Our Top 5 Favorite Homemade Cleaners (Cheap, Easy to Make!)

If there’s one place where you can really cut costs in your household spending, it’s household cleaners. The cost of most home cleaning products is getting outrageous. While I don’t advocate throwing out what you may have accumulated, I recommend going forward you consider making homemade cleaners from downright cheap ingredients that perform as well, maybe better, than their commercial cousins. 

 

woman wearing apron holding a beige linen bag filled with her homemade cleaners

Tub and Shower Homemade Cleaner

This is truly #1 on my list of favorite homemade cleaners. It is better than any commercial product on the market. Use it for the toughest, scummiest, “mildew-iest” situations—or for routine maintenance. Prepare to be amazed.

Ingredients

  • Blue Dawn liquid dishwashing detergent*
  • white vinegar

Instructions

Pour 1/2 cup** Blue Dawn into a 32-ounce spray bottle (1/2 cup Dawn if you are using a 16-ounce bottle; 1/3 cup for a 12-ounce bottle). Fill the bottle to about 1-inch from the top with plain white vinegar. Apply sprayer top; shake gently to mix. Label bottle.

*may substitute with pure-castile liquid soap

**assumes original Blue Dawn, which is no longer readily available. If using Blue Dawn Ultra, Platinum, 4x, or 5x which are highly concentrated, reduce the 1/2 cup measurement accordingly. Don’t worry, this is not an exact science. For example, if 1/2 cup means unconcentrated original Blue Dawn, then 4x concentrate means dividing by 4, which is 1/8 cup or about two tablespoons.

To use

Spray liberally on the areas to be cleaned—tub or shower walls, doors, floor, fixtures. Allow to sit from 30 minutes to overnight, depending on the soap and scum build-up amount. The offensive scum, gunk, and grime will break down and become soft and gooey. Simply rinse it away.

For incredibly challenging situations (or if this is the initial treatment) use a sponge or brush to gently scrub the surfaces before rinsing. To maintain: Spray down the walls and floor of the tub/shower once a week. Rinse. Admire.

 

Toilet Bowl Cleaner

Ingredients

  • 1 cup baking soda
  • 1 cup white vinegar

Instructions

  1. Remove the water from the toilet bowl by reaching down behind the toilet near the floor and turning off the water input valve. This is easy. Just turn the handle clockwise until it no longer turns.
  2. Flush the toilet once or twice or until all of the water disappears. Because you turned the input off, no water will fill the tank.
  3. Sprinkle the baking soda all around the inside of the toilet bowl. Next, pour or spray the plain white distilled vinegar into the bowl. You’ll get a little bubbling show and even a popping sound. Great! That’s the reaction you want.
  4. Using a good toilet brush, scrub it down including under the rim. Last, turn the inlet valve back on by turning it counterclockwise until it stops turning. The toilet tank will fill. Flush to rinse. Repeat as necessary.

You’ve just cleaned, scoured, deodorized that toilet, and removed mildew and odors.

 

Granite Homemade Cleaner

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup rubbing alcohol
  • 3 drops blue Dawn
  • 2 cups water
  • 5 drops essential oil (optional)

Instructions

Pour 1/4 cup rubbing alcohol into a 16-oz. spray bottle. Add blue Dawn dishwashing liquid,  and essential oil (optional, but makes it smell great) and water.

Label and keep out of reach of children. Shake to mix. Label the bottle.

To use

Use this cleaner to keep your granite countertops beautifully clean and shiny without wrecking the sealant or causing harm to the granite. Note: Any size spray bottle will work. Simply adjust the proportions to accommodate.



Heavy-duty Bathroom Cleaner

Ingredients

  • rubbing alcohol
  • white vinegar

Instructions

Fill it halfway with rubbing alcohol; the rest of the way to the top with white vinegar. Label the bottle. The ratio is 50/50 rubbing alcohol to white vinegar no matter the size of the container.

To use

This is heavy-duty and will sanitize as well as clean bathroom counters, floors, sink, glass and mirrors. The great thing about this cleaner—no rinsing required. Simply spray, scrub with a sponge or cloth, and wipe clean.

Wood, Laminate, Vinyl Floor Cleaner

Ingredients

  • 1 cup rubbing alcohol
  • 4 cups distilled water
  • 8 drops blue Dawn

Instructions

Pour ingredients into a 2 quart (or larger) bottle, jar, or jug with a tightly fitting lid. Label clearly.

