8 Easy Ways To Keep Snakes Away From Your Yard

Snakes go where their basic needs are met: food, shelter, and water. If your yard supplies that trio, it can unintentionally become prime habitat. The first step is cutting off the food chain. Secure garbage bins with tight lids, close up compost containers, and clean up fallen fruit promptly. Store pet food indoors, and avoid leaving bowls outside overnight. If you use bird feeders, place them toward the outer edges of your property and clean up spilled seed regularly—rodents are drawn to easy meals, and snakes often follow the rodents.
Next, reduce the hiding spots. Keep grass trimmed short and prune back dense shrubs, especially near foundations. Remove brush piles, stacked firewood, scrap lumber, and thick groundcover that create cool, shaded cover. If you keep firewood, elevate it on a rack and store it away from the house. Seal gaps under sheds, decks, and fences where snakes might slip through. The goal is to make your yard feel open and exposed rather than safe and secluded.
Water sources matter, too. Fix leaky hoses and irrigation lines, fill low spots where rainwater pools, and refresh birdbaths frequently so they don’t become reliable hydration points. Even small, consistent moisture can turn part of a yard into an inviting hunting ground.
Some homeowners also use plant-based deterrents. Lemongrass, for example, has a strong citrus scent that many believe discourages snakes while also helping repel mosquitoes. While no plant guarantees complete prevention, combining scent deterrents with habitat control strengthens your overall approach.
None of these steps are dramatic on their own. But together—and maintained consistently—they shift your yard from ideal snake territory to an area that feels inconvenient and exposed. And when a space stops offering easy food, comfortable cover, and dependable water, most snakes will simply move along in search of somewhere more accommodating.



