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How to Keep Cats From Pooping in My Yard: 6 Vet-Verified Safe Methods

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York chocolate cat backyard_Ciprian Gherghias_shutterstock

There’s no way to prevent stray cats from making your yard into their home without getting your hands dirty. And where there are cats, there will be cat poop. It can be frustrating to have a cat pooping or peeing in your yard, mainly because cat waste stinks and contains chemicals that can stunt your plant growth or even kill more sensitive plants. Moreover, their feces can spread parasite eggs, making it a health risk for you and your family. Here are seven tips on how to stop cats from pooping in your yard and using it as their toilet without harming them.
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The 6 Tips on How to Keep Cats From Pooping in Your Yard

1. Clean Up the Cat Poop From the Yard

blue tabby maine coon cat next to conifer tree in the back yard
Image Credit: Nils Jacobi, Shutterstock

One of the most critical factors in keeping your yard cat-free is to deter them by smell. Cats will mark areas and territories using scent markers. Removing “their” odors is part of preventing cats from your yard, so they don’t claim your yard as a specific part of their territory.

Just removing the cat poop when you see it isn’t enough. It would be best to spray the area thoroughly with a hose to wash away the pheromones. Otherwise, the cat will come to deposit more waste for you to pick up since they’ve recognized your yard with their scent.


2. Build a Fence Around Your Yard

You can get anti-cat fences with plastic barbs that resemble barbed wire. The plastic barbs won’t seriously harm any cats that run into it as the barbed wire would, but it helps deter them from your yard by making the area around it impassable territory.

Another option is Oscillot fences, which feature a roller at the top of the bar that prevents cats from rebounding up and over the wall by redirecting the kinetic energy your cat is trying to transfer when they jump up to the top of your wall.

When the cat jumps onto the Oscillot fence, it will rebound once to get its paws up to the wall’s top ledge. Then the top ridge rolls down when the cat puts pressure on it to try and haul itself onto the wall, redirecting the kinetic energy from the jump downwards and preventing the cat from continuing its ascent.

Oscillot fences are traditionally used to keep a pet cat in a yard. However, nothing stops you from installing the Oscillot fence backward and facing the roller out to keep cats out of your yard. Whether you’re using the wall to keep your cat in or other cats out, the look on the cat’s face will be priceless.


3. Grow Cat-Deterring Plants

rosemary-plant
Image Credit: Carlos Pereira M, Shutterstock

Some plants have natural properties that can help deter cats from your property. These include plants with thorns or other barriers that are difficult to pass through. Additionally, you can plant varieties that emit strong odors, which cats find unpleasant. Planting these may discourage cats from frequenting your yard as they try to avoid the scent. However, it’s important to note that some plants marketed as cat deterrents can be toxic to cats. For this reason, we strongly recommend opting for non-toxic plants to ensure the safety of any animals.


4. Automatic Sprinklers

Another way to keep cats from pooping in your yard is to get motion-activated sprinklers. Make sure you set the sensors up near where the cats usually are entering your yard, then you just let them work their magic. Cats won’t usually continue to go somewhere that reflexively sprays them with water just for being there.

Just ensure that your sensors aren’t in a place where your neighbors might accidentally trip them. Although it might sound funny, your neighbors will not appreciate being sprayed by your sprinklers.


5. Cat Repellent Sprays

Spray bottle filled with pure water and vinegar
Image Credit: Ana Portal, Shutterstock

Another option you can use is a commercial cat repellent spray. These contain scents and pheromones that make cats uncomfortable, leading them to avoid places that smell like cat repellent. It’s a fundamental repellant formula, but it’s effective.

You can even get cat repellent sprays that hook up a nozzle to your garden hose to treat large areas.


6. Use Syrup Bottles or Old CDs

Fill syrup bottles with red water, or even just plain water, and place the bottles somewhere where they’ll be exposed to light. It’s believed that the light refracting through the bottled water will scare cats away and deter them from entering your yard.

If you don’t have syrup bottles or don’t like syrup, you can use old CDs to reflect light and keep cats away. Hang them up with a simple string through the center hole and hang them around your yard to reflect light at nearby cats.

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Final Thoughts

There are lots of humane ways to keep cats out of your yard. At the same time, they’re one of the most tenacious and hardy creatures in the world. So, no need to feel bad if you find them frustrating. Even those who love our pet cats find some cat behavior offensive.

Keeping cats out of your yard is a cinch once you start playing the game on their terms. So, get a fence and keep up with cleaning to create your new, cat-free yard experience!

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Featured Image Credit: Gherghias, Shutterstock

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2 Responses

  1. there is lots of field our neighbors cats can poop at but they eat plentiful and its close and convenient to go right next door TO OUR place, they had 2 large cats now 5 are next door and I would simply like to get at a solution before its way out of hand

    1. Hi Manny NunesIII, sorry to hear about your situation. Hopefully, you find one of the methods listed in our post helpful.

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