Hasta la Vista, Squirrels!

Squirrels are clever, persistent, and very committed to turning your bird feeder into their personal snack machine. The Eliminator™ Squirrel-Proof Feeder is designed to help solve that problem by protecting your seed while still giving your backyard birds an easy place to feed.

When a squirrel puts its weight on the perch ring, the feeder automatically closes the seed ports. Birds can continue feeding normally, but heavier visitors are blocked from reaching the seed. The adjustable weight setting also lets you fine-tune the feeder to help discourage larger birds, such as pigeons, doves, or blackbirds, if they are taking over your feeding station.

  • Helps keep squirrels from emptying your feeder
  • Adjustable sensitivity can also help limit larger birds
  • Holds about 3 quarts of seed, so you refill less often
  • Seed ventilation system helps keep seed fresher and drier
  • Chew-resistant parts help stand up to determined squirrels
  • Comes apart without tools for easier cleaning
  • Top-rack dishwasher safe parts make maintenance simpler
  • Backed by a limited lifetime guarantee

This feeder is especially helpful if you are tired of squirrels draining your seed, knocking feeders around, damaging plastic parts, or scaring away the birds you are actually trying to attract. It is a strong everyday feeder for popular seed blends and works well for many backyard favorites, including chickadees, cardinals, nuthatches, finches, titmice, woodpeckers, and grosbeaks.

The Eliminator™ is also a good choice when you want a cleaner, lower-maintenance setup. Its larger seed capacity means fewer refills, while the ventilation system helps reduce trapped moisture inside the feeder. When it is time to clean, the feeder can be taken apart and reassembled without tools.

For best results, hang the feeder where squirrels cannot simply jump onto it from nearby trees, railings, roofs, or furniture. Pairing the Eliminator™ with good feeder placement and quality seed gives you a much better chance of feeding the birds instead of funding the neighborhood squirrel buffet.