Feeding ferals or your own outdoor cat shouldn’t mean feeding the whole ant colony. Here’s how to stop the invasion for good.

🐱 Feral & Outdoor Cats 🐜 Ant PreventionšŸ“ Gwinnett County, GA

If you’ve ever set out food for a feral cat colony — or your own beloved outdoor kitty — only to return and find it completely overtaken by ants, you know exactly how frustrating this problem is. The food goes to waste, the cats lose interest, and suddenlyĀ you’reĀ the one being swarmed. Here in Georgia, where the warm weather practically rolls out the welcome mat for ants nearly year-round, this is a real and persistent challenge. The good news? It’s very solvable — and you don’t need harsh chemicals to do it.

 

Why Ants Are So Drawn to Cat Food

Cat food — wet food especially — is an ant magnet. It’s protein-rich, aromatic, and often left out in the open where scout ants can find it quickly. Once a single scout discovers the bowl, it lays a chemical trail back to the colony and within minutes, you’ve got a parade. Dry kibble isn’t immune either; the fat and protein content is just as attractive.

In the South, fire ants and Argentine ants are the most common culprits, and both are relentless. Understanding that ants need a physical path to reach the bowl is the key to the solution.

šŸ’”Ā The Golden Rule

Ants need a physical path to reach food. Break the path — with water, a barrier, or elevation — and you solve the problem without harming the cats, the ants, or the environment.

 

7 Proven Ways to Keep Ants Out

 

šŸ’§The Water Moat Method

Set the food bowl inside a larger shallow dish or tray filled with water. Ants can’t swim across, so the food stays completely protected. This is the #1 most effective method — simple, chemical-free, and reusable.

🦺Ant-Proof Elevated Bowls

Purpose-built ant-proof cat bowls have a moat built right into the stand. Brands likeĀ DurapetĀ and others sell these online. A great investment if you’re feeding a regular feral colony.

šŸ«™Vaseline or Food-Safe Grease on the Stand

Apply a ring of petroleum jelly or food-grade mineral oil around the legs of a bowl stand or the outside of a pot. Ants can’t get traction and give up. Reapply every few days or after rain.

🌿Natural Deterrents Around the Feeding Area

Ants hate certain smells. SprinklingĀ cinnamon, dried mint, or food-grade diatomaceous earthĀ in a ring around the feeding station can deter them without any risk to cats.

🪵Elevate the Station

Place the feeding bowl on top of a concrete block, upside-down pot, or wooden platform. Apply Vaseline to the base. The combination of height plus a barrier is highly effective, especially for fire ants.

ā±ļøTimed Feedings — Pick Up the Bowl

For ferals especially, feed at consistent times (morning and evening) and remove any uneaten food after 20–30 minutes. No food in the bowl = no ant problem. This also discourages wildlife.

šŸ”¦Relocate the Feeding Station

Sometimes the feeding spot itself is the problem — too close to an ant trail, a wood pile, or landscaping where colonies thrive. Move the station to a clean, hard surface like concrete or pavers, away from mulch and soil, and you’ll dramatically reduce ant traffic. In the Georgia heat, a shaded concrete area works great.

 

Setting Up the Perfect Ant-Proof Feeding Station

If you’re feeding a feral colony or a dedicated outdoor cat like a beloved backyard regular, here’s how to build a reliable setup from scratch:

  1. Choose a hard, flat surfaceĀ Concrete or pavers are ideal. Avoid mulch, soil, or grass directly under the feeding area where ant colonies nest.
  2. Use a bowl-inside-a-tray moat setupĀ Place a shallow tray (like a plant saucer) filled with about an inch of water. Set the food bowl in the center of the tray. Make sure the food bowl doesn’t touch the edges of the tray.
  3. Add a cinnamon or diatomaceous earth ringĀ Sprinkle food-grade diatomaceous earth or cinnamon in a wide circle around the entire station as a second line of defense. This also deters roaches and other insects.
  4. Serve and monitorĀ Put out food at regular times. Wet food should be picked up within 20–30 minutes in warm weather to prevent spoilage and reduce ant attraction.
  5. Refresh the water moat dailyĀ Dump, rinse, and refill the tray each day. Stagnant water can attract mosquitoes, and a clean moat is a more effective barrier. Wash the food bowl at the same time.

āš ļøĀ Important: What NOT to Use Around Cats

Some common ant-control products areĀ toxic to cats — even when used near a feeding station. AvoidĀ essential oilsĀ (especially tea tree, eucalyptus, and peppermint),Ā borax-based ant baits,Ā chemical pesticide sprays, andĀ citrus peelsĀ in large amounts around areas where cats eat or rest. When in doubt, keep all pest-control products far away from feeding zones. Cats are curious, and their grooming habits mean they can ingest residue from surfaces they walk on.

 

Wet Food vs. Dry Food: Does It Matter?

Wet food is more attractive to ants due to its strong smell and moisture — and in Georgia’s heat, it also spoils much faster. If you’re feeding ferals, consider usingĀ dry kibble during summer monthsĀ and reserving wet food for cooler morning or evening feedings when you can supervise and remove it promptly.

For your own outdoor cat who has scheduled mealtimes, wet food is absolutely fine — just commit to the timed feeding routine and always use the water moat setup.

 

šŸ›’Our Favorite DIY Solution

You don’t need to spend much! AĀ 10-inch terra cotta plant saucerĀ (about $3 at any garden center) filled with water makes a perfect moat for a standard cat bowl. Add a small stone in the center if you need to elevate the bowl above the water line. Clean, simple, and it works beautifully — even for the most determined fire ants.

Special Considerations for Feral Colonies

Feeding a TNR (Trap-Neuter-Return) colony comes with its own set of challenges. Here are a few extra tips that make a big difference:

Use Multiple Stations

Spread food across two or three stations rather than one large bowl. This reduces competition among cats and means you’re not putting all your food — and all the ant risk — in one spot.

Keep It Consistent

Feral cats thrive on routine. Feed at the same time each day and the cats will be there waiting, which means the food disappears faster and sits out less. Fewer ants, happier colony.

Coordinate with Your Caretaker Network

If others in your neighborhood are also feeding ferals, share these tips! A coordinated approach means fewer rogue feeding spots that attract pests, and better overall colony management.

 

Need Help Caring for Your Cats While You Travel? 🐾

2 Paws Up Inc has been caring for cats — indoor, outdoor, and feral — in Gwinnett County since 2003. Our professional, W-2 pet sitters give you total peace of mind.

Learn About Our Cat Sitting Services →

🐾Barbie Klapp — Owner & CEO, 2 Paws Up Inc

Barbie has been a professional pet care provider in Gwinnett County since 2003. She is passionate about community cats, TNR advocacy, and helping pet owners give their animals the safest, happiest lives possible — indoors, outdoors, and everywhere in between.