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Practical Tips for the Home

How to Clean a Bathroom in Ten Minutes

(because you’re simply dying to know, right?)

Before you start, assemble your kit.

Once assembled, keep it together under the bathroom sink.:

  • rags (five is plenty – I use old towels, chopped down to size and old cloth diapers). Paper towels are okay, but really don’t clean as well AND are hard on trees.
  • cleaning solution in a squirt bottle (I use no-name Mr. Clean clone)
  • window cleaning solution
  • bleach
  • toilet brush
  • large flat box or rubbermaid tub (you can store your cleaning supplies in it!)
  • vacuum cleaner or broom
  • garbage bag
  1. Go into the bathroom. Dump garbage can contents into garbage bag. Vacuum or sweep floor.
  2. Take all the stuff off the sink counter and surrounding area (especially toothbrushes!) and put into your box or tub.
  3. Spray mirror all over with window cleaning solution
  4. Spray counter and sink all over with cleaning fluid.
  5. Remove all stuff from shower/bath and put in box or tub. Gather up any books or magazines around the toilet and put in box or tub. Put outside bathroom.
  6. Spray shower or bath all over with cleaning fluid.
  7. Spray toilet as follows
    1. spray tank
    2. spray lid
    3. lift lid and spray underside of lid and seat
    4. life seat and spray underside of seat and bowl rim
    5. spray outside of bowl
  8. Dump approximately a cup of bleach into the bowl
  9. Get rag #1 – wipe down mirror (always start with the mirror so as not to leave streaks)
  10. Working from least grungy to most and using a new rag for each, wipe down sink and counter (do door knobs then!), bathtub/shower (outside of tub, too!) and toilet tank (don’t forget the handle!), lid, seat, rim of bowl, outside. Put rags on floor as you finish.
  11. For the shower tub, work top to bottom. Optional step: after you finish, close the shower curtain and turn the shower on (cold will do) and swivel the head around to rinse the tub and walls. Best done from outside the shower, reaching in.
  12. Using toilet brush, scrub inside of toilet. Bleach generally works as well as most bowl cleaners, is cheaper and no worse for the environment. If you have a septic system, you may wish to use even less bleach than I state here. If you do, make sure to drizzle it around the inside of the bowl.
  13. Spray floor behind toilet. Using rags on floor, wipe floor around toilet.
  14. Working your way backwards, spray and wipe floor.
  15. After floor dries, put stuff back in bathroom. Restock towels. Wash rags for next time.

There are, of course, other things that need doing, but not necessarily every week:

  • Windows, for instance, can generally be done less frequently. Do them after the mirror, but before the counter/sink.
  • Shower curtains can generally be machine-washed (even the plastic ones). Just use warm water.
  • Cupboards need a periodic wipe.
  • Walls need a scrub-down once in a while.
  • Drains may need the odd cleaning, depending on your household.

Really, though, the trick is in the prep. Make sure you have everything you need ready-to-hand and spray surfaces down well before you get to them (but not so far in advance that the cleaner dries!). Cleaners work better when given a wee bit of time to penetrate grease and grime. I prefer to spray and wipe the floor (as opposed to mopping) as it’s one less set of tools to assemble and less water to deal with. Clean up is much quicker when you don’t have a bucket of grimy suds to dump (in your nice, clean toilet!).

Addendum: don’t judge how long it takes to clean a bathroom by the first time you do it – the first time always takes longer than it should

(From http://vickyth.wordpress.com/2007/05/17/a-practical-post/)