8 Tips to Keep Your Home Clean Longer

Quick and Dirty Tips
by Quick and Dirty Tips
Make your home stay clean for weeks with these eight quick and easy tips from Domestic CEO.
You just spent hours cleaning your home. You scrubbed. You vacuumed. You got down on your hands and knees, and you stood on step stools. Everything is sparkling clean … so long as nobody moves. There are few things more frustrating than seeing your house get dirty immediately after you clean it. Luckily there are some tricks that you can use in your home to keep your home cleaner longer.
Grant // Flickr
Remove Your Shoes


The first tip to keeping your house clean longer is to always remove your shoes outside. Our shoes often carry lots of dirt, dust, and other unwanted items on them. If you wear them in your house, they are going to leave traces of that icky stuff on your floors. Even if your shoes seem clean, it’s always good to get into a habit of removing them as soon as you get into your home.


If you have kids, this tip is especially important. I used to run a daycare, and was constantly amazed at the amount of sand, dirt, and rocks that came out of kids’ shoes when they took them off. How they didn’t feel all that stuff in their shoes was a wonder, but it did teach me that you can never trust a kid’s shoe in your house. Teach your kids to remove their shoes before, or right when they enter the house, and you’ll at least keep the bulk of the outdoors out of your house.
rusty_dragonfly // Flickr
Change Your Air Filters


I’ll be honest, I didn’t know the importance of air filters until I married my husband. At that time, I had never owned a house, and figured the maintenance of my apartments was the responsibility of the apartment complex. Then we bought a house together, and he started educating me on all the things you get to do as a homeowner. Changing air filters on a regular basis was one of those things.


Those papery air filters may not seem like they do a lot, but they get a lot of the dust and dirt out of the air. They are placed in the vents where the air is being pulled, so the air goes through, and the filter catches all the stuff from the air. If the filters are dirty, that means that less air can get pulled through, and less dust can get trapped in the filter. If your house gets dusty soon after you clean it, your air filters may be too full to do their job. Change them out once a month, and they will help collect a lot of the dust that would otherwise be settling on your furniture.
Patti // Flickr
Groom Your Pets


If you have pets, your house is almost certainly going to get dirtier than a house without pets. When the animals go outside, or even crawl under furniture, they are collecting dirt and dust in their fur. Then, when they hang out in the house, the dirt and dust starts to fall off them all over the house. Combine that with normal pet shedding, and you have a recipe for a very dirty home.


The solution: Groom your pets often. Brush your pet outside every couple days to help get some of the loose hair and dust to fall out, and give them a bath at least every few weeks. During the summer, when they are shedding a lot, we do a serious hair removal brush about once a week, and bathe them every other week. It’s time intensive, but consistent grooming will help prevent them from leaving hairballs and dirt all over your home.
Malcolm Espinosa // Flickr
Clean Under Furniture


I can’t tell you how many times I’ve cleaned the house, only to have a dust bunny fly out from under a piece of furniture as I walk past it the next day. If you aren’t cleaning under your furniture, especially in rooms with hard flooring, you are missing a bunch of dust that is bound to make its way back into the room. To make sure you aren’t constantly chasing dust bunnies, use a fluffy floor duster to reach under all your furniture and wrangle up those bunnies.
Pink Sherbet Photography // Flickr
Teach Kids How to Clean Up Spills


This may seem like common sense, but remember that young children haven’t learned most cleaning lessons that adults have. They don’t realize that if they spill their snack crackers on the floor and don’t pick them up, they are going to get stepped on and become a crackery dust that is can spread all over a room. They also don’t know that a little juice spill gets really sticky if it’s left long enough to dry. By teaching them the importance of cleaning up their spills as soon as they happen, you will help prevent the messes from spreading or getting tougher to clean. Dealing with spills is inevitable when you have kids, but if you can teach them to clean up their own, your home will stay just a little bit cleaner.
Steven Depolo // Flickr
Install a Water Softener


