IIWEY Humane Mouse Trap, Enlarged Smart Mouse and Rodent
IIWEY Humane Mouse Trap, Enlarged Smart Mouse and Rodent Trap, No Kill The Mice, Pets & Children Friendly, Like a Real Mouse Home (2, Large)
How does iiwey humane mouse trap work?
- iiwey humane mouse trap has sold more than 30,000 in Europe.
- Thousands of people solved the mouse problem in a humane way with the help of iiwey humane mouse trap, this trap also protects their children and pets from the danger of poison and mouse killer trap.
Catch mouse easily!
Anyone can become an expert mouse catcher!
No touch release!
Open the front door of the trap from the outside to free mouse!
How to set iiwey humane mouse trap?
The easy way to set traps!
Mice ate the bait but the trap didn’t trigger?
Two reasons can cause this problem:
- Please make sure to put the bait into the bait slot at the end, otherwise the mouse can eat the bait without reaching the trigger position.
- If you encounter little mouse can’t trigger the trap, please try to put two coins on the pedal.
Is it truly humane?
Absolutely yes! In the past 7 years, the iiwey mousetrap has not caused any death or hurt in the world!
Why doesn’t it pinch the mouse’s tail?
The door is closed by gravity (others rely on strong springs), there is even no pain to put your fingers on it. And it have enough safe space (9″/7.4″) for rats to get in safely
What bait do you recommend?
Peanuts, pistachios, peanut butter, crushed nuts, cookies, chocolate, or the food that is often stolen by mice at home.
The bait is eaten but the trap is not triggered?
1. Please make sure to put the bait into the bait slot at the end, otherwise the mouse can eat the bait without reaching the trigger position.
2. If you encounter little mouse can’t trigger the trap, please try to put two coins on the pedal.
I have a big house, how to effectively solve the mouse problem?
We recommend that you choose 4 packs and place traps in places where mice are prone to infestation!
Dimensions: | 32.51 x 15.6 x 8.61 cm; 531 Grams |
Manufacture: | lamoe |
Dimensions: | 32.51 x 15.6 x 8.61 cm; 531 Grams |
Bought 2 more of these after testing my first one for few months.
Our cats keep on bring live mice in the house.
The medium size one even managed to catch a rat.
Tried for a few days with cheese to no avail but he couldn’t resist some Jaffa cakes. Nice to be humane and release into the wild. No problems with trap working. Sounds like a few more to catch yet! Very good product.
I have caught 3 mice since installing them and let them go some distance away.. They are long enough so the mouse has to go deep inside and not quick enough to get out before it shuts.
I bought this mouse trap because it was larger than the others I’d tried, I’d had no luck for months with the smaller mouse traps, I caught the mouse on the 2nd day of using this one so I was very pleased with my purchase.
Good points it works and recommended to buy. Small mice need a bit of weight on the trap, so I put a small pebble inside. I also put a a tiny bit of wd40 on the trip point to make sure it didn’t stick. If cought 3 in the garden. I use peanut butter. My advice is if you see one where you don’t want them, get rid quick. We were too nice and identified and released, now we have a whole litter to catch. Good bit of kit, hopefully will save my conscience from more drastic measures
I was a bit sceptical about the trap when it arrived because it’s plastic, but it is quite robust. The release mechanism for the door is a bit small and fiddly and you need to practice opening it a few times. We caught the garden rat within 3 hours of putting it near the run ( baited the trap with sunflower seeds) and the main body of the trap kept the rat calm and contained because there is no room for it to turn itself around. Excellent product.
It worked, but rat managed to escape Will keep this, as over the years have found we could use a trap occasionally living rurally. Fortunately was outside, so after cutting off all access to water etc, moved on very quickly. Think the cage type is more successful
Caught a mouse with it, which was fine and released into a local field.
Trap works perfect, can be a bit of a pig to clean though. I actually blasted it with a jet wash at work to get the mouse droppings out from my captured buddy.
I have a cat that consistently brings mice (dead or alive) into my bedroom at night. Getting this has saved me the hassle of chasing them around with a cup. I usually place it down against a wall and then let them run into it. For the tiny mice the trap doesn’t usually activate because they don’t press down on the pressure pad much, but it definitely works for the regular sized mice.
It took about 2 days for our furry house guest to get in the trap, we used peanuts and worked a treat. Fuzzy has now been safely evicted back to the fields.
After 12 years trying to catch mice caught and freed by
my Inveterate Mouser “Mittens”. I’ve finally found a solution.
Bought this mouse trap yesterday delivered in 1 day by Amazon Prime.
Set it up last night according to instructions.Opened this morning 10/08/23
Success!! one unharmed Mouse confidently sitting eating cheese and totally
unconcerned when let loose at bottom of garden. I am now buying another as spare.
