
for stubborn grout & grime
Compare Alkaline Tile Cleaner, Restore Tile Cleaner, and Tile Pro HD

choosing the right tile cleaner
Best for everyday heavy-duty tile cleaning, grease removal, kitchens, bathrooms, and routine residential or commercial maintenance where reliable cleaning power is needed.
Designed for deep cleaning dirty grout lines, restoring dull tile surfaces, and removing embedded buildup in neglected or high-traffic areas where appearance restoration is the goal.
Built for maximum-strength commercial tile and grout cleaning including restaurant grease, industrial buildup, severe grime, and heavily trafficked surfaces that require aggressive cleaning performance.
why tile cleaners matter
Tile and grout surfaces collect grease, oils, grime, soap residue, and embedded buildup over time, especially in kitchens, bathrooms, restaurants, and high-traffic areas. Choosing the right tile cleaner helps improve cleaning performance, restore appearance, reduce repeat cleaning, and achieve better overall results.
faq
What is the best carpet spotter for old stains?
The best carpet spotter for old stains depends on the type of stain. Protein stains like food, urine, blood, and pet accidents often respond best to enzyme or oxidizing spotters. Tannin stains such as coffee, tea, and wine may require specialty stain removers. For unknown stains, start with a general-purpose carpet spotter and escalate to a specialty product if needed.
Why do carpet stains come back after cleaning?
Carpet stains often return because of wicking. Moisture deep in the carpet backing can carry soil and residue back to the surface as the carpet dries. In some cases, the stain was never fully removed and only temporarily hidden. Using the correct spotter and thoroughly extracting the area can help prevent recurring stains.
Can one carpet spotter remove every type of stain?
What stains are the hardest to remove from carpet?
Permanent dye stains, bleach damage, rust stains, paint, ink, and stains that have been treated incorrectly are often the most difficult to remove. The longer a stain remains in the carpet, the more challenging removal becomes. Early treatment usually produces the best results.
How do I choose the right carpet spotter for a stain?
Start by identifying the stain type. Organic stains such as food, urine, or blood typically require different chemistry than grease, oil, ink, or rust. A carpet spotter comparison guide can help match the stain to the most effective product, reducing the risk of carpet damage and improving cleaning results.
No. Different stains require different cleaning chemistry. Oil-based stains, food spills, pet accidents, coffee, wine, rust, and dye stains all respond differently to cleaning products. Professional cleaners often carry multiple spotters because no single product is effective on every stain.
