The use of household cleaning products is essential for daily hygiene. This also includes storing your products properly.
After all, organization is the key to a pleasant home, and when it comes to household cleaning and hygiene products, it’s much more practical to have them close at hand in a specific place. Proper storage of these products also ensures that they are kept out of reach of children, as recommended by specialists.
Follow our advice on how to store your household cleaning products:
Step 1: Identify expired products
The first step in organizing household products is to sort them out. It’s essential if you want to have an overview of the products you own:
- open bottles,
- empty bottles that you have not yet thrown away;
- products that have expired;
For your information, some household cleaning products can still be used even after their expiration date, especially cleaning products. Disinfectants, on the other hand, lose their effectiveness once the recommended use-by date has passed.
Keep this in mind before throwing your bottles in the garbage can, or before continuing to use a disinfectant that no longer eliminates any bacteria or microbes!
Step 2: Sort by category
Once you’ve decided which products to throw away and which to keep, you need to draw up an inventory. This involves grouping products by category:
- kitchen (dishwashing liquid, soap paste, fruit and vegetable disinfectant, etc.)
- bathroom (bleach, multi-surface cleaner…)
- toilets: (toilet duck, toilet blocks, drain cleaner gel, etc.)
- floors ;
- surfaces ;
- linen ;
- glass ;
This step is a good way of identifying the products that are most useful to you, so you’ll know where to make savings or, on the contrary, where to spend more.
There are products that can be used for several purposes at once, allowing you to save on several categories! Choosing this type of product also allows you to declutter your storage cupboards and gain a little more space.
Step 3: Tidy up
The best way to make your cleaning products accessible when needed is to place them directly in the rooms where they will be used. Dishwashing liquid and soap paste, for example, should be placed under the sink, while toilet duck should logically be placed in the toilet. Multi-purpose products, on the other hand, should be stored in a central location in the home, such as the kitchen.
To keep them out of reach of children, however, it is also advisable to place cleaning products high up or under a key.
You can also dedicate a storage area to all your household products. A cupboard may be suitable for grouping all products, but in this case, take care to dedicate a place for each category.
Step 4: Organize with the right storage space
It’s not a good idea to leave household products lying around in a house with children. That’s why we recommend investing in secure storage units. They’re also a good way of preventing clutter in the home.
Spray products such as window cleaner, for example, must be stored high up. To do this, you can install a hanging bar on a wall or on the inside door of your cupboard.
Bottled cleaning products, on the other hand, can be stored in a transparent, closed box so that only adults can open and use them.
Similarly, consider hanging tea towels on hooks in the cupboard or on the kitchen wall for easier access.
As for sponges, they should be placed close to a water source in a perforated box to prevent water stagnation.
Finally, you can also store brooms and mops on high-mounted racks to save a little extra space around the house.