Yes—rats can slip into parked cars through small gaps and climb up from below, then nest in warm spots like the engine bay.
Rats don’t “choose” a car because it’s special. They choose it because it’s close, quiet, and warm after a drive. Add a nearby food source—trash, bird seed, pet bowls, compost, fallen fruit—and a parked vehicle can become part of a regular route.
If you’re worried about rats getting into your car, you’re already ahead. The sooner you spot the signs, the lower the odds of chewed wiring, odd smells, or a surprise nest stuffed behind plastic covers.
Can Rats Get In Your Car? Common ways they enter
Most of the time, rats get into a vehicle from underneath. They climb suspension parts and tuck into protected cavities.
Open paths from below
Wheel wells, splash shields, and under-tray seams often leave gaps. Those gaps don’t look like “doors,” yet they can be wide enough for a rat to pull through and reach the engine bay.
Wiring and hoses act like handrails
Once a rat is under the hood, it can move along harnesses, hoses, and heat shielding. It doesn’t need much room to settle in.
Small openings still count
Field exclusion guidance used by the U.S. National Park Service notes a useful rule of thumb: rats can enter through holes larger than about 1/2 inch, while mice can enter through holes larger than about 1/4 inch.
Cabin entry happens when seals fail
Rats can reach the cabin through torn door seals, missing body grommets, or damage around the firewall. Once inside, carpet padding and seat foam become nesting material.
Why rats pick cars
Rats like cover and predictable routines. Cars can provide both.
- Warmth: the engine bay stays warm after you park.
- Low disturbance: cars that sit for days are easier targets than daily drivers.
- Nesting material: leaves in the cowl, hood insulation, and stored bags tear easily.
- Nearby food: if food is close to the driveway or garage, rats stay close too.
Early signs a rat has been in your car
These clues tend to show up before big damage. Use a flashlight and check in daylight if you can.
Smell that’s new or stronger
A sharp urine smell, a musty odor, or a “wet cardboard” scent near the vents can point to nesting near the cowl or cabin air intake.
Shredded material or a stash
Open the hood and check corners near the firewall, the battery tray, and the air filter housing. Look for shredded paper, cloth, or plant matter. Food stashes can include kibble, nuts, or fruit pits.
Droppings and rub marks
Droppings often collect on flat surfaces: plastic covers, ledges on under-trays, and the top of the engine cover. Greasy rub marks can appear where rodents repeat the same path.
Chewed wires and hoses
Wire damage can look like frayed loom, exposed copper, or small bite marks along a harness. Consumer Reports warns that rodents can chew wiring and trigger repairs that are far more expensive than prevention (Consumer Reports on car rodent damage).
What to check first: A fast inspection map
Start with a short loop that hits the places rats use most. If you find fresh signs, pause and plan your clean-up before you start pulling material out.
- Engine bay: firewall corners, battery area, under the engine cover, around the air filter box.
- Cowl area: leaves at the base of the windshield and inside the plastic cowl.
- Wheel wells: torn liners, missing clips, gaps near the strut tower.
- Cabin and trunk: under seats, glove box area, spare-tire well.
If the smell is strongest at the vents, check the cabin air filter area. A nest there can make the whole car smell “off” within a day.
Table 1 (after ~40% of article)
Signs, likely locations, and what to do next
| Sign you notice | Where it usually is | Next step that helps most |
|---|---|---|
| Urine or musty odor from vents | Cowl area or cabin filter pocket | Clear debris, replace cabin filter, clean the housing |
| Leaves and shredded nest under hood | Firewall corners, battery tray, engine cover edges | Remove nesting, then inspect wiring near the nest |
| Droppings on plastic covers | Engine cover, fuse box lid, under-tray shelves | Wet clean, then trace travel paths to entry gaps |
| Chewed wire loom or exposed copper | Harness runs near the top of the engine or along the firewall | Arrange a wiring repair check before regular driving |
| Nibble marks on soft hoses | Vacuum lines and small coolant hoses | Replace damaged hoses and verify no leaks |
| Scratching sounds after parking | Hood insulation, cowl, under-tray | Inspect for fresh nesting, then set traps in the parking zone |
| Food stash (kibble, nuts, fruit pits) | Battery area, spare-tire well, behind trim | Remove stash, then secure nearby food and trash |
| Greasy rub marks along an edge | Wheel well liners, under-tray seams, firewall lip | Follow marks to gaps, then block access points |
Clean-up steps that keep you safe
Rodent droppings and nesting material can carry germs. The CDC recommends wet cleaning methods and careful handling so you don’t stir dust (CDC sealing guidance).
Quick gear list
- Disposable gloves
- Mask
- Paper towels or disposable rags
- Trash bags
- Disinfectant spray
Clean-up in six steps
- Air it out. Open doors and let fresh air move through.