The best thing is that it keeps the mouse in. It’s very sturdy and there are no parts that the mouse can chew to escape out of it. Very easy to set and release the mouse. I have used them repeatedly. Very easy to clean too.
Great to capture and release.
Court thee in two days . And now none kept set up for further.little Visitors.
Better than using bated with blocks and visitors die somewhere in your household.
Our cat brought a mouse in to play with and straight away lost it in one of the bedrooms where we confined it. I immediately sent for the large size mouse trap thinking the mouse would have room to move around a little bit which would lessen the stress and it would be more likely to go in which it what happened. After it had eaten the small piece of cheese and a few raisins that I placed in as bait, I released it in a hedgerow in a field adjacent to our house which is likely where it came from.
Some reviews have said that a mouse was able to take food without triggering the trap which is impossible in my opinion providing the food is placed in the correct receptacle. There is a small hopper for the food at the very end of the trap which means that a mouse has to pass over the platform which triggers the mechanism. The platform is very sensitive and operates at the slightest touch. The hopper can be accessed by sqeezing the sides together at the very end of the trap to release the end wall of the trap.
All in all I am very satisfied with this purchase and i will keep it for any future mousy encounters.
It’s brilliant! I purchased cheaper ones previously ( 2pk for 12 ones – avoid btw!), one arrived broke and the other broke within a couple of days not to mention the last one had it’s tail caught in the door, so trying to free it’s tail without hurting it even more was a tug on the ol’ heartstrings. As much as they’re bad for your health and home, I didn’t want to harm it but unfortunately it happened and I felt so bad. After looking for another one, I ordered this one and caught “Jerry” tonight. Baiting them with Nutella, it works a treat everytime! I gave him a good dollop so he’s good to go. The traps well made and isn’t flimsy plastic. I went for the large trap to make sure it was long enough for its tail not to get trapped. He had plenty of room which made me happy. I did put a 1p coin on the trap to be on the safe side which I’m glad I did as it was a small mouse and the trap door shut just fine. I released “Jerry” before and he wasn’t in a rush to get escape from the trap as I think he was enjoying his Nutella too much. What can I say, I like them to leave with a full stomach. They’re only trying to survive like we are
Actually managed to catch mice with this one! The fact that it’s larger with the door on the outside is a big plus. You will need to weigh down the mechanism (I used coins) especially for smaller mice.
We had a rat in the house, it came in from outside as we leave the door open a lot, by the time I chose and received the trap it had been running around inside for four days. I had removed and sealed away every trace of food so the rat must have
been very hungry by the time we placed the trap. Put it down in the evening with peanut butter, around the corner from the kitchen so the rat didn’t see us put it down (they are clever!), and went to bed, but within less than two hours felt I should just check the trap before going to sleep. We had caught it! I couldn’t believe it was so quick, but I think it’s really important that the rat is hungry and will go for any food. Made my boyfriend get up and take it outside with me at midnight. Felt a bit sorry for it, it looked terrified but it ran off and we are now rat free. Thank you!
Have been using this trap for a few months now and have caught mice and rats successfully after my cats have brought them into the house. Quite easy to use once you get the hang of it, fiddly to clean (I flush mine through under the outside tap).. one of the trap door springs fell off recently but it still seems to work ok.. Definitely best to place alongside a wall as the rodent sees it as a safe space.. The long length is good so you can catch rats as well as mice and also makes it easier to release them for those of us a bit squeamish
– will probably buy again..
So, I am a woman living alone and this was the first time ever I had a rodent in my home. I did not know what kind of animal it was – from a mouse to a giant rat, the friend that witnessed the animal couldn’t pinpoint its size, so I went for this bigger version. It worked immediately, after a week trying to catch it with some shop bought live trap (crap – too small, probably would kill the mouse by asphyxia and you cant even see if it’s inside) and YouTube DIY traps. I decided that 10 euros more would not harm my finances and bought this trap.
It was the best decision. In only one night, the mouse was there, eating happily, with some space for moving around. It was secure enough, so I brought it myself to a nice scenic natural place close by so it can live its best life (though I wonder if its best life wasn’t inside the cozy trap with peanut butter, dog food and indoor warmth. To be honest the mouse even hesitated leaving the trap, looked at me like “please adopt me” and I had to shake it a bit to kick it out… felt like I’ve got 10 plus karma points for freeing this cute animal instead of killing it.
The mice were cute, but unwanted. This trap did the trick. It is relatively easy to set. As per the instructions, I had to add a small coin to ensure the trap was triggered by the mouse’s weight. I thought this might be fiddly, but it wasn’t. No danger of the mouse’s tail being trapped by the closing door – there can’t be many bigger traps out there – but there is still not a huge amount of room inside, so when I found one trapped in the morning I was concerned he’d been in it for hours. However, he was perfectly fine (and well fed!) and I guess it’s a lot better than the alternative. The trap is a little awkward to clean, I took a star off for that, but it’s much nearer a five than a three.
