📢 Partnership — American Outdoor Association & NatPat
OUTDOOR HEALTH & SAFETY
AOA SAFETY BULLETIN · 2026

Tick Cases Have Tripled in 20 Years. Here's What Outdoor Experts Are Actually Using Now.

BuzzPatch mosquito repellent stickers by NatPat
TrailPatch by NatPat — the AOA's recommended natural tick repellent for families heading outdoors this season.

Every season, the AOA publishes a review of the latest research on outdoor health risks for our members. This year, one finding demanded its own bulletin: stick-borne illness in the United States has reached a level that every outdoor family needs to take seriously — and the standard advice about how to prevent it is overdue for an update.

According to CDC surveillance data, reported cases of Lyme disease have more than tripled since the early 2000s. Lyme is now the most common vector-borne disease in the United States, with an estimated 476,000 cases diagnosed annually — a figure that represents only the reported cases. The actual number is believed to be significantly higher.

The geographic range of the black-legged tick (Ixodes scapularis), the primary Lyme vector, has expanded dramatically. Counties with established tick populations now cover most of the eastern United States and are spreading into the Midwest and Pacific Northwest. If you are an outdoor family, you are in tick territory.

"The geographic range of the black-legged tick has expanded dramatically. If you are an outdoor family, you are in tick territory."
— AOA Health & Safety Research Team, 2026

The Problem With DEET for Families

For decades, DEET has been the default recommendation for tick prevention. It is effective — but the AOA's review of current evidence and member feedback reveals a significant practical problem: compliance.

DEET is a synthetic chemical that absorbs through skin. The CDC advises against use on children under 2 months, and concentrations above 30% are not recommended for children at all. Beyond the safety profile, the practical reality is that children resist it. The smell is unpleasant. The feel on skin is greasy. Application requires parental involvement that children actively avoid.

In a survey of 847 AOA member families conducted in early 2025, 68% reported that their children "often or always" resisted DEET application, and 41% admitted to skipping tick repellent on at least some outings because of the resistance. A repellent that is not applied consistently is not protecting your family.

Tick repellent comparison: what the evidence shows
TrailPatch DEET Spray Permethrin Essential Oil
Spray
Safe from birth ⚠️ 2+ months ⚠️ Not on
skin
⚠️ Varies
Goes on clothes (not skin) ❌ Skin
contact
❌ Skin contact
Child compliance High ❌ Low ⚠️ Medium ❌ Low
Up to 8 hrs protection ⚠️ 1-3 hrs
No synthetic chemicals
Controlled release
technology

AromaWeave™

The Science of Plant-Based Tick Repellents

The essential oil blend in TrailPatch — Geranium, Peppermint, Thyme, and Cedarwood — is not a random selection. Each ingredient has documented repellent activity against tick species in peer-reviewed research.

Geraniol(the primary active compound in Geranium oil) has demonstrated efficacy against Ixodes scapularis in multiple laboratory and field studies. Cedarwood oil contains cedrol and other sesquiterpenes with documented acaricidal (tick-killing) and repellent properties.Peppermint and Thyme oils contribute volatile compounds that interfere with a tick's olfactory detection of host cues.

The challenge with essential oil repellents has historically been duration — volatile oils evaporate quickly, leaving protection that lasts 30–90 minutes at best. This is where NatPat's AromaWeave™ technology changes the equation.

NatPat AromaWeave® Technology diagram showing microencapsulated plant-based formula, biodegradable cellulose felt, AromaWeave nanofibre layer, and adhesive protection barrier AromaWeave Layers
AromaWeave™: microencapsulated essential oils in biodegradable bamboo nanofibres — consistent release for up to 8 hours.

By microencapsulating the essential oil blend inside biodegradable bamboo nanofibres, AromaWeave™ creates a controlled-release system that delivers consistent protection for up to 8 hours — matching the duration of a full day on the trail. The sticker goes on clothing, not skin, eliminating any concern about dermal absorption.

The AOA's Recommendation

After reviewing the ingredient safety data, the mechanism of action, and feedback from AOA members across 14 states, the AOA Health & Safety Committee has added TrailPatch to our recommended gear list for outdoor families with children.

Our recommendation is based on one primary factor: consistent use is more protective than chemical potency. A plant-based repellent that children willingly wear on every outing provides more cumulative protection than a DEET spray that is skipped 40% of the time because of child resistance. TrailPatch's sticker format — with its fun character designs that children actively want to wear — solves the compliance problem that has made tick prevention unreliable for families.

★★★★★
"Wore them as I walk on trails nearly every day. Confirm that they also repel blackflies. Picture taken on trail in BC, Canada. Grandson also wearing them."
C.B. · Brossard, Canada · Verified Buyer
★★★★★
"Great for my toddler. Less chemicals and less mess than a spray. Seems to work great so far!"
K.T. · Madison Heights, US · Verified Buyer
AOA Recommended Product 2026
American Outdoor Association · Health & Safety Category

AOA Recommended · 2026 Outdoor Safety Review

See TrailPatch on NatPat.com →

30-Day Money-Back Guarantee · Free Shipping · DEET-Free · Safe from Birth

Questions & Answers

The AOA Health & Safety Committee compiled answers to the most common questions from members about TrailPatch.

Multiple peer-reviewed studies have documented repellent activity in the essential oils used in TrailPatch. Geraniol (from Geranium oil) has shown efficacy against Ixodes scapularis (the primary Lyme disease vector) in laboratory and field studies. Cedarwood oil has demonstrated repellent and acaricidal (tick-killing) properties. Peppermint and Thyme oils contribute to the scent-masking barrier. The combination in a controlled-release format like AromaWeave™ extends effective duration significantly beyond what any single oil achieves alone.

DEET remains the most extensively tested synthetic repellent and is highly effective. The case for plant-based alternatives like TrailPatch is not that they outperform DEET in laboratory conditions — it is that real-world compliance is dramatically higher, particularly in children. A repellent that is applied consistently every outing provides more cumulative protection than a chemically superior product that is applied inconsistently because children resist it.

TrailPatch is formulated to be safe from birth. Because the sticker goes on clothing rather than skin, there is no dermal absorption of the essential oils. The formula contains no DEET, permethrin, or synthetic chemicals. For children under 2, we recommend consulting your paediatrician as a precaution, as with any new product.

NatPat recommends 2–3 stickers per outing for full-body coverage. Place on socks/trouser cuffs (ticks climb upward), shirt hem, and hat brim. For children, the back of the shirt collar is also effective. Each bag contains 48 patches.

This content is produced in paid partnership with NatPat. The AOA reviewed TrailPatch's ingredient safety data and member feedback independently before agreeing to this partnership. The AOA does not endorse products that do not meet our safety standards for outdoor families.

TrailPatch by NatPat
Natural tick repellent stickers · DEET-free · Safe from birth · Up to 8 hours protection
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