- Wet first. Spray droppings and nesting material until damp.
- Pick up. Use paper towels to lift material; don’t sweep dry.
- Double-bag. Tie off waste, then place it in a second bag.
- Wipe down. Clean the area, then wipe again with disinfectant.
- Wash up. Remove gloves and wash hands well.
Swap the cabin air filter if the cowl was packed with debris
A chewed or filthy cabin filter can keep odor trapped in the vents. Replacing it is cheap and can stop the smell from lingering.
How to stop rats from returning
Think in three tracks: food, cover, and access. The U.S. EPA outlines the same basics: reduce food and water sources, remove nesting spots, and block entry (U.S. EPA rodent prevention steps).
Fix the parking zone
If rats are active near where you park, prevention inside the car won’t hold. Secure trash lids. Store bird seed and pet food in hard containers with lids. Clear clutter from wall lines and corners where rodents travel.
Block access with durable materials
Repair torn wheel-well liners and missing under-tray clips. Check door and trunk seals. For gaps you can’t rebuild, metal mesh and hardware cloth are common choices. The National Park Service rodent-exclusion manual lists hardware cloth gauges and mesh sizes used for screening vents and openings (NPS rodent exclusion manual).
For tiny cracks, the same manual notes that 00-sized steel wool can deter rodents when it’s packed tight and sealed over with caulk. Steel wool can rust and it can be pushed aside if it isn’t locked in place, so it’s a short-gap filler, not a full fix.
Use traps where rats travel
Traps work best on edges: along a wall, behind stored bins, near a garage door track, or by a known runway. Keep traps out of reach of pets and children. If you keep seeing activity, a licensed pest control company can help match the plan to local rules and the layout of your property.
Avoid poison near cars
Poison baits can lead to a dead rodent in a dash, under a hood, or inside a wall, which can cause long-lasting odor and extra cleanup. Stick with exclusion, cleanup, and trapping when your goal is to protect a vehicle.
Table 2 (after ~60% of article)
Deterrents and fixes: What works, what to watch
| Tool or tactic | When it tends to work | Watch-outs |
|---|---|---|
| Daily hood checks and leaf removal | Outdoor parking or cars left sitting | Needs steady effort for the first couple of weeks |
| Replace torn wheel-well liners and missing clips | Visible gaps in wheel wells or under-tray | Low-grade clips fail; use the right fasteners |
| Metal mesh or hardware cloth barriers | Garages, sheds, and known entry gaps near parking | Fasten tight so it can’t be pushed aside |
| Snap traps placed on runways | Fresh droppings or nests in the parking zone | Place out of reach of pets and children |
| Copper mesh plus caulk for small holes | Small gaps around pass-throughs | Mesh alone can shift; seal over it |
| Cabin and engine cleaning after nesting | After droppings or shredded material is found | Wear protection; wet clean to avoid dust |
| Wiring inspection and repair | Any chewed harness or new warning lights | Electrical faults can strand the car |
When wiring is chewed
If you see exposed copper or damaged harness wrap, treat it like a safety issue. A single nick can trigger a short, drain a battery, or cause random warning lights. If the car smells like burning plastic, starts acting weird, or throws new alerts, stop driving and get it checked.
Repair hot spots to point out
- Wiring near the firewall and fuse box
- Wheel-speed sensor lines near wheel wells
- Small vacuum lines and soft hoses
- Cabin wiring near the glove box and footwells
Take a few photos before you clean it all up. It helps a technician spot patterns and helps if an insurer asks what happened.
A simple checklist for cars parked more than 48 hours
This takes five to ten minutes. Run it daily for two weeks after an incident, then switch to a weekly scan.
- Pop the hood and scan for fresh leaves, shredded material, or droppings.
- Clear leaves from the cowl area at the base of the windshield.
- Check wheel wells for torn liners or gaps you can fit a finger through.
- Sniff near the vents; if odor is new, check the cabin filter area.
- Remove food wrappers, pet treats, and stored snacks from the cabin.
- Secure trash lids and store seed or pet food in hard containers nearby.
- If signs repeat, set traps along walls where droppings show up.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“How to Seal Up to Prevent Rodents.”Guidance on finding and closing gaps to keep rodents out.
- U.S. EPA.“Identify and Prevent Rodent Infestations.”Steps on reducing food sources and nesting spots that draw rodents.
- National Park Service (NPS).“Rodent Exclusion Manual: Mechanical Rodent Proofing Techniques.”Exclusion methods, screening materials, and hole sizes rodents can use.
- Consumer Reports.“How to Protect Your Car From Rodents.”Vehicle-focused prevention tips and examples of wiring damage risks.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.