6 House Cleaning Tips to Be a Pro

House cleaning.
House cleaning. (Image: Ahmmadoz via Wikimedia Commons)

Suppose you are new to cleaning a house and don’t know if you should dust or vacuum first. Sometimes you are torn between where to begin, the kitchen, bedroom, or bathroom. This house chore is challenging for an inexperienced cleaner, especially when you must be fast due to particular circumstances. 

With these 6 tips, you’ll be a cleaning pro

1. Learn how to prioritize your cleaning needs

Take a piece of paper and draw a giant pyramid on it. Write down the word “clean dishes” at the pyramid’s base. Draw a horizontal line over those words, then write “taking out the trash” above it. Separate the task of “cleaning bathrooms, floors, clothing, counters, picking up, and vacuuming” with a line and write them above the first line.

The essentials of maintaining a clean and healthy home lie at the bottom of the cleaning pyramid. Cleaning tasks contributing to a tidy home are completed ascendingly as you move up the pyramid. If you’d instead not utilize a pyramid, construct a list with the most vital aspects of cleaning at the top. Keep the list or pyramid where you can see it, such as on the fridge.

Someone wearing blue gloves is using a spray bottle to sanitize a surface, wiping it down with a gray cloth.
Cleaning tasks contributing to a tidy home are completed ascendingly as you move up the pyramid. (Image: Martinmark via Dreamstime)

2. Make a pattern

Surface cleaning shouldn’t be carried out at random. If you create a pattern, you can ensure that you won’t miss any areas the first time and end up wasting time. Also, if you’ve ever entered a room and felt overwhelmed by the prospect of cleaning it, you might find that sticking to a set pattern simplifies things. 

The power of gravity to attract and hold crumbs, dust, and other debris suggests beginning at the ceiling and working your way down. Then, concurrently, proceed from left to right as you work. Cleaning the floors last is a terrific way to finish up a room after the sink, shower, tub, counter, etc.

3. Store cleaning supplies in one place

If you store all of your supplies in a portable caddy, you won’t have to pause to get anything while in the middle of a room. Instead, lighten your load by purchasing products with many uses, such as a wood cleaner appropriate for furniture and floors or a multipurpose cleaner that sanitizes the kitchen and bathroom.

4. Dust first, then vacuum

You’ll waste time and energy having to vacuum again after dusting and straightening up if you do so first. Switching off any of your fans before dusting a room is best to prevent the dust from being blown around the room. 

Wipe the surfaces of furniture and shelves, including the tops and bottoms, railings, pictures, other decorations, and television screens. Clean blinds and high shelves with a microfiber cloth tied to the end of a mop or broom. Before cleaning the carpets, consider changing the bed linens in the bedrooms. 

Young woman sits on the floor sorting through clothes and putting them in piles or plastic bins.
As established by the experts, the quickest and most effective cleaning technique is to begin by putting away everything that doesn’t belong there. (Image: Pojoslaw via Dreamstime)

5. Declutter before cleaning

Toys, books, and other stuff scattered on table tops and floors make it nearly impossible to sweep and clean effectively. As established by the experts, the quickest and most effective technique is to begin by putting away everything that doesn’t belong there. Once you’ve done that, the rest will be much easier, but attempting both simultaneously will lead to frustration.

6. Make space for everything

The time spent putting things away as you use them is minimal compared to the time saved in the long run, and a neat house is much more likely to result. Drop your garments beside your closet, return them to their hooks, or toss them into the laundry basket. Dishes should be loaded into the dishwasher rather than left on the countertop. 

Once you walk through the door, remove your shoes and hang up your outerwear. Make sure you don’t have to deal with a messy kitchen right before bedtime by having everyone pitch in and clean up after dinner. 

These minor improvements are just habits you may form with planning and preparation. Although there will inevitably be exceptions, this is a great way to reduce the work you must put in later.

In conclusion

To become an expert cleaner and significantly reduce your cleaning time, you must clean more frequently. Doing a quick once-over of the house every few weeks after a thorough cleaning works best.

This will keep things looking beautiful and save you from having to do extensive house cleaning all at once. In addition, establishing a routine instead of one-time deep cleaning will make your home a more secure place to live.

Follow us on TwitterFacebook, or Pinterest

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR YOU