19 Natural Cleaning Tips (+ Easy Recipes)

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Natural Cleaning Recipes and Tips
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Cleaning a house naturally is not any more difficult than cleaning it with harsh chemicals. It improves indoor air quality and is much safer, especially for children.

We’ve switched entirely to natural cleaning products and our house is just as clean (or cleaner!). I don’t have to worry about the kids getting sick if they lick the floors. (What, your kids don’t do that?) 🙂

The other great thing about natural cleaning recipes is that they are safe for kids to use. The earlier, the better I say!

Natural Cleaning Ingredients

Switching to homemade DIY cleaners might sound like a lot more work, but it’s actually quite simple. The ingredients are easy to come by and last a long time.

The natural cleaning ingredients I always keep on hand are:

Easy Natural Cleaning Recipes for Beginners

Here are a few easy and inexpensive natural cleaning recipes to get started around the house:

Homemade All-Purpose Cleaner – Four ingredients and thirty seconds to mix it up is all it takes! Customize the scent with essential oils.

Glass Cleaner – No need for that bright blue, highly scented stuff … vinegar + water cuts through dirt and leaves glass streak-free.

Tile Grout Cleaner – Mix 1 part water and 3 parts baking soda mixed into a paste. Apply to grout and let sit, scrub with toothbrush, remove with sponge.

Cookware – Use sea salt or coarse salt mixed with a little lemon juice and scrub. Also, try baking soda and water made into a paste. This also works well on stained tea cups or coffee mugs, and even the cutting board.

Fabric Softener – Mix 1 part vinegar and 2 parts water together. Add 1/4 to 1/3 cup to the final rinse cycle.

Toilet Cleaner – Use undiluted white vinegar, pour around the top of the toilet bowl, scrub until clean.

Wood Dusting Spray – Banish dust and nourish wood at the same time.

What could be easier?!

19 Tips for Natural Cleaning Success!

Through trial and error I’ve learned a bit about natural cleaning over the years. Below I’ve compiled my top 19 tips for easy natural cleaning so you can skip the learning curve!

Please share your best cleaning tips as well in the comment section below!

1. Baking Soda for Oven Cleaning

A paste of baking soda and water cleans ovens without the chemicals or the hassle of the self-cleaning cycle. Just make a paste on the bottom of the oven, leave for a few hours and wipe off for a shiny, chemical free oven. This post explains the specifics.

2. Save Money on Magic Erasers

Rather than buy the name brand magic erasers, buy the melamine sponge in bulk and save a lot of money!

why microfiber?

3. Switch to Microfiber

I have saved a lot of money since I switched to microfiber, and I was using inexpensive homemade cleaners before switching! I have a basic set of antibacterial microfiber cloths and a microfiber mop set that I absolutely love and use daily. I can literally clean my entire house (except toilets) with just water now! To keep things simple, I have one color-coded microfiber cloth per room. No chemicals and it saves money!

4. Make Scouring Powder

For soap scum on tubs and showers, make your own scouring powder with 2 parts baking soda, 1 part salt, and 1 part borax. It will cut through even the toughest scum!

Natural cleaning tips- infuse white vinegar with citrus peels for a potent natural cleaner

5. Citrus Infused Vinegar

Fill a jar with (organic) citrus peels and pour undiluted white vinegar over them. Leave for a few days (up to 2 weeks) and strain out the vinegar to use as a natural cleaner. It works as a window cleaner (dilute with water), for mopping floors, or for disinfecting surfaces.

all natural cleaning and organizing checklist

6. Use a Checklist!

Use a checklist for each room so that you can clean efficiently, or assign the jobs to children and know that they will be thorough. Here is my checklist (feel free to print and use!).

7. Treat Stains Naturally

small Wellness Mama Stain Treatment Laundry Guide small Laundry soaps and stain treaters can be some of the worst offenders for toxic chemicals. There are natural options that work really well, but it helps to know a little chemistry, as different natural options will work better on different types of stains.

Here is my reference sheet that I keep by my washer for quick reference: (Free Printable – Click Here)

8. Clean the Dishwasher

To clean your dishwasher effortlessly, fill a dishwasher safe bowl or jar with 2 cups of vinegar and set on the top rack of the dishwasher. I use a small glass Pyrex container.

Run through on a hot cycle with no other dishes in the dishwasher to clean and remove the musty odor.

9. Clean the Garbage Disposal

I use my garbage disposal a lot and sometimes it gets that not-so-lovely odor. To combat this, there are a couple of options:

  • Cut a lemon in half, shove in garbage disposal and grind (with water running) for 10 seconds.
  • Freeze lemon and orange peels in ice cube trays with vinegar or water and throw these in and grind for 10 seconds.
  • Pour 1/2 cup of baking soda in and then 1 cup of distilled white vinegar and let sit for 10 minutes before running the water and and the disposal.