Great for humanely trapping mice & relocating them. Does what it says.
However, they are AWFUL to clean.
Bought a few of these types of trap on here as I had a family of mice move in behind my kitchen cupboards.
Trapped & moved around 16 mice.
The mice STINK, so bad. They’d go into the traps at night mostly or when I’m at work in the day so they’d be in there a few hours & the stench is disgusting. They poo loads & the droppings manage to get stuck around the sides & under the food lever & you can’t get it out which leaves their scent for the next ‘victims’.
Not sure how this can be improved.
I wouldn’t buy any more, as they are costly when you can only use them so many times.
I needed a mouse trap to catch mice feeding off my bird tray: rats meet their end there from an air rifle pellet but the rim around the tray provides almost complete cover for a mouse. I wanted a trap that would allow me to release unharmed any bird that might be trapped. I haven’t caught any mices yet but I live in hope. The metal reinforcement/ anti-escape-by-chewing parts are plated steel (magnet test,) so will probably rust after extensive use outdoors. I put the bait in the pot at the end of the trap, with the intention to make a mouse move all the way over the trip plate, which will, I hope, overcome reports of a need to add weight on the trip plate to be sure it will move under the weight of a mouse and close the trap. Maybe I have smart mice but one time (so far,) they pushed the trap onto its side, presumably to cause the bait to fall out of the pot, thus disarming the trap (they ate all the bait!) Now it is screwed to a piece of wood to make it more difficult to cowp (I had to open up the fixing holes provided slightly: they seem to be sized for clock-makers’ screws.)
Great device. Caught the mouse in my attic on the first night that I put it there.
Goor tip in the instruction to put a coin on the the trigger flap for light mice (I held my coin in place with a piece of blue tack.
Inadequate instructions for cleaning the m/c, which (if you know what you are doing come completely part to do this. To remove the back panel, squeeze the side lugs in towards the body of the m/c. to remove the floor panel pull the lu /clip (by the spring door and slide it toward the opening (be careful to get the spring in the correct place when you reassemble this.
To open the access door simply hold back the locking lever.
I was skeptical, as was my other half. We had seen live/humane mouse traps before and had experience using ones that just didn’t work. We live out in the sticks, literally in the middle of no where AND we have a cat that likes to ‘go out and play’ so as you can imagine, mice are as common in our kitchen as cups of coffee in the morning. It was one day, when we had 2+ mice eating through all of our porridge in the pantry cupboard (seriously, you’d think there would be better things to eat in there) and we were adding bait to our ‘snap traps’ that we hadn’t used in a while and really didn’t want to, that I thought, I’ll go on Amazon and look one last time for a trap that might do things without the snap. I happened to find this trap, the reviews seemed OK and it looked pretty easy to use so I bought it, and I tell you what, we have not looked back since. We put this trap down with some (seriously it works) cheddar cheese in the back and we have been catching mice continually since day 1. If you want to trap without breaking necks then this is the way to go. Hands down the best humane trap we have tried, and catching another this morning and releasing it back out into the fields reminded me to write this review! Once you lose the snap, you never go back.
This is a good trap. Its easy to set, keeps the trapped animal from escaping without harming it and is easy to bait too. Its also very easy to clean afterwards. Metal linings prevent the mouse from escaping once trapped.
A removable end section allows bait to be set into a tray, then its just a question of re-fitting it, lifting the catch on the door at the opposite end and opening the door fully to set the trap.
I used a piece of chocolate smeared with hazelnut chocolate spread, an irresistible lure for any mouse with taste.
I added two coins on the outside of the trap on the cantilever hinge point to increase the sensitivity and it worked on day one, trapping the mouse overnight and he or she was released without harm in a field the following morning.
It has a couple of drawbacks but these are easily remedied. Firstly the slots on the end are quite wide so if your bait is going, its possibly because a small mouse is able to go into and out of the trap through these slots and is just feasting on the food. Experts say small mice can squeeze through spaces just 5mm wide. So I fixed some wire mesh beneath the metal guard to solve this.
The next issue is the weight required to trip the door. A very small mouse wont push the plate down unless its very sensitive. I weighed mine so that plate drops under gravity with nothing on it then when its set up, the wright of the door just keeps the plate from falling. This should ensure that even the lightest mouse gets trapped.
You may need to experiment and mod the unit a bit to make it more effective but anybody with a modicum of DIY skill can turn this good trap into an excellent one capable of catching even the smallest mouse.
