
Mixing These Cleaning Supplies Creates Toxic Gas in Your Home
Go ahead, do it. Splurge on a professional to clean your place once a month or a couple of times a year. It feels good, calms your nervous system, and gives you some personal time back.
Meanwhile, when you have to carve out every Saturday morning to clean your home or pick a couple of evenings a week where you clean certain rooms, let's make sure you stay safe.
According to Real Simple, you could end up creating toxic gas, and there's nothing clean about that. It's easy to fall down rabbit holes while researching cheap ways to clean. Maybe you saw a life hack on socials and figured, why not try this without researching what the products can do?
Certain cleaning chemicals can be very poisonous when mixed together, and in general cleaning products should never be mixed together because of the risk of unwanted toxic inhalation effects.
You should be cleaning at least once a week, at least while wiping down your kitchen counter several times a week. Cleaning products get expensive, so it's so nice to find ways to alleviate the price by mixing products to make cleaning last longer, for example
But danger lurks so take note, please.
DON'T MIX THESE CLEANING PRODUCTS
- Bleach and Toilet Bowl Cleaner
- Bleach and Ammonia
- Bleach and Vinegar
- Bleach and Drain Cleaner
- Bleach and Rubbing Alcohol
- Bleach and Lysol
- Bleach and Oven Cleaner
- Bleach and Dish Soap
- Bleach and Lemon Juice
- Bleach and Windex
- Bleach and Vinegar
- Hydrogen Peroxide and Vinegar
- Several Drain Cleaners
- Antibacterials/Disenfectants and Detergents
Do you see a trend?
According to the Taste of Home website, each cleaner should be used separately. If you really want to save money and minimize your products by using bleach or vinegar, only mix those with water.
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