Why I Stopped Using Only DIY Green Cleaners

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DIY Green Cleaners
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I have a confession to make… I’m lazy when it comes to cleaning. In fact, that is why I started using multipurpose homemade green cleaners in the first place… I could clean the majority of my house without the need for a bucket full of cleaning products.

Green Cleaner Troubles…

Unfortunately for my DIY green cleaners, vinegar stinks and borax is controversial.

Try to make a green cleaner without either of those and it is tough to make an effective one, especially because my non-negotiable standards are:

  1. It must not leave the surface worse than before I cleaned it (no trading dirt for bacteria for chemical residue)
  2. It must not kill my children if they accidentally ingest it
  3. It must work (or course!)
  4. It must be able to be used for more than one thing so I don’t end up with a closet full of bottles
  5. I don’t have to find a hazardous waste disposal location to get rid of it

Vinegar: The Problem

Vinegar has gotten a reputation as an all purpose green cleaner on its own and while it certainly has its place in a natural home, it isn’t the panacea it is made out to be for a few reasons:

  • It doesn’t actually remove dirt very well. In fact, the “cleaning” action often associated with vinegar is simply degreasing as many surfaces contain both grease/oil and dirt or is a result of the cleaning cloth used.
  • It may not disinfect well either. Research is still divided on this, but vinegar may not be an effective natural disinfectant and experts typically recommend other well-proven substances like hydrogen peroxide instead if disinfection is the goal.
  • It stinks. Not a scientifically backed problem but one that my kids make sure to point out every time I use it.

It CAN be a great degreaser and I have used it as a rinse aid in my dishwasher when we’ve lived in places with hard water, but on its own, it isn’t a cleaner per se. That being said, I do still keep a bottle of white vinegar with organic orange and lemon peels around the house for degreasing and descaling, I just don’t use this as my all purpose cleaner.

Borax: The Problem

You know when kids get in a fight and you try to find out what actually happen but get a long story and multiple answers? That is how I feel when it comes to borax. On the one hand, it is touted as a great green cleaner, but on the other people claim that it is harmful and deadly.

As I’ve explained before, I think the truth is somewhere in the middle with borax being generally safe to use in cleaning but not in personal care products as much of the research on the actual dangers of borax is actually on boric acid (not the same thing chemically).

While I would still feel safe using Borax for certain purposes around the house, I’ve also been experimenting with alternatives, as the mention of borax as an ingredient in a natural cleaning recipe will typically get dozens of comments from those on both sides of the debate and there are safe alternatives.

Unfortunately, my original all-purpose cleaner that works really well contains borax and doesn’t work well without it, so I was back to the drawing board!

The time… oh, the time…

The other part of the story about why I don’t exclusively use DIY cleaners anymore is because of time. I have (almost) six kids and a dog, and a house, homeschooling, and a blog, and even a couple of friends. I wouldn’t trade any of those things for the world, but to keep all of them happy and healthy requires time.

I still do make many of my own natural cleaners and virtually all of our food from scratch, but I had to free up some time and when evaluating my options, I realized that homemade cleaning products was one area I could do this. To be fair, when I first started out, this wasn’t possible, both because of our budget and because there were few or no good natural cleaning options available to purchase.

Thanks in large part to people like you who research and choose healthy options, there now are natural cleaning options available to purchase so DIY isn’t the only option. I’ve also gotten quite a few questions from readers who don’t want to make their own cleaners and am glad to find budget-friendly and effective natural options to share.

My Favorite Pre-Made Cleaners

Short story… I’ve finally found several pre-made cleaner concentrates that I absolutely love, that are cost effective and that work really well:

Again, I still think DIY cleaners are awesome and a great alternative to harmful chemical cleaners, but I’m excited to have found another good option. Simple recipes like homemade all-purpose cleaner and vinegar based cleaners are great, but I’m also glad to have some pre-made options to choose from when I want to.

