How long does vinegar take to kill weeds?

Days of Waiting… Then Regrowth

Vinegar works fast – you’ll see wilting within 24 hours. But here’s what nobody mentions: a few weeks later, those same weeds are back. If you want results that actually last, there’s a smarter approach.

Fast Results That Last →

VINEGAR TIMELINE

Visible Wilting in 24 Hours — But Roots Stay Alive

Vinegar burns foliage fast on warm, sunny days. The problem is it never reaches the root system, so what looks like a dead weed is really just a weed waiting to regrow.

How Long Does Vinegar Take to Kill Weeds?

Vinegar works quickly – you’ll typically see visible damage within 24 hours. The acetic acid burns plant tissue on contact, causing leaves to wilt, turn yellow, and shrivel. In ideal conditions (warm, sunny weather), you might even notice effects within a few hours.

This speed is one of the main reasons vinegar has become such a popular homemade weed killer. Compared to systemic weed killers that can take 2-3 weeks to show full results, the instant gratification of vinegar is appealing.

However, there’s an important distinction between “damage” and “kill.” While vinegar damages weeds fast, it rarely kills them permanently. Understanding this timeline – and what happens after – will help you decide if vinegar is worth trying.

Method Visible Damage Kills Roots?
Vinegar (5%) 24-48 hours No — regrowth in 2-4 weeks
Horticultural Vinegar (20%) 6-24 hours No — regrowth in 2-4 weeks
Bleach 1-3 days No — regrowth in 2-4 weeks
Salt 3-10 days Partial — damages soil
Systemic Weed Killer 1-3 weeks Yes — kills entire plant permanently

The Vinegar Timeline

0-6 hours: On a warm, sunny day, you may notice the first signs of wilting as the acetic acid begins to dehydrate plant cells. The weeds start to look slightly droopy.

APPLICATION

Complete Leaf Coverage Is Essential for Contact Damage

Vinegar only damages what it directly touches. Any foliage you miss stays healthy, so thorough spraying is critical — even though it still won’t reach the roots below ground.

24-48 hours: This is when the visible damage becomes obvious. Leaves turn yellow or brown, edges curl inward, and the plant looks thoroughly scorched. At this point, many gardeners assume success and move on.

DAY 1-2

Scorched Leaves Look Like Victory — But It’s Misleading

The brown, curled foliage at this stage convinces most gardeners the job is done. In reality, the root system underground is completely untouched and already preparing to send up new growth.

3-7 days: The visible parts of the weed appear completely dead. Brown, crispy foliage that looks like the job is done.

2-4 weeks: Here’s where the disappointment sets in. Fresh green shoots begin emerging from the base of the “dead” weeds. The roots survived, and the plant is regenerating.

THE CATCH

Without Root Kill, Regrowth Is Inevitable

Two to four weeks after treatment, fresh green shoots appear from the same root system. You’re locked into a cycle of re-spraying that never actually solves the problem.

This regrowth cycle is why vinegar isn’t truly effective as a long-term weed killer. You’re essentially trimming weeds with acid rather than eliminating them.

Factors That Affect Speed

Several factors influence how quickly vinegar damages weeds:

Weather conditions: Warm, sunny days produce faster results. The heat accelerates dehydration, and sunlight intensifies the burning effect. Apply on a dry day with no rain forecast for at least 24 hours – rain will dilute and wash away the vinegar before it can work.

Vinegar concentration: Standard household vinegar contains about 5% acetic acid. Horticultural vinegar with 20%+ concentration works faster but is also more hazardous to handle and no more likely to kill roots.

Weed type and size: Small, young weeds with minimal root systems show damage fastest – and are the only ones likely to actually die. Established perennials with deep roots will show surface damage just as quickly, but will always regrow.

Application method: Thorough coverage matters. The vinegar needs to contact all the foliage to cause maximum damage. Use a spray bottle to coat leaves completely, or pour directly into paving cracks for concentrated application.

Why Speed Doesn’t Equal Effectiveness

Here’s the crucial point many vinegar advocates miss: fast visible results don’t mean the weed is actually dead. Vinegar is a contact herbicide – it only damages what it directly touches. The root system, safely underground, remains completely unaffected.

Compare this to a strong systemic weed killer. Yes, it takes 2-3 weeks to show full results. But during that time, the active ingredient is being absorbed and transported throughout the entire plant – leaves, stems, and crucially, roots. When it finally works, the weed dies completely with no chance of regrowth.

With vinegar, you get fast cosmetic results followed by regrowth and repeat treatments. With a proper weed killer, you get slower initial results followed by permanent elimination. For tough weeds like brambles, ivy, or nettles, there’s really no comparison.

When Vinegar’s Speed Is Useful

Vinegar’s quick action does have some legitimate uses. If you need weeds to look dead quickly – perhaps before a garden party or house viewing – vinegar will deliver that cosmetic result within a day. Just understand that it’s temporary.

For very young seedlings that have just germinated in patio cracks or block paving, vinegar may actually kill them outright if you catch them before they develop substantial roots. Combined with regular maintenance, this can help keep hard surfaces relatively weed-free.

But for established weeds, or anywhere you want long-term results, speed of initial damage is the wrong metric to optimise for. What matters is whether the weed stays dead – and on that measure, vinegar consistently fails.

Alternatives Worth Considering

Other DIY methods like salt, bleach, and boiling water share the same limitation – they’re all contact killers that leave roots intact. If you want something that actually works long-term, a long-lasting weed killer containing glyphosate is your best option for driveways, paths, and gravel areas.

For more on vinegar’s limitations and how it compares to other methods, see our complete guide: Does Vinegar Kill Weeds?

Stop Watching and Waiting

One application that kills roots completely. No regrowth, no repeat treatments, no disappointment two weeks later.

See Results in Days, Not Weeks

About the author 

Chelsey

Hey there, I am founder and editor in chief here at Good Grow. I guess I've always known I was going to be a gardener. I'm on a mission to share my UK based weed control & lawn care tips with you all. If you have any queries please post in the comments below.

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