5 Ways to Clean and Protect Your Floors
These expert tips will keep your vinyl, tile, and even wood floors looking great, year in and year out
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Keeping your home’s floors clean and protected is a year-round job. In winter and spring, snow, mud, and grains of ice melt that end up indoors can make a mess of your floors, in addition to leaving scratches and damaging the finish. In warmer months, there’s beach sand and garden-variety dirt to contend with.
- Tips to Keep Your Floor Clean: Establish a No-Shoes Policy Be Strategic Sweep and Vacuum Regularly Do a Deeper Clean Use a Humidifier
- Best Flooring
And diligent floor care does more than just preserve your flooring’s good looks—it also contributes to a healthy indoor environment. Especially if you have a crawling infant at home, you’ll want to keep your floors free of tracked-in contaminants, including de-icing chemicals and oils that can irritate a child’s skin and, if ingested, their mouth and stomach, says Aparna Bole, MD, a pediatrician and former chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Environmental Health and Climate Change.
Around some homes, lead is also a concern. “When soil containing lead is tracked in, crawling babies and toddlers can be exposed from hand-to-mouth behaviors or putting toys from the floor into their mouths,” Bole says.
Here are five simple ways to keep your floors pristine.
1. Establish a No-Shoes Policy
This practice is followed in many countries worldwide to prevent grit, dirt, and other nasties from entering the home. But like the metric system and tiny cars, it’s not as common in the U.S. Eevi Jones of Falls Church, Va., says it’s the norm in Germany, where she was born. “Entering the living space with street shoes is a big no-no,” she says.
2. Be Strategic
Place a boot scraper outside your front door. This will reduce the amount of mud and other grime that gets tracked indoors. In a Google search, we recently found boot-scraping coir doormats start around $25, as well as handheld boot-scraping brushes and standing metal boot scrapers incorporating designs of birds, butterflies, cowboy boots, curlicues, and a surprising variety of dachshunds.
Use doormats, indoors and out. “We have small decorative mats that are easy to vacuum and clean,” says Wendy Bazilian, who lives in San Diego. The floors in her home aren’t subject to winter’s elements, but because they’re made of relatively soft bamboo, they still need protection from nicks and dents.
Protect a wood floor in the kitchen. Place a mat in front of the sink and one in front of the range to prevent steady foot traffic from wearing bare spots into the finish. A cushioned version can also help prevent back strain.
Use plastic or felt protectors under furniture legs to prevent scratches. And when rearranging furniture, always lift pieces instead of sliding them.
Keep shades down when possible to minimize UV exposure to wood floors. Our flooring tests reveal that ultraviolet rays can take a toll on some of them.
3. Sweep and Vacuum Regularly
Daily sweeping is essential to maintaining the integrity of a floor’s finish, regardless of the material. Vinyl and laminates, for instance, have a plastic surface, so it’s important to sweep or vacuum them regularly to remove hard dirt particles that can leave scratches, says Li Wang, who heads up CR’s flooring tests. “This is especially important if you live in a sandy area, like close to the beach or the desert,” she adds.
Ceramic and porcelain floors have a hard, permeable surface, so any broom should work. For wood and other flooring types, use a soft-bristle broom. If the floorboards have a beveled edge that traps dirt and crumbs, use your vacuum cleaner instead.
Susan Booth, who leads vacuum cleaner testing for Consumer Reports, says you can protect your floors from scratches when vacuuming by using the appliance’s soft-roller attachment or by turning off the brush roll. “If there isn’t an option to turn the brush roll off on your stick vacuums or Shark uprights, set it to ‘low’ or its bare-floor setting, which will spin the brush roll slowly,” she says.
In Consumer Reports’ tests, we’ve found that stick vacs can offer a more convenient alternative to upright vacuum cleaners for cleaning bare floors, and our stick vac ratings include dozens of options. You can also use a canister vac; as a group, they perform admirably on bare floors. The trade-off is that they can be heavier and pricier than other vacuum cleaner types. For more on choosing a vacuum cleaner, check out our vacuum cleaner buying guide.
4. Do a Deeper Clean Periodically
If you sweep or vacuum your floors diligently, cleaning a few times a year with a product designed for floors might suffice. You’ll want to take different steps, though, based on the flooring material.
Nonwood Flooring
Water alone might be sufficient to handle spot stains. “Most flooring today is easy to keep clean,” Wang says. “Stains normally don’t soak in, so they can be removed with plain water.”
Before using a store-bought liquid floor cleaner, check to make sure that it’s suitable for your flooring type. Cleaner labels usually will specify, but if you’re not sure how the cleaner will work on your flooring, try it on an inconspicuous area first, Wang says. Put a few drops of the cleaner on the floor, let it sit for an hour or so, and wipe it off with a wet paper towel. After the spot dries, look for damage. Shine a flashlight on the spot and move it around at different angles to see whether the gloss on the spot is different from that on the rest of the floor.
Wood Flooring
Your choice of cleaner will depend on the wood’s finish. If you don’t know what type of finish your wood flooring has, apply a few drops of water to an inconspicuous area. If white spots appear within 10 minutes, the finish is wax. If no white spots show up, it’s polyurethane. Another way to test is to scratch the surface with a coin or another sharp object (again, in an out-of-the-way area). If the finish doesn’t flake, it’s polyurethane.
To clean wood floors with a polyurethane finish, use a solution of 1 cup of distilled white vinegar and 3 to 4 gallons of warm water. (Or use a water-based cleaner designed specifically for urethane finishes, such as Bona.) Damp-mop the floor, don’t soak it. To do this, dip a terry cloth towel into the solution, wring out the excess solution, and cover a standard flathead mop with the towel to clean the floor. Clean wax-finish floors with a solvent-based cleaner and liquid wax designed specifically for wood floors.
Regardless of the finish, never use products intended for vinyl or tile on wood floors because they can dull the finish and make the floors slippery. Be careful when using a sponge mop; some have hard metal edges that can scratch floors. And avoid using a steam mop on wood flooring because the hot water can warp it. “If you’re not careful, they can do some damage,” says Larry Ciufo, a CR test engineer who evaluates steam mops.
5. Use a Humidifier
With wood floors, excessive dryness can shrink floorboards, creating gaps and making them creak. In northern regions, that’s more likely during the winter, when dropping temperatures outside lead to drier air inside. To prevent this, use a humidifier to maintain room humidity between 30 and 40 percent in cooler and drier seasons. As a benefit, you’ll be protecting your wood furniture and leather goods from cracking and splitting.
Choose a humidifier based on the room size; the packaging will indicate the range of square footage the unit is designed to cover. For more information, see CR’s humidifier buying guide and our ratings of dozens of humidifiers in five sizes.
Best Flooring From CR's Tests
When you need to install new floors, read Consumer Reports’ flooring buying guide, and check out our latest test-based flooring ratings, including engineered and prefinished solid wood flooring, linoleum, plastic laminate, and wood-look porcelain. Here are the top products in each category.