7 (Better) Alternatives to Salt for De-Icing Driveways (2024)

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7 (Better) Alternatives to Salt for De-Icing Driveways (1)

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Remove ice without harming your driveway, car, plants, and pets!

Robin Sweetser

7 (Better) Alternatives to Salt for De-Icing Driveways (2)

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Before you pour salt on your driveways to melt snow and ice, consider its impact on your plants, pets, pavement, and water quality. Explore seven less harmful ways to melt ice—as well as ways to use lesssalt!

Rock salt (sodium chloride) has been the conventional choice to melt ice on driveways and sidewalks as salt has a lower freezing point than water.Rock salt is effective to approximately 12°F but can damage soils, kill plants and grass, and cause driveway and car problems. It’s also toxic to animals when ingested.Plus, if you care about keeping local waters pristine, salt causes problems with the over-salinization of rivers and lakes.

7 (Better) Alternatives to Salt for De-Icing Driveways (3)

Negative Impact ofSalt

  • If your front walk or driveway is made of porous paving materials like concrete or brick, salt causes freeze and thaw cycles that eat away at it and make it prone to cracking andcrumbling.
  • Salt can dry out and burn your pets’ sensitive paws, causing painful cracks and open sores. Licking the salt off also puts them at risk for gastrointestinal problems. If they ingest enough salt, it can belethal!
  • Salt runoff can contaminate well water and reservoirs and wash into lakes and streams where it is toxic to fish andamphibians.
  • Salt injures plants in many ways often causing a slow death. Roots take up salt which accumulates in plant tissues causing nutrient imbalances. Salts also make it difficult for some roots to absorb water which leads to dryness and droughtstress.
  • Large amounts of sodium can chemically change the clay in the soil, decreasingdrainage.
  • Salt spray, splashed up from the roads, can cause chemical toxicity to the plants, especially evergreens within the splashzone.
  • Salty deposits on the surface of twigs, leaves, and buds dehydrate them and interfere with photosynthesis, transpiration, andrespiration.

Signs of Salt Damage toPlants

The University of Wisconsin lists these signs of salt damage to be on the lookoutfor:

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  • Browning leafedges
  • Wilting during hot dryweather
  • Off-colorfoliage
  • Stuntedgrowth
  • Fewer or smallerleaves
  • Yellow leaves that are a sign ofchlorosis
  • Premature fall color and early leafdrop
  • Smaller than normal flowers andfruit
  • Evergreens with discoloredneedles

7 Alternatives to RockSalt

There’s no “perfect” ice-melt solution, but here are some solutions that are less damaging than 100% rocksalt.

  1. Rubbing Alcohol: In a bucket, mix 1/2 gallon of warm water with 6 drops of dish soap and 1/4 cup of rubbing alcohol ($1.99 for 16 ounces where I live which would make MANY batches). Splash this around on your icy spots and watch the ice bubble up and melt away. It’s very effective and satisfying! The rubbing alcohol has a much lower freezing point than water so it thaws ice and prevents re-icing! (Rubbing alcohol often appears as one of many ingredients in commercial ice melts.)

    You can also combine the alcohol with water in a spray bottle, creating a portable ice-melting solution to keep in your car to defrost your windshield! Often, airplanes use rubbing alcohol to defrost the wings of a plane.

  2. Epsom Salt:Epsom salt isn’t as harmful to plants or vegetation as rock salt (or table salt). You may already have some on hand from the garden. It is an abrasive and melts ice slowly. To speed upyour Epsom salts’ melting power, combine sugar and Epsom salt in a 1:1 ratio. As Epson salt costs more than rock salt (6 pounds for $5.29 where I live), perhaps save it for the front steps when company is coming.Learn about using Epsom salt in the garden.
  3. Garden Fertilizer/Alternative Salts: Check your garage to see if you have any fertilizer left over from gardening, and check the label for the below ingredients. These salts are slightly gentler than rock salt, though they are more expensive and they still have some of the disadvantages of salts described above.

    Calcium chlorideis the popular ingredient in commercial de-icers and melts ice to about -25 degrees F, lower than rock salt. It will form slippery surfaces on its own, so mix it with sand—one part to 3 parts—to stretch it and add abrasive qualities. It’s very quick-acting and melts ice almost instantly. It’s less damaging to concrete than other ice melts. However, overapplication can still harm plants as well as corrode metals, damaging your car.Plus, it’s strength makes it theleastpet-friendly of the salts and very irritating to pets’ paws.

    Magnesium chloride is effective down to 0 degrees and also a popular ingredient in de-icers. The advantage is that it offers a more environmentally friendly alternative to calcium chloride. It causes minimal damage to surfaces, it’s less harmful to plants, and it’s less irritating to pets’ paws than rock salt orcalcium chloride. However, keep it mind it’s still a salt so it still has the issues of salt residue and crumbling driveways as all salts, just less severe.