30+ Uses for Green Cleaners

With just a few green cleaners (homemade and from concentrate) it is possible to literally clean your entire house from top to bottom. In fact, for about $50, I can clean my house naturally for over a year!

Here’s how I use these basic green cleaners in our home:

  1. All Purpose Cleaner: Dilute 1 teaspoon of sal suds concentrate into a spray bottle (at least 16 ounces) on all hard surfaces in our house. (Homemade option: this all-purpose cleaner recipe)
  2. Dish Soap: As a natural dish soap I dilute 1/4 cup sal suds in a 16-ounce foamer bottle. (Pre-made option: EcoMe Dish Soap)
  3. Glass and Windows: I dilute 5 drops of Sal Suds concentrate in a glass spray bottle with filtered water and wipe with microfiber. (Homemade option: This is one area where vinegar is effective and can be used to make a simple cleaner for glass with this recipe).
  4. Fruit and Vegetable Wash: 1 drop of Sal Suds concentrate (or 1/2 teaspoon of liquid castile soap) in a sink or bowl full of water to wash produce.
  5. Laundry: 1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon of Sal Suds concentrate per laundry load as needed. This homemade version also works really well and there are other good pre-made options like BioKlean liquid laundry soap  or Ecover zero.
  6. Stainless Steel: To clean stainless steel without streaks I dilute a few drops of Sal Suds in a spray bottle of water.
  7. Stain Treating: There are many natural ways to treat stains (here’s a helpful chart), and 1/4 cup Sal Suds Concentrate diluted in a spray bottle of water is a great all-purpose pre-treat for stains.
  8. Carpet Cleaning: To clean carpet naturally I pre-treat stains with a 1:10 dilution of Sal Suds in water and then use 1 drop of the concentrate in a steam cleaner (full tutorial here).
  9. Bathroom Cleaning– Make a floor to ceiling bathroom cleaner with 1 tablespoon Sal Suds concentrate in a spray bottle of water with 10 drops of lemon essential oil (optional, but for freshness).
  10. Hard Water Stains: To remove hard water stains I use either Sal Suds all purpose cleaner or Bon Ami.
  11. Glue and Adhesives: Use a 50:50 mixture of Sal Suds and water. Spray on, let sit 5 minutes and scrub off.
  12. Oven and Stove: I make a natural scouring powder for use in oven and stove cleaning or use Bon Ami.
  13. Floor Cleaning: I add 1 tsp of Sal Suds concentrate to a mop bucket to mop the entire house.
  14. Grout Cleaner: I use a 1:3 Sal Suds dilution to clean tile grout or use homemade scouring powder or Bon Ami for tough stains.
  15. Blinds: I make a spray of 1 tablespoon of Sal Suds in a spray bottle of water to clean blinds or if I’m feeling really ambitious, I take them all down and add to a bathtub full of warm water with 1/2 cup Sal Suds, soak for 15 minutes and scrub. Air dry before hanging.
  16. Urine stains: a 1:15 dilution of Sal Suds with 5 drops of lemon essential oil works great on urine stains and smells in the bathroom. For mattress urine stains, I sprinkle with baking soda, then spray with this mixture and wipe up.
  17. Cloth Diapers: To pre-treat and wash cloth diapers (no residue and completely removes ammonia smell) I pre-soak in the washing machine and add 3 tablespoons Sal Suds and 1 cup baking soda.
  18. Shave Soap: In a foamer bottle, I use a (1:5) dilution of Liquid castile Soap as a shave soap.
  19. Foaming Hand Soap: Liquid castile soap diluted in water makes a great foaming hand soap that costs pennies per bottle. Here’s how I make it.
  20. Face and Body Wash: Combined with raw honey and water, liquid castile soap makes a great face and body wash.
  21. Shampoo: castile Soap and coconut milk make a moisturizing shampoo.
  22. Baby Wipes: Diluted in a foamer for DIY baby wipes (I wipe with cloth wipes).
  23. Dog Wash: A few drops to a teaspoon of liquid castile soap makes an effective pet wash.

What types of cleaners do you use? A skeptic like I was? Will you give it a try?

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

310 responses to “Why I Stopped Using Only DIY Green Cleaners”

  1. quianna Avatar

    You stated you use this to pretreat and clean cloth diapers. Do you use this instead of your typical laundry soap like rockin green? If so, how much? Im starting to use cloth diapers in a few months and if i dont have to buy seperate cleaners i would love it! Thanks!

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      I do… I used to use Country Save or other cloth safe detergents but find that BB takes the stains and smells out more easily. I’ll add oxygen boost or baking soda occasionally or line dry in the sun, but it is great for day to day washing.

      1. Mollie P Avatar
        Mollie P

        I have yet to find anything I like washing diapers in… Hiw much do you use? Want to try this.

  2. Mary Avatar

    I have been reading Wellness Mamma posts for a long time. I truly believe that if Katie recommends something she really believes in it. Thank you Katie for all of your informative posts.

  3. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    Hi,
    I recently ordered the medium starter kit and am very pleased. So far I have used it for the bathroom, kitchen counters, mirrors, windows, and floors. I also used it as a face soap and have replaced my shave cream!! The only thing that didn’t work for me is when I tried to clean stainless. Left lots of streaks even with microfiber.
    I am also experimenting with the dishwasher and my washing machine. I don’t like that I have to dilute the concentrate in water before using it in the dishwasher and washing machine. I see that you added it to your powder dispenser. I look forward to taking that short cut. Has anyone tried adding it to their HE washer without diluting it (also has anyone added EO to the laundry wash for scent as well)? As a mom who has a full time job, I need any short cuts I can get!

    I just made a second order for the large kit, oxy cleaner, and some more foamers! I can’t believe I am this excited about a cleaning product. I may order some as gifts for my mom and sis!

  4. Sara Avatar

    I am in Canada and I use Pink Solution. I get it at Costco. The ingredients are sea kelp,vegetable tallow, coconut oil, soda ash, water, no fragrance or dyes added.

  5. dina Avatar

    I’m very interested in transitioning to a true all purpose household cleaning product. a few questions:

    1. what dilution would you use for a toilet cleaner? and do you recommend a squirt bottle or sprayer for that?

    2. i color my hair, and am looking for a safer, more natural shampoo. anyone who uses this for their hair have any input on that?

    3. as someone who loves natural scents, would adding a few drops of essential oils affect the cleaning power, or is it safe to do that.

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      I use a spray bottle for the toilet cleaning. For my hair, I’ve been using it in a foamer bottle in a 1:5 concentration with water. From what I can tell, adding essential oils is fine.

  6. Amber Avatar

    I just received my order of Branch Basics in the mail a few days ago and am loving it! So far it has worked great on everything I have tried. It has been excellent as a makeup remover, shampoo, kitchen cleaner, and for baby wipes. They also have excellent customer service. One of my bottles wasn’t sealed and some of it leaked inside of the box. I was able to talk to someone immediately and she refunded me for the ounces lost. So far, I am very happy with Branch Basics!

  7. Tanya Avatar

    Hi Wellness Mama, I am fairly new to this new world of eating clean and making “clean” products to use for our house and bodies. Thank you so much for your hard work in researching. I go to your site for almost everything. Anyway, I had just bought some Dr. Bronner’s soap and a few other things to start making my own soaps and such, but now I am confused. Should I just use this Branch Basics? Is it replacing all your other cleaning recipes in your home now? Like are you using it to wash your face instead of OCM? Body wash instead of the honey/castile/oil recipe? Shampoo, toothpaste, Etc? What would you do if you were just starting this “clean” living? AND, are you confident about the ingredients although they seem pretty vague?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      I don’t use it for toothpaste, but yes! I am confident in their ingredients, and would recommend it as a great way to go natural all at once.

