







🐭 Catch mice, not germs—humane, reusable, and hassle-free!
The Trazon Humane Mouse Trap 4-pack offers a durable, no-kill solution for catching and releasing mice safely. Crafted from high-impact ABS plastic, these traps are weather-resistant and reusable, featuring an easy-to-clean bait compartment with convenient notches for quick release without touching the rodents. Ideal for indoor and outdoor use, they provide a hygienic, eco-friendly way to manage multiple mice invasions with minimal effort.






L**Y
It Works!
It works! It took a few days but it caught the mouse. We spotted this little mouse running back and forth behind the TV in the living room first time in the 58 years I've lived in this house that I ever had a mouse. This was a little tiny field mouse and the only one that we've seen and no evidence anywhere even especially the kitchen that there was even a mouse in my house. so I ordered this set of traps because I wanted something humane, and I ordered a set of ultrasonic repellers and between the two within a few days after setting everything out my sister and I were sitting in the living g room and we heard a snap and this trap caught this little field mouse. Took a ride to a big open field and released it. So now it can live in the field where it belongs. So if you're looking for a Humane mouse trap that really works and is easy to set up and doesn't cost the Earth then this is the one. Thank you
B**S
Got him!
I accidentally left an unopened almond chocolate bar in a gift bag in my bedroom and started hearing what ended up being a mouse in the wee hours of the morning, waking me up. I purchased a 2-pack of these so that a spring trap wouldn’t give me a heart attack in the middle of the night. I broke small pieces off the chocolate bar he was sneaking and used them for bait. It was easiest to put the chocolate into the bait compartment and then load the part into the rest of the trap while holding it upside down. It’s easy to open and set, just press down the door until it clicks and set it in their path. Although it’s plastic, I think it feels like pretty good quality. I don’t care if it’s not fancy, it’s a trap. It’s also heavy enough to keep itself in one place on the floor. We kind of scared the little guy away when we moved the gift bag and rummaged around looking for him, but after 2-3 nights of having it up, he finally made another appearance. We’ve caught him and he’s very much alive. It will be easy to clean, there’s condensation inside (probably from urine) but I’ll just rinse it out with warm water. This was my first personal encounter with using a mouse trap - hubby used to work pest control - and I have to say, there probably isn’t a better mouse trap to build with as easy to use, sturdy, and effective as this one is. Removing mice from the home is easy and effective with this trap!
M**N
Super effective and humane trap!
One of the easiest traps to set and then most effective for mice. Also super easy to release the little guys somewhere faaar away!
S**Y
Both Trazons and CaptSures catch mice
I’m only giving the Trazon a 4 because I don’t know how long they will last. First impression I’d give it a 5. Because we frequently get mouse infestations now without a cat in the house (our brilliant elderly mouser died) or a feral outside (we caught the feral last winter when it got too cold), the mice invade. Last year I used the CaptSure. They work well for a while, but possibly they’re too short in length, or maybe the trigger is too close to the door, so about 20% of the time the mouse gets its tail stuck in the snap door. Also the little plastic “latch” on the trigger wears out (yes, after about 20 mice or so, but still…). This year we’re trying both CaptSure and Trazon. I think the Trazons are easier to use: the bait/release door is easier to open to both peanut-butter the lever and release the mouse from the trap, the trap is taller although shorter than the CaptSure; and because so far this trapping season we have 35 mice in six days in four traps, the Trazon seems more robust. The CaptSure, however, has a lighter-tint than that Trazon which makes it easier to check for mice without needing to pick up the trap. The Trazon is also heavier, and with its darker tint, it’s more difficult to both see inside and (when you pick it up) evaluate by weight whether there’s a baby/juvenile in there. You gotta look to see if the door is sprung. Anyway, both are good. You WILL catch mice, so check the traps AT MINIMUM first thing in the morning and in the evening—I’m catching them all day long. You go to the trouble of live-trapping so keep them alive by releasing them quickly AND release them as far away from dwellings as you can. Far far away. They come back otherwise. And release them all together so they find one another.
P**E
Works to safely and harmlessly remove mice.
Poison is a terrible way to kill mice, it eats them up inside and they die a painful death. Traps are quick, but only it they catch them at the right spot along their neck.So these are great for catching mice and you can easily release them in the wild. I just put a little peanut butter on the end slab, then set it easily by dropping down the door. There are air vents and the plastic is thick enough they can;t chew it, unlike other traps. To release the mice, just open the other end once you found where you want to place them. I go to the park in an area that is mice friendly and they will survive off the grass and underbrush. Just slide up the other end cap and give them a moment to run off. You can wash the trap out easily and re-use. Just wish it was a little lighter color to see them more easily inside.
D**5
It Just Works... Really really well
After 2 exterminators and all their fancy traps were left empty this trap actually worked and caught a mouse. Just dumped the dead mouse and reset it. I can't recommend this trap enough. I baited it with the regular green mouse poison bricks. Buy buy buy!!!
W**R
Didn't work for me, good idea though
I either have a mouse that can levitate or it's not chunky enough to trip the trap. I thought that the mouse wasn't bothering with the trap at first as the holes to get to the bait are very small. So I added some oats to the interior of the trap. This was useful as I could see them through the trap to tell if the mouse had been there. Those oats were eaten. I decided to redo the trap as some of the oats has slipped under the trigger pad, so I assumed that was what prevented it from tripping. I put one oat and one peanut on the interior of the trap at the very back next of the trap. I made sure nothing slipped under the trigger. Sure enough, the peanut and oat were gone and the trap did not trip. I will be trying a different type of trap next. I'm sure this would work just fine for a heavier mouse. I do think the bait holes are too small on the inside though.