. Refresh every 5–7 days.
1. Peanut Butter + Honey
Best all-around. High fat, sweet aroma. Works for all three species.
2. Nutella / Chocolate Hazelnut
Top performer for mice and roof rats. Rich cocoa scent travels far.
3. Oats + Peanut Butter + Aniseed
Longer-lasting, strong scent radius. Best for outdoor and extended deployments.
4. Dried Meat / Beef Tallow
Best for Norway rats. Add brewer's yeast for extra umami attraction.
5. Nesting Material (Breeding Season)
During Feb–Apr and Sep–Nov, cotton balls or dental floss outperform food baits. Rodents prioritize nest building during breeding cycles.
How to Find the Right Bait for Your Rodent
Not sure which bait will work? Follow this 14-day testing protocol to identify what attracts the rodents in your space.
Days 1–5: No Bait — Familiarization Only
Place the trap in position with no bait. Don't worry about whether it's on or off. The only goal here is for rodents to accept the trap as a normal part of their environment. Don't rush this — skipping it is why most traps fail.
Days 6–8: The Peanut Butter Test
Now add bait for the first time. Start with peanut butter + honey (the universal option). Apply a pea-sized amount with a cotton swab inside the top dome chamber. Leave the trap OFF. Check daily — if bait is being nibbled, you've found your winner. Move to Step 5.
Days 9–11: Switch to Nutella
If peanut butter wasn't touched, swap to Nutella or chocolate hazelnut spread. The cocoa volatile compounds attract different species, especially roof rats and mice. Trap stays OFF.
Days 12–14: Try Protein Bait
Still nothing? You likely have Norway rats — they prefer protein over sweets. Try dried meat, beef tallow, or bacon grease with a drop of aniseed oil. This is the heavy-hitter for barn and outdoor rats.
Confirm & Activate
Once you see consistent nibbling, the rodents trust both the trap and the bait. Now activate the trap. This is when catches happen reliably.
Pro Tips for Bait Testing
- Always wear gloves when handling bait — your scent is the #1 reason rodents avoid traps
- Pre-warm bait in a spoon for 10 seconds — heat releases aromatic compounds that travel further
- Use LESS bait, not more — a pea-sized amount forces the rodent to engage the trigger to eat
- Remove competing food sources first — pet food, compost, bird feeders, fallen fruit
- If you see droppings but bait isn't touched after 10 days, move the trap — you're in the wrong spot, not using the wrong bait
Where to Place Your Trap — and Where Not To
- Flush against walls at 90° angle to travel path
- Dark corners, behind appliances, under sinks
- Along baseboards where droppings are visible
- Near entry points — gaps, holes, pipe penetrations
- Outdoors: along fence lines, near visible burrows
- Garage perimeter, shed walls, barn corners
- Center of a room — rodents avoid open space
- Near doorways with heavy foot traffic
- Next to pet food bowls (competing food source)
- Near compost bins — remove competing food first
- In bright light — rodents avoid illuminated areas
- Too close to bird feeders or fallen fruit
Everything You Need to Know
Take Back Your Space
No poison. No suffering. No recurring costs. Clean, fast, automatic rodent control — recharged by USB and reset by engineering.
Shop Now — $129.00 Bulk Pricing / Contact UsDeploying 5+ traps? Request a bulk pricing quote — we offer volume discounts for farms, warehouses, pest pros, and property managers.