How do I clean rust stain in a toilet?

Lisa Botella
by Lisa Botella

  9 answers
  • Pamela Pamela on Dec 01, 2018

    Hi ! I found a pumice stick for cleaning the dust stain at home depot for about $4.

    It worked well , but needed tough scrubbing .Good luck !

  • Lori Jo Lori Jo on Dec 01, 2018

    Wink rust remover

  • Carol Prim Carol Prim on Dec 01, 2018

    Rust remover..

  • Tonya Tonya on Dec 01, 2018

    Hi Lisa,

    I like CLR.

  • Pamela Pamela on Dec 01, 2018

    I got a pumice stone shaped like a cross between a big piece of chalk and a pencil , it is meant just for this purpose, to remove dust stains. It worked well , but it took some work to get it all off. I got it at home depot for about $4 . Good luck !

  • CLR should do the trick right away.

  • Em Em on Dec 03, 2018

    The Works toilet cleaner found at Dollar Stores. Works like nothing I have ever seen. Will take the rust out of the tank as well.

  • Edwardmorrison Edwardmorrison on Dec 04, 2018

    I had always used harsh chemicals in the toilet bowl. We have a lot iron in our water and it stains the toilet within a few days after cleaning it. It is nearly impossible to scrub off and to be real honest I have been doing just 'bare minimum' cleaning since the arrival of my second daughter back in August. I had tried vinegar, baking soda, non-toxic all natural cleaners and nothing touched the iron stains in the toilet. I've tried hand scrubbing, brush scrubbing and letting the cleaner soak for a few hours. Nothing. The only success I have had in the past getting the toilet clean and bright white was to use some sort of iron removing harsh chemical spray and scrubbing the living hell out of the toilet with gloves on and a little green dish srubbie. I probably don't have to explain what level I feel at socially when I'm on my knees scrubbing stuck bits of god knows what off a nasty toilet bowl with just a stupid little green scrubbie. At least the noxious fumes of the cleaner gave me a bit of a free buzz while I was down there.


    In steps the miracle of lemons and salt. I had a half of a lemon drying out on the counter for no apparent reason. I glanced over at it on my way to tackle the filth that had taken over my bathroom and thought I'd give this whole eco-cleaning thing one more shot. I had heard that lemons were a main staple in eco cleaning because of the acid, and using a coarse salt was supposed to create an effective scrubbing action.


    Gloves on, lemon in hand, I squeezed it a little to get the juices flowing and topped it with a heavy shaking of coarse sea salt. I had already dumped a big bowl of clean water into the toilet to make it do that magic thing where the water goes down but doesn't refill; the toilet was pretty much empty while I was cleaning it. I took the salted side of the lemon and used it to scrub the slime/iron/calcium that had built up in the bowl. "Are you kidding me." With minimal effort a small portion of my toilet was actually white. White! "Are you kidding me?!" I had not seen a white toilet bowl in about year. I had pretty much given up on it and let the iron win this battle. "You have got to be kidding me." My dog had come in at this point and was staring at me wondering who I was talking to.


    It did take some elbow grease in a couple of tough spots, but I just kept re-salting my lemon half and scrubbing away. That dried out half of a lemon was the only lemon in the house. I can imagine the task would have gone even better had the lemon been fresh and if I had more than one so I could swap them out as they wore down. It was pretty ragged looking lemon in the end.


    I have no 'before' pictures of the said toilet. I had no hope of a simple thing like lemon and salt actually working like it did, so I had no ambition to get out my camera before hand. When it was all done, I actually took pictures of the toilet it was so damn good looking.


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