Well I have to say, a wonderfull mouse trap, I hate killing any thing. And this is truly humane, in the sence they have room to move around in once caught, they can still get at there food ( peanut butter ), they can see what’s happening around them, we check each morning with a video set up to see if we have caught any. and they seam very relaxed. The long tube, the are caught in takes too long for them to get back to the exit and is locked by the mechanism, so well that one time we looked in horror as a cat had noticed a mouse trapped and had spent 20 minutes trying to get at it, and failed. The trap had been pulled all around the area it was in. Turned upside down ,and it never came unlocked or broke, so well designed.up to now we have caught over 30 mice, we live close to waist ground and a field, and all let free, a few miles away into a field, one last thing, cleaning is a breaze, the back comes off ( where the food is put ). And the trap mechanism once the back is unclipped just slides back and releases for cleaning. One thing that is suggested is to place a 2 pence coin on the moving slopping floor which activates the trap. This to make it very sensitive, and a Couple drops of super glue to keep the coin in place.
A well designed and well thought out trap. We have bought a few more to up the catch rate. Very recommended.
This little guy took me a few days to catch as before purchasing this I had attempted unsuccessfully and he was now very cautious and a little smarter. After finding the best spot I used unsalted peanuts (just rinsed the salt off salted ones lol) and crushed them, a few coco pops and a small amount of chocolate spread. The first night he took the coco pop from the entrance and didn’t enter. I tried moving the trap along his trail line, still unsuccessfully. When I finally found the perfect spot (after around night 3) I left a trail of three pieces of a crushed peanut, a dab chocolate spread inside the entrance and chocolate spread at the rear of the trip step. This trail lead to the remaining feast. I also placed a 1 coin on the middle of the trip step to make for an easy activation. Not sure at what point the little guy realised he was trapped since most of the feast and all the chocolate spread was gone. In the morning I noticed the trap was closed but couldn’t see him since he was hiding at the side. The feeling having caught him humanely was great! I took him approx 3 miles away to a field and he grabbed the remaining food and (actually quite slowly) left the trap, I also shook out the rest of the food and left him to hopefully enjoy a new life away from my house.
The trap itself had a lot of mouse poop and smelled terrible and was hard to really get in a clean other than that this was the best thing I bought and would 100% recommend this to anyone.
Before I review the mouse trap I think a bit of history would help. We found traces of mice in our loft and set normal lethal traps and caught two large mice. When we spotted a tiny mouse in our lounge we tried to use the same trap reluctantly as there was no way were going to catch him ,he was blazing fast.
My wife was reading her book one evening and just happened to see Moudini (we named it that as will be seen later)
on the trap munching away at the Red Leicster cheese bait.He came back five times and the lethal trap did not trip.
How were we going to catch it – I saw these traps and thought we will give it a go.These traps will catch normal sized mice easily ,it’s the wee ones that are the trouble. My first three attempts at adding weight to the trigger platform let Moudini nick the bait . My failed attempts used a pound coin -no good.Second attempt was with a two pound coin – no good .Third attempt was two ten pence pieces- still no good. Finally i used three twenty piece coins -two on platform edge nearest the bait and the third coin behind in the centre. These coins were fixed in place using bluetack .I had to adjust the positions of the coins (this is so fidly but necessary) ever so slightly to allow the trap to set by the finest margin , so sensitive to allow Moudini (this mouses body was the size of my thumb top joint) to trip the trap. Bingo ,got him -job done.Moudini released into the wild a long way from our house without any harm.
These traps work ,it just takes a bit of time for the mice to work out how to get the bait as they smell it through the end slots ,I suppose it depends from which end they approach the trap.
Sorry for the length of this review but I hope it helps anyone else trying to catch tiny mice. All in all i cant fault these traps .The nice thing is the traps are long so there is absolutely no chance of any mouse’s tail being caught or the mouse being hurt.
I’d had a mouse in the attic for ten months and I’d tried all kinds of home-made traps – many coming from expert YouTubers skilled in the capture of such creatures. He would take the bait from around them (mainly nuts, which he loved) but he was too canny to be caught and always seemed to be one step ahead of me. I didn’t really want to kill him but I was almost at the end of my tether and was about to lay old-fashioned, mice-killing, sprung traps when I saw this advertised on Amazon. I ordered two, baited them with walnuts (his favourite) and put them in the attic. I always wore surgical gloves when handling traps or bait for this little guy just in case my scent put him off his dinner. It didn’t, however, because he was always willing to eat! On the second night he took bait, as previously, from around the trap but was wary of venturing inside. This occurred for two more nights. On the fifth night, around midnight, I was falling asleep and heard the noise of the trap door closing shut. I sprang out of bed to investigate and, sure enough, the game was up! He was dark brown in colour, very small body (length approx. 5cm) with a very long tail and he was walking back and forth, wondering what was going on. Ten minutes later, after a quick journey in the car, I released him in a wooded park well away from the house. He ran off into the undergrowth and I’ve not seen him since. I’m certainly not going to miss him. I cleaned the trap, put more bait down and relaid it. I think he was a lone agent but, if he has accomplices, I’m quite sure they’ll be coming for a ride to the park with me soon enough.