Natural Bug Repellent Recipes That Work!

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Every year as warmer weather approaches, I make several homemade products for summer. This includes my homemade sunscreen and these natural bug repellent recipes.

I don’t use sunscreen often because it limits vitamin D production. I prefer to eat my sunscreen instead. This homemade insect repellent spray recipe, on the other hand, gets daily use where we live (unfortunately!).

Why Homemade Bug Spray?

At my house, we joke about mosquitoes being the size of birds. They certainly do seem to come in flocks! Keeping bugs away with a good mosquito repellent is a top priority, especially with small children who are prone to scratching mosquito bites.

It’s not just annoying bites that we have to worry about. Some mosquitos can transmit diseases like Zika and West Nile virus. Then there are fleas and ticks infected with Lyme disease, Bartonella, and more.

According to the CDC, about 6% of all mosquito types are known to transmit diseases. But it’s impossible to know which ones when you’re just enjoying an evening outside.

Many natural bug-repellent options from the store aren’t my first option either. The label may say all natural and plant-based but they’re full of soybean oil and undisclosed proprietary ingredients. For example, one popular brand of DEET-free natural mosquito repellent features oil of lemon eucalyptus. However, the other 70% of the ingredients list is a mystery.

What’s the Deal with DEET?

While I am serious about avoiding bug bites, I don’t want to use nasty pesticides and repellents like DEET to do it. DEET is in many commercial insect repellents and has mixed results when it comes to safety.

The EPA weighed in on DEET in 1998 and again in 2014, concluding it doesn’t have health concerns for most people, even for kids. Looking at their long list of warnings and precautions, I’ll stick with my natural bug spray.

Dr. Aboue Donia, a pharmacologist found that rats treated with an average human dose of DEET had some issues. They performed far worse than control rats on physical tasks requiring muscle control, strength, and coordination.

In the same study, DEET caused neurons to die in parts of the brain that control muscles, learning, memory, and concentration. Young children are more at risk because their skin absorbs things more readily.

It’s also interesting to note that so far the EPA has yet to complete an endocrine disruptor screening on DEET. So we don’t know know how it affects hormones.

Another common pest control option is picaridin, a synthetic chemical derived from piperine. Runoff from these products contaminates the water supply and is known to cause deformities in certain animals. So what is it doing to us?

Natural Alternatives to DEET

As with most household items, you can make natural bug spray cheaply and naturally at home. Lotion with coconut oil is another DIY I like to make instead of buy. This recipe takes just minutes to mix up. You can use different ingredients based on what you have available. I’ve included several variations so you can try whichever one you have the ingredients for.

5-Minute Essential Oil Natural Bug Repellent

This is the best bug spray recipe I’ve found. It uses essential oils, which are really effective for natural bug protection. I prefer not to put this blend directly on skin, especially on kids. Instead, I use it on clothing or our gear.

Any combination of these essential oils will work

All of the above have insect and mosquito-repelling properties. I’ve included the mixture I use below. For this recipe, I use 100 drops of essential oil in total with a mixture of various oils. If you don’t have a certain oil you can leave it out or use a mixture of the others in its place.

Don’t Want to DIY Your Natural Bug Repellent?

Don’t feel like making your own? There are some really great pre-made bug-repellant options now.

To save time, I sometimes use a pre-mixed kid-safe essential oil blend. It’s made to repel insects and can replace the other oils in the recipe below. Here are a few premade natural bug spray options that don’t require any mixing at all.

I definitely recommend spot-testing for allergic reactions anytime you’re using a new product on your skin, whether it’s natural or not.

Natural Bug Repellent Recipes

I use this bug spray to spray my kid’s clothing on their way out the back door in the summer. I also pack one in our first aid kit when camping or hiking. This homemade anti-itch cream is also handy to carry in case of a random bug bite!

