Cleaning myths busted: How using water, salt and vinegar to shift stains should be avoided

When it comes to cleaning there are tried and tested hacks you can rely on to make sure your house is spotless.

However, according to Good Housekeeping Institute there are some widely known household hints that are actually causing more harm than good.

While some hacks can make cleaning easier, the experts say you can’t believe everything you have heard will work – like using salt to lift red wine, immediately pouring water on carpet stains, or using vinegar as a makeshift cleaning product.

Here FEMAIL reveals which of the well-known hacks could make your clean-up job harder, not easier… 

Putting salt on a red wine stain is the last thing you should do if an accident happens, because while some of the liquid can be soaked up the salt can actually set the stain in the carpet and become a magnet for dirt

Don’t pour water on carpet stains 

It may seem like logic to use water to mop up a spill, but there’s a danger that adding more liquid can over saturate a stain.

The excess water could cause long-lasting damage – soaking through the carpet fibres and into floorboards.

Good Housekeeping says that patience is key, and advises gently blotting out as much of the stain as possible, then follow with a ‘light spritz of sparkling or soda water to rinse followed by more blotting’.

A clean dry cloth or paper towel is all that’s needed, and to make sure the stain doesn’t remain use a special removal cleaner.

Forget reaching for the salt for a red wine stain 

There’s nothing worse than red wine splashing on your plush carpets – but don’t go reaching for the salt to try and soak it up.

Salt can lift the colour out of the carpet, but the consumer experts say that it can actually ‘set the stain’ because of the abrasive nature of the substance.

There’s also a risk that salt grains can stick in the carpet and become a dirt magnet for everything else. 

Vinegar is not the multi-purpose solution many believe, despite being able to cut through grease and mould, the acid in the kitchen cupboard staple can actually cause damage to natural surfaces

Vinegar is not the multi-purpose solution many believe, despite being able to cut through grease and mould, the acid in the kitchen cupboard staple can actually cause damage to natural surfaces

Using vinegar as an all-purpose solution 

While vinegar is regularly counted as an all-natural cleaner and can tackle grease and mould, the kitchen cupboard staple does contain acid and is abrasive.

The acid can affect wood and natural stone, so Good Housekeeping suggests keeping it away from marble counter tops or tiles. 

Keep window cleaner away from your computer

The ingredients in a regular window cleaner can permanently damage a computer screen if used to shift marks.

According to the consumer site the ammonia and alcohol mixture used to remove stubborn stains on a window can actually strip anti-reflective coatings off screens, as well as cause clouding.

It advises using a microfibre cloth with a specialist LCD or plasma screen cleaner with no alcohol.

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