The bathroom is the room most people dread cleaning — and it’s usually because they’re approaching it without a system. Cleaning in the wrong order means you’re dripping product on surfaces you’ve already cleaned; using the wrong tools means scrubbing twice as hard for half the result. With the right sequence and a few professional techniques, a full bathroom deep clean takes under two hours. Here’s exactly how to do it.
The Golden Rule: Always Clean Top to Bottom
Before anything else, the sequence: always work top to bottom, and always apply product to surfaces and let it sit before scrubbing. Spray the shower, the toilet, and the sink with their respective cleaners, then start dusting and wiping from the highest point in the room. By the time you get to the surfaces with product on them, the chemistry has done the work for you.
For grout — the surface most people struggle with — the most effective non-commercial solution is undiluted hydrogen peroxide (3%, available at most pharmacies) sprayed directly onto the grout lines. Leave for 15–20 minutes, scrub with a stiff-bristled toothbrush, and rinse. According to cleaning expert Melissa Maker of Clean My Space, hydrogen peroxide is one of the most underutilized cleaning agents in the average household — it disinfects, whitens, and removes mold without the harshness of bleach.
- Sequence: Apply products first, work top to bottom, scrub last
- Grout: Hydrogen peroxide (3%) sprayed on and left for 15–20 mins, then toothbrush scrub
- Ventilation: Open the window and run the extractor fan throughout the entire clean
- Gloves: Always — even for non-bleach products
- Microfiber cloths: Use different colored cloths for different surfaces (toilet vs. sink vs. mirror) to avoid cross-contamination
Shower and Bathtub: Tackle Limescale and Soap Scum for Good

Soap scum and limescale build up gradually — each shower adds a thin layer that’s almost invisible, until one day the shine is gone and what looked clean before suddenly looks permanently dirty. The solution is part technique and part prevention. For the clean itself, white vinegar is the most effective acid for dissolving both soap scum and limescale without scratching surfaces.
For the showerhead, fill a plastic bag with white vinegar and secure it around the showerhead with an elastic band — or use an old shower cap — and leave overnight. The limescale deposits dissolve completely without any scrubbing. For the shower screen or glass door, a squeegee after every single shower is more effective than any cleaning product — it prevents the buildup from forming in the first place.
“A squeegee takes 30 seconds after every shower. That 30 seconds saves you 30 minutes of scrubbing every month. It’s the single best investment in bathroom maintenance you can make.”
— Becky Rapinchuk, founder of Clean Mama and author of Simply Clean
- Showerhead: Vinegar bag or shower cap overnight — no scrubbing required
- Glass door/screen: Squeegee after every shower (prevention) + weekly white vinegar spray wipe
- Bathtub: Baking soda paste + dish soap scrub for stains; rinse with warm water
- Silicone sealant: Bleach pen or diluted bleach on a cotton coil left for 30 mins — remove mold from sealant without damaging it
- Prevention: A daily shower spray (diluted vinegar or commercial version) reduces buildup dramatically
The Toilet: The Full Clean, Not Just the Bowl

Most people clean the toilet bowl and consider the job done. But the toilet seat hinges, the base, the outside of the cistern, and the floor around the toilet all harbour bacteria — and are rarely cleaned properly. A full toilet clean takes an extra five minutes and makes a significant hygiene difference.
Apply toilet cleaner to the bowl and let it sit. While it works, wipe down the entire external toilet — lid, seat (both sides), hinges, outside of bowl and cistern, and the floor around the base. Use a dedicated toilet cloth or disposable wipes only for this surface. Then return to scrub the bowl. Flush with the lid down — a 2014 University of Leeds study found that flushing with the lid up disperses bacteria up to 25cm above the toilet, landing on nearby toothbrushes, towels, and surfaces.
- Apply bowl cleaner first — let it dwell while you clean the exterior
- Exterior sequence: Lid → seat top → seat underside → hinges → outer bowl → cistern → floor around base
- Dedicated cloths: Toilet surface never shares a cloth with any other bathroom surface
- Flush with lid down — always
- Frequency: Quick bowl clean twice weekly; full exterior clean weekly
Mirror, Sink, and the Streak-Free Finish

Bathroom mirrors are one of the most satisfying surfaces to clean when done correctly — and one of the most frustrating when streaks are left behind. The professional secret: use a slightly damp microfiber cloth, not a wet one, and a glass cleaner sprayed onto the cloth (not the mirror). Work in a Z-pattern from top to bottom, overlapping each stroke slightly.
For the sink, baking soda and a damp cloth works on most finishes. For chrome taps, a small amount of baby oil on a cloth after cleaning restores the shine and creates a thin protective layer that repels water spots. Apartment Therapy notes that this chrome-finishing technique is one of the most widely recommended professional tips for maintaining a bathroom’s appearance between cleans.
- Mirror: Glass cleaner on cloth (not mirror), microfiber cloth, Z-pattern wipe top to bottom
- Tap chrome: Wipe clean, then buff with a tiny amount of baby oil to repel water spots
- Sink basin: Baking soda + damp cloth scrub; rinse thoroughly
- Drain: Baking soda + vinegar monthly to prevent hair clog buildup
- Streak-free tip: Buff mirrors and chrome in circular motions if any marks remain
The Bathroom Maintenance Habit That Cuts Your Cleaning Time in Half

The most effective bathroom cleaning strategy isn’t a better product — it’s a daily 60-second habit. Each day: squeegee the shower screen, give the toilet bowl a quick brush, and wipe down the sink with a small cloth kept there for the purpose. This routine, done consistently, prevents the buildup that makes weekly cleans hard. According to Real Simple’s cleaning team, households that do a 60-second daily maintenance routine report spending 40% less time on weekly bathroom cleaning than those who don’t.
- Daily (60 seconds): Squeegee shower, quick toilet brush, sink wipe
- Weekly: Full toilet clean, mirror and sink, floor mop, cabinet wipe
- Monthly: Showerhead descale, grout check, extractor fan filter clean
- Quarterly: Full deep clean, replace toothbrush heads, edit cabinet contents





The grout cleaning tip with hydrogen peroxide changed my life. I’d tried every commercial grout cleaner on the market with mediocre results. Left the H2O2 spray on for 20 minutes as suggested and the grout came up noticeably whiter. My bathroom looks like it was just renovated.
Top to bottom, always! I used to clean the toilet last and then drip product on the floor I’d just cleaned. The sequence advice in this article sounds obvious in retrospect but I’d genuinely never thought about it. Now my cleans are both faster and more thorough.
The tip about using a shower cap to soak the showerhead overnight in white vinegar is brilliant. Mine was completely blocked with limescale and I’d been putting off the clean for ages. The next morning it was perfect — zero effort involved. Sending this to my mum.
Love the 2-hour framing — I always think bathroom cleaning is going to take all day and avoid it as a result. Timed myself using this method and it was genuinely 1 hour 45 minutes including the toilet, shower, sink, mirror, and floor. The sequence really does make a difference.
Good article but I’d add: always wear gloves when cleaning bathrooms. Not just for the bleach products but for general hygiene. My partner is an ER nurse and was horrified to discover I clean bathrooms without gloves. Learn from my mistake.
The squeegee-after-every-shower tip for preventing soap scum buildup is something I implemented six months ago and I can confirm — bathroom cleaning now takes half the time it used to. Preventive maintenance is the real secret and this article touches on it perfectly.