Clean & Shine Wood Floors Naturally

Learn how to keep your floors sparkling without toxic chemicals.

While carpeting and linoleum were once the hallmarks of contemporary households, many homeowners today opt for hardwood flooring. Ranging from solid to engineered and other forms, hardwoods are beautiful but not inexpensive to install. But what about upkeep?

Maintaining them to enjoy, showcase, and help ensure a long life can result in even more expense for commercial products. What’s more, many of these cleaners are toxic to people, pets, and the environment with formulas that may include formaldehyde, styrene, and chloroform. But safe, common household products—some probably in your pantry at this very minute—can work to keep your hardwoods clean, conditioned, polished, and bright.

Clean & Shine Wood Floors Naturally

The following natural cleaners can help you creatively curate your hardwood floors, some going the distance to make scuff marks disappear and add luster to your living space!

  1. To get rid of germs, simple lemons, with their acidic property, are said to be a proven antiseptic and antibacterial force. A half cup of lemon juice in your pail of damp-mopping water will work to sanitize your wood floors.
  2. Among the more popular natural cleaning products for wood flooring is white vinegar, though some people argue it can dull the finish. To remove odors and mildew, and power through wax build-up, use a quarter-to-one half cup of white vinegar to each gallon of warm water. Though a vinegar smell may be objectionable to some, it will dissipate quickly (try leaving windows open for a while if possible). The addition of a few drops of essential oils like orange, peppermint or lavender can mitigate an unpleasant smell, and you can change them as your mood or the seasons change.
  3. To condition and shine when done cleaning, add some vegetable or olive oil to a little undiluted white vinegar and rub into floor—kind of like adding a finishing product for shine after you shampoo!
  4. Use about a dozen black teabags, steeped in hot water until the liquid cools, to create a top-notch solvent to clean and shine your wood floors. The tannins in tea are said to remove residue, resulting in real shine.
  5. Some hardwood aficionados swear by a mixture of equal parts rubbing alcohol, white vinegar, water, and a few drops of liquid dish soap.
  6. For scuff marks, baking soda on a damp sponge, plus a little elbow grease, can make them a distant memory.
  7. A little coconut oil (solid or warmed to the point it melts) on a cloth can also be rubbed into hardwoods to produce a rich, burnished surface.
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Beth Herman

Beth Herman is a freelance writer with interests in healthy living and food, family, animal welfare, architecture and design, religion, and yoga. She writes for a variety of national and regional publications, institutions, and websites.

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Katie Cascone

Love these tips! But just my ten cents from experience. Alcohol will strip the finish right off, I did this by accident when I spilled a bottle of isopropyl on my mail table. So i would test it on an inconspicuous spot first. My other thought…Olive and vegetable oil is highly perishable and while I’m sur it immediately looks nice,
it will eventually reek of rancid oil. Mineral oil on the other hand wont smell over time.

Marsha

I definately would not put alcohol on my wood floors.

M. Hedlund

I greatly appreciate your advice on cleaning wooden floors.

Susan Higgins

Glad you enjoyed the article!

linda

Most wood floors i know of have a coating of polyurethane or something like it. Our wood floors were finished with oils and have no protective coating. What are these cleaners meant for woods with finishes or no finishes?

Nancy

I can’t find anything to clean bamboo or cork. Suggestions?

Char

Are any or all of the above solutions ok for Laminate flooring? I was told only to use vinegar and water, but it does look dull. Thanks

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