If you live in an area that has hard water, a water softener is one of the best things you can do to keep your bathrooms and kitchen cleaner longer. Hard water creates a film or crust on everything it touches. Installing a water softening system will help prevent the hard water stains from forming. This won’t mean that you can stop cleaning your bathroom, but it will mean that you won’t have to be quite as diligent about using the squeegee in your shower and wiping up water before it leaves spots.
dgblitwin // Flickr
Keep Your Windows Closed


I’m a huge fan of letting fresh air into the house, but in order to keep our house cleaner longer, there are times when I make sure everything is sealed up. Where we live in Arizona, we get big dust storms. You have probably seen images or videos of the massive dust clouds that make their way across the desert. Not only can these dust storms wreak havoc on allergies, but they can also leave one-quarter inch of dust on surfaces if the windows are left open.


Even though most parts of the country don’t get these big dust storms, there are other times that leaving your windows open can cause your house to get dirty quite quickly. If a rain storm comes in, or if the landscapers show up on a day you left your windows open, you are going to come home to at least a little mess. To prevent these messes from happening, always make sure to shut your windows before leaving your house each day. You can always open them right up when you get home, so keep them closed to keep out the dirt, rain, and allergens.
maggie.5150 // Flickr
Designate One Eating Area


The last tip I’m going to give is a habit changer, and will likely make a huge difference in your home if you aren’t already doing it. The habit? Only eat in one area of your home. The more places in your home you allow food, the more places that are going to get crumbs, spills, and messes. Those numbers go up significantly for each person you have in your home too. If you live by yourself, your crumbs might not make too much of a mess. If you have a spouse, roommates, and/or children in your home, the messes appear almost instantly.


By limiting the eating to one area, you are going to be able to contain the messes much more easily. You also won’t have to go hunting for dishes, food wrappers, and half-eaten snacks in all the rooms of your house when you clean. I should probably mention that this is one of the easiest ways to prevent bugs and critters from taking residence in your home too. Leftover food, even little crumbs, are a surefire way to attract ants, mice, and other unwanted roommates to your home. Keep it cleaner (and critter-free) by keeping your food in one area of the house and cleaning up the dropped food immediately.
There you have it: eight tips to keeping your home clean longer. What else do you do to keep your home clean longer? I’d love to hear your tips! Post them below, or on my Facebook page.


Until next time, I’m the Domestic CEO, helping you love your home.


Originally posted here: http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/house-home/housekeeping/8-tips-to-keep-your-home-clean-longer
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  • San31272921 San31272921 on Jun 05, 2018

    What is the easiest,cheapest homemade product to clean old hardwood floors,tile,cabinets,bartops,my showers that is an all in one product?! Ive been told simple tap water & vinegar?! Could yall give me few tips yall maybe using in ur own homes please and God Bless U all, Sandra aka Gigi :)

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  • Ginny Ginny on May 21, 2017

    Here is a list of my frequent  must cleans:

    • toothbrush holder
    • area behind faucets in bathroom and kitchen sinks
    • under rims of pots and pans and where handle is attached to utensil
    • Use a toothbrush for all of the above


    When cleaning windows, don't forget:

    • screen tracks - take screens outside or put into bathtub, spray with warm water and household cleaner; clean screen and track with scrub brush
    • rinse with garden hose or Shower Massage if you have one


    Wipe door and window screens often as they collect dust, dirt and pollen


    Inside of medicine chest


    Dust tops of doors and door frames - they collect dust too


    Vacuum furniture every few weeks


    You need not turn into a workhorse or become compulsive about cleaning, but these few tips will help keep your home clean and cut down on allergies.


  • Lka30119615 Lka30119615 on Jun 20, 2018

    I live in Scotland so don't often have nice days to have the windows open so when it is nice they get thrown open along with the patio doors and fresh air literally blows through the house. Worth wearing an extra sweater just to get the freshness in. Great tips

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