  4. Urea:While also an ingredient infertilizer,Urea (carbonyl diamide) is not salt-based. It’s environmentally safe and doesn’t cause damage to concrete. It’s often used on airport runways. It can melt ice down to temperatures of 15℉. In the spring, you might notice that the edges of your lawn grow more vigorously!The ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center recommends an urea-based product as it’sgentlest on pets paws and least likely to cause poisoning. Urea is different because it doesn’tpull water from paws as much as salts do. If eaten, urea is nontoxic to dogs (though it may cause vomiting).
  5. Calcium magnesium acetate (CMA):A new, salt-free melting agent, CMA works differently than other materials in that it does not form a brine-like salt. Instead,it helps prevent snow particles from sticking to each other or the road surface. CMA is made from dolomitic limestone and acetic acid (the main compound of vinegar). This material has little impact on plants and animals and is a good alternative for environmentally-sensitive areas. It’s considered biodegradable and don’t damage brick or concrete surfaces. That said, it is a more expensive alternative.
  6. Natural Fertilizer: Alfalfa meal, wood ashes, coffee grounds. Alfalfa meal is a great non-chemical fertilizer that won’t burn your plants. Wood ash from your fireplace contains potassium salts that help melt ice. Ash also absorbs solar energy, increasing the temperature to melt the ice. All these abrasives willhelp speed melting AND improve traction. Plus, they have relatively few impacts on the environment or plants.
  7. Salt Plus Hot Water:Here’s a way to use rock salt but also lessen the harm that it does while increasing its effectiveness! To melt ice more quickly, salt shouldn’t sit on top of the ice; it needs to permeate the ice When that water re-freezes, the corrosive effect of salt damages the concrete. The trick is to use hot water to melt the ice and then a small amount of salt toprevent the liquid water from re-freezing.

    For your doorsteps or a stubborn area, just boil a large pot of hot water and gently poor on ice. The trick is to sweep the water off the surface so that it doesn’t get cold and freeze. Then sprinkle the salts. Using hot water is not less harmful and more effective but also means that you will end up using lesssalt.

7 (Better) Alternatives to Salt for De-Icing Driveways (4)

8 Ways to Use LessSalt

  1. Clear the snow first! The more snow and ice present, the more de-icing compound is needed for melting. Use minimal de-icing product to treat thepavement.
  2. If you’re going to use salt, don’t scatter it around willy-nilly. Put it in the spots where you need it, not over the entire driveway. For example, sprinkle it near the door and along the entryway to your house after you shovel off everything youcan.
  3. Get a shovel with a sharp aluminum edge strip on the end of the shovel scoop. This metal strip is more effective at removing ice from yourdriveway!
  4. When landscaping, avoiding planting right along the driveway. Plant any salt-susceptible plants away from roads andsidewalks.
  5. In the spring, irrigate the areas that had snow/salt buildup to lessen effects to the root zone of plants. Especially pay attention to any landscape beds that become heavily contaminated (from salty snow being dumped on them) and flush with fresh water as soon aspossible.
  6. Salt-covered foliage should be hosed off with clean water as soon aspossible.
  7. Use barriers, gutters, and hardscaping to channel de-icing materials away from the garden andplants.
  8. If vegetation is located in areas where heavy salt spray occurs, erect barriers or screens to protect plants (especially evergreens) during the wintermonths.

Abrasives to StopSlipping

If you are running out the door or have guests coming and you can’t wait for ice to melt, toss kitty litter or sand or sawdust by hand over the ice! Make sure it’s plain non-clumping clay kitty litter (save the clumping perfumed stuff for inside the house). In general, it’s always a good idea to combine a de-icer with an abrasive to keep folks fromslipping.

Learn anything new today? Whatever de-icer and abrasive you choose to use, keep the safety of people, pets, property andthe planet inmind!

Home Improvement

About The Author

Robin Sweetser

Robin has been a contributor to The Old Farmer’s Almanac and the All-Seasons Garden Guide for many years. Read More from Robin Sweetser

7 (Better) Alternatives to Salt for De-Icing Driveways (6)

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If you have a wood-burning cook/heating stove or fireplace, the dark-colored wood ashes sprinkled on the drive/walkway will absorb the sunrays and help melt the ice/snow.

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Thank you. Yes, I learned I should probably move to the tropics!🤣😂🤣😂 I absolutely hate ice and snow. In AR we mainly get ice. Life stops for two weeks! I use the kitty litter method and just treat slippy spots with de-icer.

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In winter I always carry a bag of used kitty litter - yes used - just in case I get stuck on the road or in an icy parking spot where traction is needed to get out. Came in handy a few times

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What ever you do - do NOT use kitty litter. I tried that and all it does is make a miserable slurry of a mess that gets tracked into your house. It's a disaster! The best thing I've found is rubbing alcohol mixed with a little water in a spray bottle. Works on your car windows too if your car happens to get caught out when ice forms. I keep a small bottle in my car and by both front and back door of my house.

  • Reply

We've used wood stove ash for 40 years. It works very well. We filter it through hardware cloth so it doesn't look crummy on the driveway and walkway.
Also: The anti-skid material (very fine stone) our township spreads on the roads is ready to re-use. Before the township does its spring cleaning, show up with a wheelbarrow and a push broom, and harvest yourself some buckets full of anti-skid.
Also: bags of play sand work.

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I've successfully used #2 chicken grit or cherry stone for decades sometimes mixed with a small amount of salt or ice melt. Usually carry a container in trunk of car to use under tires in case I get stuck in winter. Also, it doesn't track in as much as sand, but do wipe shoes off on door mat. Probably doesn't feel good on puppy feet as a bit sharp, but safer than chemicals.

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I’m using ashes from fire place to stop the icy and slippery walkways, driveway. It doesn’t melt the snow but works on the slippery side

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Calcium chloride is extremely harmful to metals, and can be extremely harmful to your vehicle. I used to test wire cables in mine companies.. those mines with slope shafts , Cars that were pulled from the mine bottom to the top to unload passengers or coal, were very much afford by calcium chloride. The MSHA declared CC not suitable for mining applications because of the deterioration of the cables . Use at your own risk.

  • Reply

Good to know. Thanks for the heads up.
As for wood ash, this can cause a holy mess if you use it where it can be tracked into the house on your shoes so be careful where you spread it. That being said, I DO use the abundance of ashes from my wood stove on the streets near my house. There's barely a level road in my town, and the runoff from melting ice and snow can re-freeze overnight into an Olympics worthy slalom course. Spreading pails and pails on the worst of it has cut down on the wheel-spinning in front of my house quite a bit.

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