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» Make Your Own Green Cleaners
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Services > Garbage > Keep Seattle Clean > Green Cleaning

Make Your Own Green Cleansers

With basic ingredients—baking soda, vinegar, Murphy’s Oil soap, and salt—you can make non-toxic alternatives to more hazardous chemicals that are traditionally used at home.


Follow these simple recipes to make your own cleaners for:

Tub and Sink Cleaner
Window and Mirror Cleaner

Outdoor Window Cleaner

Toilet Bowl Cleaner

Linoleum Floor Cleaner

All-Purpose Cleaner

Copper Cleaner

Drain Cleaner

Oven Cleaner

Links to other sites


Safety First!
  • • Please do not mix the Green Cleaning recipes with other cleaning products.

  • • Keep these basic cleaning products out of the reach of children.

  • • To properly dispose of hazardous household products you no longer want or need, call the Hazards Line at (206) 296-4692.


Tub and Sink Cleaner
  • • Use baking soda in place of scouring powder.

  • • Sprinkle it on porcelain fixtures and rub with a wet rag.

  • • Add Castile Soap or Murphy's Oil Soap to the rag for more cleaning power.

  • • Rinse well to avoid leaving a hazy film.



Window and Mirror Cleaner
    1. Put ¼ cup of vinegar in a spray bottle and fill to top with water.


    2. Spray on surface.


    3. Rub with a cloth diaper, other lint-free rag, or sheets of newspaper.


Outdoor Window Cleaner
    1. Use a sponge and wash with warm water mixed with a few drops of liquid soap.


    2. Rinse well.


    3. Squeegee dry.


Toilet Bowl Cleaner
    1. Sprinkle baking soda inside the bowl.


    2. Squeeze a couple of drops of soap in also.


    3. Scrub with a toilet bowl brush and finish outside surfaces with a rag sprinkled with baking soda.


    4. Rinse.


Linoleum Floor Cleaner
    1. Mix 1/2 cup vinegar in a bucket of warm water.


    2. Mop as usual.


    3. The vinegar odor will go away shortly after the floor dries.


All-Purpose Cleaner
For spots on linoleum, tile, and woodwork.

    1. Add a drop of Murphy's Oil Soap on a wet washcloth.

    2. Rub briskly.
A washcloth will last longer and create less waste than a sponge.



Copper Cleaner (Do not use this cleaner on lacquered finishes)
    1. Mix equal parts vinegar and salt (a tablespoon of each should do).


    2. Apply to surface with a rag.


    3. Rinse thoroughly with water to prevent corrosion.


    4. For a shiny appearance, apply a little vegetable oil with a cloth and rub.

Drain Cleaner
This recipe will free minor clogs and help prevent future clogs.


    1. Pour ½ cup baking soda down the drain.


    2. Pour ½ cup vinegar down the drain.


    3. Let it fizz for a few minutes.


    4. Pour a teakettle full of boiling water down the drain to clear it.


    5. Repeat if needed.
If the clog is stubborn, use a plunger. If very stubborn, use a plumber's snake



Oven Cleaner (Do not use this cleaner on self-cleaning ovens)
    1. Mix 1 cup baking soda with enough water to make a paste.


    2. Apply to oven surfaces.


    3. Let stand for several minutes.


    4. Scrub with a scouring pad for most surfaces.


    5. Use a spatula or bread knife to get under large food deposits.
Try spot cleaning your oven regularly; dirty ovens are less energy-efficient.

Links to other sites
Washington Toxics Coalition

Local Hazardous Waste Program