10. Natural Air Freshener

In a medium saucepan, simmer a quart of water with natural ingredients to freshen and clean the air. Just make sure not to let the water evaporate off completely! My favorite combinations are:

  • 1 sliced lemon, 2 tablespoons rosemary and a dash of vanilla
  • 1 sliced lime and 1 piece chopped ginger root
  • 1 sliced orange, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, and a dash of nutmeg and cloves (smells like pumpkin pie!)
  • 2 tablespoons thyme and 1 sliced lime

how to make your own laundry soap and save money

11. Homemade Laundry Soap

Save a lot of money by making your own laundry soap! Here is the recipe I use and it makes enough for our family of 7 for months and costs pennies!

12. Remove Urine Stains

If you have potty training kids like I do, tackle urine stains in mattresses with this great solution for removing the stains and smells using hydrogen peroxide, baking soda, and dish soap.

13. Clean Shower Heads

Clean a shower head by filling a plastic bag with white vinegar and then tie the bag around the shower head so that the shower head is immersed in the vinegar. Leave on for up to 12 hours and remove carefully. Pour it down the drain and your shower head should be clean and free of hard water residue.

14. Car Upholstery

Clean stains are car upholstery with Dawn dish soap, baking soda, and club soda. Here’s the method.
19 Easy, Natural and Inespensive Cleaning Tips with Recipes and Instructions- pin for reference

15. Clean Toilet

Dump a cup of baking soda into the toilet and let it soak for at least an hour. Pour in a cup of white vinegar, leave for 5 mins and flush. Unless the toilet is really dirty, this will clean it without scrubbing! Here is my bathroom cleaning checklist and recipes.

16. Stove Vent Fan

Clean the stove vent fan with boiling water and baking soda. Here’s how.

17. Glass Spray Bottle

glass spray bottleI am not a fan of plastic spray bottles, especially when they contain substances that can break down the plastic. A friend gave me a glass spray bottle as a gift and I’ve since made several more using old Bragg’s Apple Cider Vinegar bottles with the tops from a plastic bottle. These also look a lot better in my opinion and are an Earth-friendly option vs. generating more plastic packaging.

18. Microfiber for Windows

Since switching to microfiber for window cleaning, I will never go back! It cleans without chemicals (all you need is water!) and leaves no streaks or lint. This is my favorite brand.

Natural cleaning materials

19. Store-bought Cleaners

Yes … there are store-bought cleaners with good ingredients that make life even easier. While I enjoy making my own DIY cleaning recipes and truly feel it simplifies life, I honestly don’t love the smell of vinegar and not everyone wants to use borax.

Here are some store-bought green cleaners I’ve used over the years and love:

Ready for More?

Hooked and ready to try some more? Here are some other great natural cleaning recipes and ideas:

Here’s another article with some additional tips on natural cleaning.

Do you have any favorite natural cleaning tips? What are some of your favorites? Share below!

Use these natural cleaning tips to clean your whole house naturally: floor cleaners, all purpose cleaner, window spray, and more.

Sources

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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

98 responses to “19 Natural Cleaning Tips (+ Easy Recipes)”

  1. Emily Avatar

    I learned about the company, Branch Basics, and their amazing cleaning concentrate, from your website in 2014 and have never looked back. I bought it because I had an old dog in diapers and you said it worked great on diapers. It did, and on carpet stains, and laundry, as an air freshener, and on glass, and toilets and for mopping, etc, etc.

    I bought 3 bottles of the concentrate of the old formula when the company discovered a problem with their manufacturer. I was starting to panic when more than a year later I was running low and they had not finished perfecting the new product/producer. I had no idea what I would switch to … then I came back here and remembered there are many alternatives but it meant much more space devoted to cleaning products.

    Branch Basics is back and better than ever.

    It is the only cleaner I use in my house for everything including hand soap. I sometimes use it for body wash & shampoo, especially when I am traveling because the travel kit is in my toiletries bag.

    I live alone so the $49 bottle of concentrate lasts 4-6 months. It’s a no-brainer for my budget and my health.

    I am surprised that it has not returned to your list of recommended pre-made products. The company is run by wonderful, brilliant women and I plan to support them forever.

  2. Penny Avatar

    Please note that the article about Magic Eraser comes from SNOPES – a self described fake news collection site. Last I checked if you eat the foam, well maybe you’ll get sick, but the same can be said for Castile Soap. Please stop scaring other people.

  3. Janetta Avatar

    I’ve been using natural/ecological cleaning products for quite some time but am stumped trying to find a cleaning substance for antique wooden furniture. Any ideas???

  4. sandra Avatar

    I have been using tea tree oil for skin infection. it works wonders diluted with vitamin E oil. to my horror, it is found to be lethal to pets. it can kill your birds cats and dogs. i looked it up on pets and tea tree oil and read the horror stories.I just wanted to get the word out,as it is gaining in popularity and has a deadly caviatte.Can be good for people when diluted and used correctly,but deadly for your pets. thankyou for your website!

