Homemade Toilet Scrub

Bathroom Cleaning Photo credit: Sidekix Media on Unsplash

Homemade toilet scrub: how to make and use. I’ve never been able to make use of scented cleaning products. Below is a recipe and instructions for making your own bathroom and toilet scrub. I also advise spraying some white vinegar in the bowl after.

Instead, I’ve usually been left with no other choice but to make my own. So my entire adult life I’ve spent endless hours conducting research on natural alternatives to commercial products. It’s taken a lot of trial and error since I use only natural, organic ingredient compounds and as such, these can vary in potency, efficacy, results, etc.

DIY Toilet Cleaning Scrub Photo credit: Patricia Hernandez @zeroquestpeople

How to Make Toilet Scrub

Ingredients
  • 1½ cup baking soda⁣
  • ¼ cup Castile soap⁣
  • 10 drops Tea tree⁣ essential oil⁣
  • 10 drops lemon essential oil⁣
Directions
  1. Mix together well and store in a reusable jar (preferably recycled, repurposed or thrifted).
  2. Apply with a designated toilet brush.⁣
  3. ⁣This is a great scrub for ceramics, to get them coming up shiny clean.⁣

If you are looking for easy ways to reduce your waste as well as harmful chemicals, this is a pretty basic toilet scrub recipe you can try.

Here I’m sharing a homemade toilet scrub recipe that is sustainable, zero waste, plastic free, and cost–saving. As always, due to its very nature, different people may react to it differently. So my advice, as usual, is to first test the finished recipe on a small patch of skin on the outside of you arm, and wait a good 12–24 hours to ensure no allergic reaction.

I share this freely and encourage people to use it because as I see it; if given a choice why would anyone use harsh chemicals around their home which are bad for your health as well as the environment.

Start with the Basics

Cleaning products are so cheap to make once you have a few basic ingredients that can be combined in many different ways to achieve different results.

I prefer to store this in a reusable large glass jar. But, rather than ditching all the plastic detergent containers and tubs you already have (they’ll end up in the ocean, rivers, beaches, and lakes).

Why not just wait until the product in them is used up, then clean and refill with your own DIY. Continue reusing them until you can’t anymore, then replace them with reusable glass ones.

Source & image credits:
The Zero Waste Cartel
@zerowastecartel
https://www.zerowastecartel.com/
Patricia Hernandez
@zeroquestpeople
https://www.zeroquest.org/

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