      1. Tanya Avatar

        Okay, thank you! Just thought I’d share that I did end up ordering some Branch Basics and mixed up a squirt bottle of 1:5 dilution. After trying many other “natural” shampoo recipes with no luck (very oily scalp and hair), I decided to try squirting the 1:5 dilution of Branch Basics in my hair one night, and worked it through my hair, rinsed it out, and surprisingly it left my hair soft and clean feeling. Finally found something that works for my hair!

  8. Tina Avatar

    How does Branch Basics Cleanser compare to Yound Living’s Thieves Cleaner?
    Thanks. 🙂

  9. Rachel Avatar

    I have just started switching to green natural cleaners. I was so excited to try BB as I was feeling a little overwhelmed with all of the DIY products, so the one for all products sounded really good. Sadly, it’s not what it is hyped up to be… It works ok for kitchen and bathroom counter top cleaner and for the bathroom sinks (1:5 dilution), but my counters and sinks are pretty new and never really that dirty. It didn’t work very well as a toilet cleaner. It was terrible as laundry detergent (2 tbsp undiluted per medium load, HW washer), clothes that had very small amounts of dirt came out still with it. It didn’t do anything for grease and tomato stains (tried 1:1, 1:5 and undiluted, soaking for several hours then agitating). I do live in Arizona and have very hard water, but still. I will be finishing my gallon jug using it as a counter top cleaner and will be trying other vinegar DIY recipes in the mean time.

  10. christie Avatar

    Do you know anything about Biokleen? This is available at my co-op but don’t know if its good? Thank you

  11. Laurie Phillips Avatar
    Laurie Phillips

    Has anyone tried Meyers clean day concentrate? i just love it and have been using it for years on everything. For greasing jobs…..on stoves and cabinets…seventh generation laundry soap or dish soap , just a little in a spray bottle and had water to dilute and your good to go. I used Murphy’s oil on wood or vinegar mixed with water. I have allergies and it is the only thing that works for my home. If I am cleaning others than I use spic and span from the dollar store everyone likes that , it is lime scented .. the best thing about these is none of these products make me sneeze or cough like others. I use just a damp wash cloth to dust or use any oil in my home to use on the furniture. Like orange oil.

  12. Nicole Avatar

    I would really like to know how you get rid of cold sores with this. I’ve been using vanilla extract or hydrogen peroxide on mine. I’m not really sure how effective either of these treatments are but I’m trying to use less icky chemicals. I used BB on my filthy bathroom counter it seemed to work pretty well. My toilet could be cleaner but I think it’s probably bc the spray isn’t allowed to sit on the stains. I’m hoping to get the ingredients for Katie’s toilet bomb together soon to see if that helps.

  13. Lourdes Avatar

    I clean my bathroom with baking soda and vinegar, it has never been so clean, shiny and smelling great. Vinegar kills everything and b.s help removes the toughest black stains in the tub and toilet. I mix a few drops of essential oils if the smells bothers me when cleaning. Economic, safe and it works!

  14. Barbara Christensen Avatar
    Barbara Christensen

    I love DIY and natural cleaners. I use Trader Joe’s all purpose cleaner. I have a couple objections to the post. Maybe they are just semantics, but nonetheless they perpetrate some misconceptions. First thing the cleaners even “natural” cleaners are made of chemicals. Baking soda is a chemical, water is a chemical, protein is a chemical, minerals are chemicals and essential oils are composed of chemicals. Everything is made up of chemicals. The difference is man made versus those occurring in nature. or maybe your definition includes toxic versus nontoxic. In any case all cleaners contain chemicals, even DIY cleaners (vinegar is acetic acid by any other name).

    The second thing is just because something is naturally occurring does not make it safe or nontoxic. One of the most carcinogenic compounds known to man, aflatoxin, is naturally occurring. Also think of all the poisonous plants and animals. Even oil (fossil fuel) is naturally occurring and I wouldn’t recommend eating it or putting it on your skin. Toxicity is also matter of degree, Drinking too much water or eating too much salt will mess up your electrolyte levels in your body.