How to make natural bug spray in about five minutes
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3.96 from 136 votes

Natural Bug Repellent Recipe

Make this 5 minute simple & effective homemade bug spray recipe with essential oils and other natural ingredients to keep mosquitos and insects away.
Prep Time10 minutes
Total Time10 minutes
Yield: 1 cup
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

  • In a glass spray bottle, combine the essential oils.
  • Add the vodka or rubbing alcohol and shake well to combine.
  • Pour in the witch hazel and shake again to combine.
  • Add the vegetable glycerin if using. It isn’t necessary, but it does help everything stay combined.
  • Add the water and shake again.
  • Shake before each use as the oils and water will naturally separate over time.

Notes

How to Use:
I keep a bottle of this bug spray by the back door for easy application. I also pack one in our first aid kit when camping or hiking. I find it’s also handy to carry this homemade anti-itch cream in case of the random bug bite!

DIY Bug Repellent Recipe Variations

Natural bug sprays can also be made without essential oils. Just use dried herbs and witch hazel or vinegar. This recipe is less expensive, but it’s not as potent as the recipe above.

Herbal Bug Spray Ingredients

Herbal Bug Spray Instructions

  1. Boil water, then add the herbs.
  2. Mix well, cover, and turn off the stove. Let cool completely. Covering is important to keep the volatile oils in!
  3. Strain out the herbs and mix the tea with witch hazel or alcohol. Store in a spray bottle in the fridge for up to a week.
  4. Use as needed. Added bonus: it smells great and is very refreshing to the skin.

TIP: You can also use the above herbs and make an alcohol tincture instead for longer shelf life. Add 1 part tincture to 1 part water before use and spray liberally on clothing.

Vinegar Tick and Insect Repellent Recipe

Fair warning: this stuff stinks when it’s wet. Thankfully the smell disappears as it dries. It works really well though. I use this spray whenever I’m going deep into the woods or other tick-infested areas.

It’s based on a recipe that was rumored to be used by thieves during the Black Plague to prevent sickness. Legend has it that the thieves survived thanks to this bug blend. Regardless if the story is true or not, it definitely makes a great insect repellent.

This recipe is cheap and you probably already have the ingredients in your kitchen.

Vinegar of the Four Thieves Insect Repellent Ingredients

Vinegar of the Four Thieves Insect Repellent Instructions

  1. Put the dried herbs into the large glass jar. Pour the vinegar over the herbs until the jar is almost full.
  2. Seal tightly and store in a cool, dry place. Shake occasionally.
  3. After 2-3 weeks, strain the herbs out. Store the vinegar in spray bottles or tincture bottles, preferably in the fridge.
  4. To use on skin, dilute to half with water in a spray bottle and use as needed.
  5. Use it whenever you need serious bug control!

Note: This mixture is very strong and has antiviral and antibacterial properties. It can also be used as a tincture for many illnesses. For adults, I use 1 tablespoon in water several times a day. For kids over two, I use 1 teaspoon in water several times a day.

Other Simple Natural Bug Repellent Ideas

  • Use a non-toxic, plastic-free insect-repelling band like these. They’re easier to use on children and very effective.
  • Add vanilla extract to either of the above recipes or just rub it on the skin. You can also mix vanilla with witch hazel and water for a spray version.
  • Plant insect-repelling herbs in your yard. I grow lavender, thyme, mint, and citronella near our patio and we use these fresh plants as bug repellent in a pinch.
  • Rub lavender flowers or diluted lavender oil on your skin to repel insects.
  • Rub fresh or dried leaves of anything in the mint family all over your skin to repel insects. Peppermint, spearmint, catnip, pennyroyal, etc., or citronella, lemongrass, etc. Basil is also said to repel mosquitoes. I’ve used fresh basil leaves in the garden with great success before.

What are your tricks for keeping bugs at bay? Which do you think is worse… the insects or the chemicals in most repellents?

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

570 responses to “Natural Bug Repellent Recipes That Work!”