  5. Lori Avatar

    What about a natural floor cleaner? I have mostly tile floors and I hate the smell of Fabuloso and Pinesol but I want something that cleans. And what do you recommend to mop with. I had the string head mops that seem to just push the dirt around?
    Thank you

  6. Kala Avatar

    Katie thank you for sharing I love DIY natural cleaning products! It makes a huge difference on my budget and I sleep easy knowing the chemicals are out of my house. Have you tried a diy dish detergent? I’ve been making mine for a while and it saves me $$$. I’d be happy to share it with you!

    Best,
    Kala

  7. Natalie Avatar

    Hi! Love, love, love your site. Thank you for all the valuable wisdom. My husband and I have been making our own wild boar sausage with the meat he’s hunted. We are curious on a better way to clean our sausage making tools. In the past we have sanitized with diluted bleach, but we would like to use something a little less harsh on both the environment and our skin/lungs. Do you have any recommendations for cleaning machines/tools used for handling raw meat? Thank you so much for any ideas!

  8. Ginger Avatar

    The recipe for car upholstery cleaner contains Dawn dish soap, which is a toxic, petroleum-based detergent. Maybe the recipe should be re-written using natural dish soap like Seventh Generation, which works just as well as conventional dish soap. I’m also concerned about the toxicity of Magic Erasers as well as microfiber cleaning cloths. Every time you use microfiber cloths they release tiny particles of microfiber into your home and the water supply, which is already highly contaminated because of the proliferation of microfiber clothing that gets washed every day. Using an old cotton cloth diaper, washcloth, or hand towel can work just as well.

  9. Som Avatar

    I would also strongly discourage the use of microfiber. Micro plastics are the biggest environmental disaster so far. There is so much of it in the ocean it’s in the fish too. If you are trying to be healthy and finding it difficult it just got harder with bpa in seafood and to fix it we need to stop using and wearing microfiber, polyester etc…..
    I clean with the kids old cotton face washers, they work fine.

  10. Beryl Avatar

    The dogs ate in a room. It is not carpeted but the odour is still in the house even though he cleans it.

  11. Carol L Avatar

    I make all of my own cleaning products. I don’t, however, use the magic eraser: melamine + toxic. I found a similar product that is made from glass: Bath Stone Cleaning Block. Try it you will LOVE it.
    I also don’t use microfiber, it literally won’t hold water as water just drips off of it like off of a duck. It smears water around when I try to clean glass….plus as others have noted: it is made from petroleum products which I refuse to support.
    The third product you mention that I never use is Sal Suds: toxic ingredients. I know that Bronner’s makes some nice castile and ‘organic’ soaps, however, this product does not fit that description. I read what the ingredients are and won’t use it as well as Dawn dishwashing liquid. I know some are addicted to Dawn, citing they use it to clean animals that have been caked in oils, but it is, nevertheless toxic!!!
    I do use the citrus vinegar, making sure it is made with GRAIN and not just ‘diluted to 5%’….which means it is also a petroleum product.
    Most of these are GREAT recipes. I make my own dishwasher soap, laundry soap, and use a combination of organic non toxic and homemade dish soap for hand washing dishes.
    Hopefully reading this will help you make the jump from commercial products which are overpriced as well as toxic for us and the environment, to making your own: saving money, your health and the health of your family and the health of the planet.

  12. Beryl Murphy Avatar
    Beryl Murphy

    Love your post. I am trying to use less chemicals now. Can you tell me what to use to get the rid of dog odour from the house. My son has dogs but they stink.
    Thank you

    1. Som Avatar

      If the odour is in carpet and couches you can sprinkle with baking soda and leave for 5 minutes then vacuum. You can also mix a few drops of essential oil if desired.

  13. Sarah Avatar

    Hi there, love your post! I’m switching our home cleaning supplies and have a question about your #3 point with antibacterial microfiber cloths. If you can use them with just water and they kill 99% of germs, etc., then why would one need cleaning agents of any kind (even your awesome homemade ones)?

  14. Megan Avatar

    Love the saucepan idea for air freshening. Some christmas blends make my house smell amazing during the holidays! Try Purple Frog Patches for on-the-go air freshening, their personal, all natural pods let you breathe in essential oils where ever you are!

  15. Emma Angel Avatar
    Emma Angel

    Great post. I like your patience and motivation.I have been very impressed with the cleaning efficiency of microfiber cloths but something tells me that anything made out of petroleum byproducts cannot be hundred persent okay. And indeed, I just did a quick search and found that anything made out of polyesters does shed very minuscule particles that are apparently harmful to nature especially after being washed in hot water in a washing machine. So that means, they’re also harmful to us. Thanks for sharing

  16. Sara Avatar

    Cleaning Iron covered rust skillet using potato. Paired with salt and vegetable oil, this trick will return your skillet to its former beauty.

  17. Jen Avatar

    I tried #15 before and yes, it is very effective. It also saves me from brushing which is something I really don’t like. I will try the rest of the tips on your list!

  18. Nick John Avatar
    Nick John

    These are really beneficial tips. I have tried using most of the tips given and honestly saying they are really effective.

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