    So we really need to be careful on how we use terminology. Natural is not necessarily nontoxic and all things are composed of chemicals.

    1. Laurie Phillips Avatar
      Laurie Phillips

      Thanks for this post.
      I seriously agree with you that people need to be careful what they say because you are so right.

  15. Betsy Avatar

    I feel like this company is not fully disclosing their ingredients. The list of ingredients seems very intentionally vague to me. Sounds like greenwashing and I won’t buy it. I use water, vinegar, castile soap, baking soda, and essential oils to clean everything in my house from my hard wood floors to my granite and quartz countertops to my windows. The vinegar smell dissipates ones it is dry, but adding a few drops of peppermint, lemon, orange, lavender, tea tree or any other type of essential oil not only removes the smell of vinegar but also adds disinfecting properties to the cleaning solution. If you are truly concerned about safe and green cleaning you must make your own products. They are cheap and simple and they work. I remember reading a post of yours a while back about how you switched to Norwex microfiber cloths and all you use to clean with was water.

  16. Nancy Avatar

    When you use it for dishes does it make suds? I’ve unsuccessfully tried to make dish soap I like but none of them are sudsy and my husband is hung up on suds… at least he does the dishes but he likes soapy soap!

  17. Laura Avatar

    Can you explain how you use this as a toothpaste? I’m curious about how that can be safe. Any links that you can share would be helpful (google search was unsuccessful for me).

  18. Nita Avatar

    There is information left off of the ingredient list. I will not buy a soap product that omits things, because a) what else are they not disclosing?, and b)soapmakers who DO fully disclose ingredients lose sales to companies who don’t fully disclose. Soap is, by definition fat and/or oil combined with a strong alkali ( usually potassium or sodium hydroxide, aka lye) in a properly made soap all of the atoms in the lye molecules will recombine with the fatty acids to form soap and glycerin. Some people get needlessly freaked out seeing this on an ingredient list which is why some manufactures omit that bit of info. And sodium bicarbonate doesn’t have a high enough pH to initiate this chemical reaction. If people are buying this product and love it, then fine. I have nothing bad to say about the actual product. Just know that if you favor this over other soaps because you think there is no lye used to make it, you are misguided.

    1. Leslie Avatar

      Absolutely right but just as the highly reactive Sodium ( basically explodes and burns when it touches water and must be stored under oil because it will combine with what is in air and burn as well!!) and dangerous Chlorine gas react to make salt, lye and fat combine to make soap. After all, lye is Sodium or Potassium combined with Hydrogen and Oxygen. Put them together with water and the fat, voila! soap. When I see soap on a label, I know there was lye used to make it because I make soap and have a degree in Chemistry!

      1. Leslie Avatar

        I must add, I keep track of the pH and do not sell or use my soap for at least 6 weeks, when the pH is down at 8-9.
        With my failed batches, (a whole ‘nother story!!) i combine the mess with the vinegar that is always on hand for safety as I work with the lye, testing the pH as I add the vinegar,
        and I do not compost it until everything is neutralized and safe for everything around, pets, kids, wildlife, environment…etc.

    2. Sasha Avatar

      Soapmakers struggle over this issue because in the finished product, due to the chemical reaction that occurs, lye is no longer present in the final product, you now have new ingredients entirely: soap and glycerin. The types of fats used tend to make the soap different, which is why it’s always mentioned. Some soapmakers list things as being “saponified” others choose not to because they assume you know that the way to get soap is through a chemical reaction caused by a liquid and a fat and a lye being mixed.

  19. Cori Avatar

    Do you have recommendations for dispensing the concentrate for dishes, dish washer and laundry? I don’t want to waste while dispensing for these items. Obviously other jobs would use a spray bottle. Any tips?

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