  1. Tonya Avatar

    Hello Wellness Mama,

    I stumbled upon your sight through pintrest, and im very glad i found it! I work for the forest service as a wildlife biologist, So im out in the night with a thick swarm of mosquito around me. Im also allergic to the bits since they all seem to swell up to about the size of a quarter or bigger! I had to use deet, just on my clothes, and that still barley helped! Im dying for a way to keep them off me and from biting me through my clothes. I am going to give your recipe a try, and ill let you know my results, thanks so much for the recipe!

    1. Elaine Avatar

      For those bites, I learned by accident (Grandson covered with huge red welts) that an aloe plant is worth its weight in gold for that. Tried it hoping to ease the itching–it did–furthermore the next morning he announced that the bites were gone! They were, just the tiniest dot, not itching or anything. I suspect that the gel straight from the leaf might be more effective than a commercial extract.

  2. Bess Avatar

    I really, really want to try making the bug repellant. Would you mind letting me know how many drops you use of each essential oil in your favorite blend? I do not know much about them and I am afraid I will not make it as potent as it should be. Thanks!

  3. kim Avatar

    Raw Apple Cider Vinegar with the mother or just the average grocery store kind? Thanks!

  4. Lisa Avatar

    I am a mosquito magnet as well. Rub a dryer sheet on your skin. Seems to work for me…

  5. David Avatar

    I have had mixed success with essential oils – in Scotland we have tiny flies called Midges which are very hard to repel. We use eucalyptus smelling herb called big myrtle, but the essential oil appears to be less effective than rubbing on the fresh herb.
    What also REALLY works though is taking vitamin B1 or ideally a whole B complex, ideally a week before exposure as it build up I. Your system, comes out your pores and makes you smell (to the Mosquitos and Midges) more like a plant than an animal – I ran out of BVits half way through a Thailand holiday and the Mosquitos (which had left me alone completely until that point) suddenly started biting. I got some more B vits and within days they were ignoring me again

  6. Chandler Avatar
    Chandler

    Hi there, Lovely! I just made this with 1 heaping T ea of dried lavender, dried catnip, dried spearmint, 1 heaping tsp dried rosemary, 1/2 tsp ground cloves, 8 oz boiling filtered water – ended with about 5 oz of “tea” to which I added 6 oz of rubbing alcohol + 20 drops each geranium EO, lavender EO, lemongrass EO. I used all organic oils and herbs. Filled qty 3 – 4oz bottles, added pretty labels, and we’re off to brave the bugs. 🙂 Thank you!

  7. Dana Avatar

    Would your essential oil bug spray recipe be safe on a newborn? My daughter is two months old and I absolutely do not want to use any chemicals on her delicate skin. Would appreciate your advice.

  8. Victoria Avatar
    Victoria

    Hey – I’m going to give a couple of these options a try. I’ve heard about the Thieves oil products, but I’m curious about the tincture you mentioned. Can that be ingested? I’m so new to this! I googled it a bit but need clarification. We live in Thailand and deal with so many bugs and sicknesses and it would be great to have a few options to pull out of my bag! Thank you!

  9. Kristy Avatar
    Kristy

    Are all the ingredients for the bug repellent safe to use during pregnancy?

  10. Lauren Avatar

    I’ve tried lavender essential oil, and it works really well! My son and I sat in a mosquito infested field last 4th of July to watch the fireworks, and the mosquitoes wouldn’t even land on us. Thank you so much for the other recipes, I can’t wait to try them. 🙂

    -Lauren

  11. Jen Avatar

    I am really enjoying the recipes on your site (love my tooth powder!) Since you recently answered another question on this post a month ago, I’m hoping you’ll catch this comment. Someone posted a question here a long time ago about the ratios of dried herbs to essential oils. They were looking to help their horse who suffers from a midge bite allergy (the condition is commonly known as “Sweet Itch”). The horse will literally scratch their hair off in an attempt to quell the itch.

    The question was never answered, and I’m sure you are flooded with comments and questions here and can’t possibly answer every single one, but I am wondering the very same thing.

