Small Hive Beetle Baitable Trap

Small Hive Beetle Baitable Trap

Single
$3.00
Sale price  $3.00 Regular price 
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Small Hive Beetle Baitable Trap

Small Hive Beetle Baitable Trap

$3.00
Sale price  $3.00 Regular price 
Count

Small hive beetles move to the darkest corners of the hive when bees chase them. That's the behavior the Beetle Jail exploits. Place it in the top corners between the outermost frame and the hive wall, and you're putting an oil-filled trap exactly where the beetles are heading. Bees chase beetles toward the corners. Beetles enter the trap through narrow slots. They drown in the oil. You clean and reload.

The three-compartment design is what separates this from the disposable Beetle Blaster. Two compartments hold oil — vegetable oil is the standard fill, apple cider vinegar is a common alternative that some beekeepers find more attractive to beetles. The third compartment is a bait chamber: you can fill it with fermenting fruit (melon rind, banana peel), ACV, or a dedicated bait like ByeBye Beetle. You can also use diatomaceous earth in place of oil if you prefer a dry trap. The flexibility to swap bait types mid-season is the main practical advantage over disposable options — if one bait isn't producing, you change it without buying new traps.

We've found 2–4 traps per box is the right range depending on beetle pressure. The trap sits between the outer frames and the box wall, so it doesn't crowd your frames or reduce working space in the hive. Compartments open fully for cleaning — run water through them, shake dry, and reload. We've had the same Beetle Jails running for multiple seasons without replacing them.

Key Features

  • Reusable — open compartments, rinse with water, reload. No need to replace each season.
  • Three-compartment design — two oil chambers for drowning beetles, one bait chamber to lure them in.
  • Accepts multiple bait types — vegetable oil, apple cider vinegar, ByeBye Beetle bait, fermenting fruit, or diatomaceous earth.
  • Fits between frames — sits between the outer frame and hive wall without displacing frames or reducing working space.
  • Thin entry slots — wide enough for beetles, too narrow for bees. Colony is undisturbed.
  • Spring and summer use — place traps when beetle pressure starts in spring; pull or leave in place as pressure drops in fall.

Placement

Place 2–4 traps per box. Put them in the top corners of the upper brood box or honey super, between the outer frames and the side of the hive. Keep them flush with the top bars so there are no gaps where beetles could hide instead of entering the trap. For a detailed placement guide and video, see: How to Catch Small Hive Beetles With a Beetle Jail.

Beetle Jail vs. Beetle Blaster

The Beetle Blaster is disposable — no cleaning, just toss and replace. The Beetle Jail is reusable and accepts more bait options. For beekeepers running multiple hives or who want to experiment with bait types, the Jail is the better value over a season. For beekeepers who want zero maintenance, the Blaster is simpler. We carry both for that reason.

Product Details

Type Reusable in-hive baitable trap
Compartments 3 (2 oil + 1 bait)
Fill Options Vegetable oil, ACV, ByeBye Beetle bait, diatomaceous earth, fermenting fruit
Compatibility 10-frame and 8-frame Langstroth hives
Quantity Options Single / 6-count / 12-count
6-Count Pack Dimensions 6.5 × 2.75 × 2.12 in

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