Cleaning Supplies
On this Cleaning Supplies category page, the range runs from everyday washing-up liquids and disinfectant wipes to specialist limescale removers, drain gels, and refill pouches for spray bottles. Some partners group items by room, while others bundle them by format, so a trigger spray might sit beside a 1L concentrate or a 5L trade-style bottle depending on the retailer. A lemon or “fresh” scent variant can appear as separate entries, and pack sizes like 2-packs of microfibre cloths or 60–100 wipe tubs shift the balance of what’s visible. It looks practical, not curated. Availability moves around as partners update listings, so the same cleaner can drop in and out in different sizes, finishes, or multipacks.
Read on for how Cleaning Supplies listings are grouped, sized, and described
Core groups you’ll notice first
The biggest clusters are surface cleaners, dishwashing items, and disinfecting formats, and they don’t always sit together. Short and sharp. One partner might publish a trigger as its own entry while another rolls scent options into a single product with selectable variants, which changes how household cleaning supplies look at a glance when bottle sizes (500ml vs 750ml) and pack counts (single vs 3-pack) are mixed in. Tesco entries also alternate between ready-to-use sprays and concentrates that need dilution, so the “same” product type can mean different bottle volumes and usage rates. Some ranges lean heavily on wipes, others on liquids. That unevenness is normal.
Room-led and format-led alternatives
Room-specific lines show up as oven cleaners, glass sprays, and toilet gels, but partners publish them in different formats. It varies quickly. One retailer will separate kitchen cleaning products into degreasers, hob creams (300–500g), and antibacterial sprays (500–750ml), while another groups those alongside general-purpose triggers and only splits by “spray” versus “cream”. Sainsbury’s listings also switch between single bottles and multipacks, so a 2 x 750ml bundle may sit next to a single 500ml bottle as separate entries rather than a variant. Some items appear as refills only. Others stay ready-mixed.
Sizing, strength, and spec details that differ
Volume and concentration are where partner descriptions diverge most, especially for sprays, gels, and floor liquids. Tiny differences matter. A bathroom cleaning products listing might specify 500ml foam spray, 750ml trigger, or 1L refill, while another partner highlights “thick gel” without stating nozzle type or dwell time, even when the bottle is the same shape. Look for measurements like 750ml, 1L, or 5L, plus whether it’s “ready to use” or “dilute 1:10”, because those specs affect how long a bottle lasts. Some entries show fragrance variants as separate items. Others hide them in options.
Materials, build, and functional features
Packaging and applicators change the way products behave in use, even when the cleaner type matches. Not all triggers are equal. For floor cleaning supplies, partners publish mop liquids (1L), concentrated sachets, and wipe-on floor sheets, and the build details—trigger spray vs flip-cap, thick gel neck vs standard spout—signal where it’s meant to go and how controlled the application is. Asda listings also mix refill pouches with rigid PET bottles, so storage and decanting become part of the product format rather than an afterthought. Some cloths are microfibre; others are cellulose sponge. The finish is utilitarian.
Practical checks people make while scanning
Shoppers tend to verify three things fast: format, surface compatibility, and pack size. Keep it simple. With cleaning sprays and wipes, check whether it’s a trigger, aerosol, or tub wipes, then confirm the count (40, 60, 100) and whether the wipe is textured or smooth for grease versus general wipe-down. For liquids, confirm 500ml vs 1L vs 5L and whether it’s concentrate or ready-mixed; for bathroom items, note if it’s foam, gel, or a limescale remover aimed at taps and shower screens. Some listings emphasise scent. Others don’t mention it at all.
How discount codes help lower costs when buying Cleaning Supplies
Discount codes relate to reduced cost when buying Cleaning Supplies by applying a retailer’s offer at checkout, even when the product listing itself is simply a 750ml trigger, a 1L refill, or a 3-pack bundle. Different partners publish eco friendly cleaning products as refill pouches, tablets, or low-fragrance sprays, and those formats can sit beside standard bleach or disinfectant in the same browsing run—messy, but workable. Discount Promo Codes provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and links to retailers’ discount code pages may be shown alongside product listings. The platform’s monthly charity donation is supported by how it operates, with 20% of profits donated each month to charity. Tracking and retailer attribution sit behind the scenes; the product information stays with the retailer listing.