Salt Stays in Your Topsoil. The Dock Taproot Goes 90cm Down.
Docks survive through massive taproots that reach depths salt can never penetrate. You’ll poison your lawn or borders for years while the dock continues regenerating from root reserves safely underground. Salt treatment gives you two problems instead of one.

Does Salt Kill Docks?
No – and attempting it damages your garden without affecting the dock. Salt cannot penetrate anywhere near the depth of a dock’s taproot, which can extend 90cm or more into the soil. What salt will do is contaminate your topsoil for years, killing grass and surrounding plants while the dock – with its taproot safely underground – continues to thrive and regrow.
Of all the DIY weed treatments people try on docks, salt is among the most counterproductive. You create lasting soil damage without solving the dock problem.
Why Salt Can’t Reach Dock Roots
The scale of a dock’s root system makes salt treatment completely inadequate:

Taproots go 90cm deep. Docks develop thick, fleshy taproots that can reach depths of 90cm or more. Salt applied at the surface penetrates only the first few centimetres. The vast majority of the root system sits safely beyond any salt you apply.
Massive energy reserves. Those thick taproots store enormous energy – enough to regenerate the above-ground plant many times over. Surface salt treatments don’t touch these reserves.
Salt stays in topsoil. Unlike water, salt doesn’t drain freely through soil. It accumulates in the upper layers where grass and shallow-rooted plants grow – not where the dock taproot resides.
Contact treatment only. Salt kills by dehydration on contact. Even if surface roots absorbed some salt, it wouldn’t travel down to kill the deep taproot.
The Damage Salt Actually Causes
While the dock ignores your salt treatment, your garden suffers real harm:

Lawn dies around the dock. Grass has shallow roots in exactly the soil layer where salt accumulates. You create brown dead patches while the dock – rooted far deeper – continues unaffected.
Contamination persists for years. Salt doesn’t break down or wash away quickly in UK conditions. Once in your soil, it can persist for a decade or more. The treated area becomes hostile to most plants you’d want to grow.
Damage spreads with water. Rain dissolves surface salt and carries it beyond your original application area. The contamination zone expands, affecting grass and plants you never intended to treat.
Seeds keep coming. A single dock can produce up to 60,000 seeds per year. Even if you somehow killed one plant with salt, new docks germinate from the seed bank while your poisoned soil prevents grass recovery.

Comparing DIY Methods for Docks
All household remedies fail against dock taproots:
Vinegar: Burns leaves, taproot completely unaffected. At least it doesn’t poison your soil for years.
Salt: Can’t reach deep taproots AND contaminates soil. The worst option – you get the dock plus a damaged garden.
Bleach: Surface damage only, environmental concerns. No advantage over safer methods that also don’t work.
Boiling water: Cools before reaching 90cm taproots. Safest failure option but still completely ineffective.
What Actually Works on Docks
To eliminate docks properly, you need systemic herbicide that travels from leaves down through the entire taproot:
Systemic herbicide approach. Apply glyphosate-based weedkiller when docks have plenty of healthy leaf area. The herbicide absorbs through foliage and travels throughout the plant’s vascular system, reaching the taproot 90cm below – something no surface treatment can achieve.
Protect your soil. Unlike salt, glyphosate breaks down in soil without leaving lasting contamination. Grass recovers around the treated dock while the weed dies completely.
Spot treatment works. You can treat individual docks without affecting surrounding lawn. A professional-strength spot treatment kills the dock while grass remains healthy.
Address the seed bank. Treat docks before they set seed to prevent the problem multiplying. One season of effective treatment can dramatically reduce dock numbers for years to come.
Kill the Dock, Not Your Lawn
Systemic treatment reaches taproots 90cm deep without poisoning soil. Your grass stays healthy while docks die completely.






