Janitorial Floor Care: Neutral vs Alkaline Cleaners
Floor care is where pH choices show up fastest — use the wrong product and you either leave soils behind or strip the finish you just paid to apply. For janitorial teams and building-services contractors, knowing when to use a neutral cleaner versus an alkaline one is the foundation of a clean, finish-safe program. This guide frames that choice before you build a supply quote.
Neutral cleaners (around pH 7) are the daily-use workhorses for finished floors. Because they are gentle, they clean light soils without dulling or stripping floor finish, which makes them the right default for routine mopping and autoscrubbing on coated VCT, sealed concrete, and similar surfaces. They are also generally easier on workers and rinse cleanly when used at label dilution.
Alkaline cleaners and degreasers step up the power for heavy soils, grease, and built-up grime, and at the high end alkaline strippers are formulated specifically to remove old floor finish before recoating. That power is exactly why they are not daily-use products on finished floors: routine use of a strong alkaline cleaner can degrade finish prematurely. Match the alkalinity to the task and the floor’s tolerance, and confirm suitability on the Technical Data Sheet.
Floor type sets the guardrails. Polished concrete, natural stone, terrazzo, wood, and rubber each have their own sensitivities — some react poorly to high alkalinity, others to acids — so the safest rule is to match chemistry to the most sensitive surface in the area and verify against the product SDS/TDS. When in doubt, test at the labeled dilution in an inconspicuous spot.
Process matters as much as product. Correct dilution, dwell time, adequate rinsing after stripping, and the right pad or brush all determine the outcome. Over-diluting wastes labor on re-cleaning; under-diluting and skipping rinse steps leave residue that attracts soil and can haze a finish. Metered dispensing keeps daily cleaning consistent and the cost-in-use predictable.
On ICD, the floor care and janitorial categories list neutral cleaners, alkaline products, and strippers with packaging ladders and minimum order quantities by packaging type. The janitorial industry and pages outline a typical daily-plus-periodic program and related products, with SDS hosted on ICD.