    Our Taya (an Arabian/Paint mix) suffers horribly from Sweet Itch every year, and I would love to have something to help her. Right now my only solution is to save up for a Boyette blanket to the tune of about $350, which might take me awhile to achieve. I’m all the way at the beginning of the essential oil journey, and I’ve just graduated from completely clueless to largely clueless ;o)

    That said, here’s my question: If I buy the four thieves blend, how much of it would I need to add to the vinegar to make it work?

    Thank you!

    1. Kimberly Avatar
      Kimberly

      I hope you’ll check back and see my comment: I have a mare and my mom now has a gelding who both suffer from sweet itch. We use garlic powder that helps. You have to feed it for a bit for it to build up in their system but it works for us. Good luck! You have my sympathy in dealing with a horse who suffers from sweet itch!!

  12. elynn Avatar

    Hi Kate,

    I would like to know for the ingredients in the natural bug spray, what can I replace with if I do not have Witch Hazel or Cider Vinegar? You mentioned that it’s for preserving purpose. If I omit that ingredient, how long can I keep the bug spray in a humid country like Singapore?

    Thanks!

    Regards
    Elynn

  13. Penny Yen Avatar
    Penny Yen

    After all sorts of reading and research, I decided to make neem oil soap. It will stink like the dickens, but I am hoping that at least some of the neem oil will stay on my skin and keep the mosquitoes and bugs at bay. I am also waiting patiently for the summer time to see if a neem oil spray will work when I spray it on my window screens.

    A friend of mine once said that taking a garlic pill twice a day helped to keep the little annoyances away as well.

  14. Ieshea Avatar

    Hello
    Do you have an alternative to the lavender as just a whiff of it gives me migraines and anything physically having to do with it brings on asthma attacks,hives and so forth to having to be taken immediately in the hospital
    thank you

  15. Nick Avatar

    I wonder if you would trust these if travelling where the threat of dengue fever or malaria is very real or fallback on a proven (though unpleasant) option like deet. Just apprehensive where getting bitten can be very seriously health damaging.

    1. Minny Avatar

      I worked for a year in Dengue Fever research in Thailand. My modest advice after discovering our cholera shots did not protect us and many other disturbing facts on Malaria and TB is take Mamas formula and every other
      Precaution but take one more thing…..and start it before…during….and after your trip…Jim Humble’s MMS!!! No matter what you are exposed to, you’ll be fine! Buying it is tricky, but in his on line book he gives the recipe ….you can make it in your kitchen. I would treat all water and take it systemically . Actually, I would use a Therapik from Walmart to neutralize the itch and kill ANY possible threat with MMS taken systemically .
      The greatest power of this combo is to Enjoy outdoors anywhere with NO fear.

    2. Marlien Avatar

      I have exactly the same question. Traveling to a denque fever area and was advised to use DEET. On the lookout for alternatives without citronella (I am allergic to that smell).

  16. Bridgette Davis Avatar
    Bridgette Davis

    Hi, are all the recipes above including the thieves recipe ok to use on my 8 month old son? Is 86% witch hazel with 14% alcohol ok to use in the recipes?

  17. Kathryn Constantini Avatar
    Kathryn Constantini

    made the five thieves one, we live in thick woods where the mosquitoes eat us alive and my husband uses it most when he works on the house. He says he never gets bit. We also put some n our son and it works awesome 😉

  18. Shelby Irvin Avatar
    Shelby Irvin

    Excited to try out these recipes. 🙂
    For a shampoo suggestion – I use a recipe of 1 part raw honey and 3 parts distilled water, with some lavender essential oil. So far it’s pretty fantastic, and has tamed my frizzy mane into lovely ringlets. It does mold after a week or two, so I make a single-use batch right before I shower.

  19. Mcvey Avatar

    The 4 thieves formula works very well, however it is better if you use all the herbs in teas so your body has absorbed them.The best that I have come across to date.

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