To use

Pour cleaner into a spray bottle. Sweep or vacuum the floor. Spray the cleaner in a small area, scrub well with a sponge and immediately wipe the area dry with a microfiber cloth. Never leave standing water on wood, laminate, or vinyl flooring.

The secret is to work in small areas—spray, scrub, and wipe dry immediately.

 

Updated Jan 8, 2023!

 



 

Everyday Cheapskate participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn from qualifying purchases, at no cost to you.

 


 

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

More from Everyday Cheapskate

garden seed starting table scape succulents tools gardener gardening hacks
DIY muffin liner homemade tulip baking lavender cutting board shadows
spa day at home mother daughter manicure hot rollers on couch
spring cleaning creative bright concept. tools, bottles, flowers, chalkboard with words hello spring
Unrecognizable woman cleaning with vinegar
wood floor with area rug
BKF cleaning a Stainless surface


Please keep your comments positive, encouraging, helpful, brief,
and on-topic in keeping with EC Commenting Guidelines



Caught yourself reading all the way 'til the end? Why not share with a friend.

33 replies
Newer Comments »
  1. Madi says:

    Can I tell you that i use the dawn/vinegar bathroom cleaner as a spot remover?? Got some motor oil on a pair of jeans. The oil did not come out. Before putting it in the dryer, I used the bathroom cleaner, worked it in well & rewashed. Came out great!! Also works on ground-in dirt!! I love this stuff!!

    Reply
  2. Kaite French says:

    Can’t live without your Laundry soap or the bathroom cleaner. Not just cheaper, but better in my opinion. Just got granite countertops after Hurricane Florence Flood rehab. I can’t wait to try out the granite cleaning formula.

    Reply
  3. Rudy U. says:

    For the heavy duty bathroom cleaner, you say that it is a ‘ratio is 50/50 rubbing alcohol to white vinegar’. The more appropriate way to describe this is a ratio of 1:1 rubbing alcohol to white vinegar or it is 50% rubbing alcohol and 50% white vinegar. However, both of these do lead to a further confusion since isopropyl alcohol (isopropanol) can be commonly bought in strengths of 50%, 70%, and 90%. True ‘rubbing alcohol’ is the 70% isopropyl alcohol. Is this correct for your formula?

    Reply
  4. Belted cow lady says:

    Hello, I use the shower cleaner daily and my shower looks new!! I’ve used this formula for years.
    I do however recall, that you posted a everyday spray onshower cleaner with a slightly different formulation.
    Could you repost that, Please!
    Thanks

    Reply
    • Mary Hunt says:

      You are partially right, WEB. Vinegar can penetrate into the spaces for air if used continuously over a long period of time. If, however, you have sealed your grout on a regular basis—a regular maintenance task for all tile grout—the vinegar won’t be an issue. It’s a given that just like granite, grout must be resealed at least annually.

      Reply
    • Mary Hunt says:

      Yes, all safe for septic systems. In fact, cleaning with vinegar can save your septic system. In fact you should consider replacing dangerous chemical cleaners around your house with non-toxic alternatives, such as baking soda, salt, isopropyl alcohol,vinegar, and hydrogen peroxide solutions. These are environmentally safe and are beneficial to your septic system.

      Reply
      • Donna says:

        Thank you for the quick reply. I have been a fan for many years, and tell everybody to check out Everyday Cheapskate!

    • Mary Hunt says:

      Is the marble sealed? It should be and should be re-sealed annually, the same as granite. Marble is soft and will stain easily so it’s important to keep it sealed. No vinegar on marble! Use the granite cleaner above and you’ll be golden.

      Reply
      • Mary Hunt says:

        Yes. Yes, all safe for septic systems. In fact, cleaning with vinegar can save your septic system. As a septic system owner, I’m sure you know that phosphate is the enemy of your system. According to its manufacturer and also the International Bird Rescue Research Center that uses blue Dawn to degrease and rescue wildlife, Dawn is harmless, biodegradable, and contains no phosphates.

    • Mary Hunt says:

      Yes, perfect on porcelain or ceramic tile! But NOT natural stone or any surface that has been “sealed.” The vinegar will break down the sealant.

      Reply
  5. Marti Buurkarl says:

    Can totally vouch for the tub and shower cleaner! I thought I was going to have to use a lime and scale cleaner on some neglected shower doors. But this worked in one overnight, they sparkle!

    Reply
Newer Comments »

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *