
Bathroom Cleaner JANITORI™ – No.02
- Cuts through soap scum, mineral buildup, and mildew without chlorine fumes or harsh acid
- Safe for daily use on porcelain, ceramic, chrome, and grout -- won't etch or dull surfaces over time
- Low-odor formula protects cleaning staff from the respiratory risks of conventional bathroom chemicals
- Formula
- Plant-Derived
- Fume-free, biodegradable, non-toxic
- Clean Claim
- 0% of 8 Harmful Chemicals
- No parabens, SLS, EDTA, NTA, chlorine, phosphates, petroleum solvents, or VOCs
- Size
- 4 L Jug
- ~1,333 sprays per jug (3 mL/spray)
- Origin
- Made in Montreal, QC
- Canadian-manufactured since 1994
Cost per application
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Common questions
Can a plant-based cleaner really handle soap scum and hard water buildup?
Yes. Soap scum and mineral deposits are the #1 reason facility managers abandon green bathroom cleaners -- most eco formulas can't dissolve calcium and magnesium deposits without acidic chemicals. No.02 uses plant-derived surfactants optimized for bathroom surfaces. It breaks down soap scum, lime scale, and mildew film without hydrochloric acid or bleach. It takes the same number of passes as conventional cleaners -- no extra elbow grease.
Is it safe for natural stone tiles and marble countertops?
No.02 is pH-balanced and safe for ceramic, porcelain, chrome, and glass. However, natural stone (marble, granite, travertine) requires a pH-neutral cleaner specifically rated for stone. No.02 is mildly acidic to dissolve mineral buildup, which can etch unsealed natural stone over time. For stone surfaces, use No.03 All-Purpose Cleaner instead.
Why not just use bleach? It kills everything.
Bleach works -- but at a cost. Sodium hypochlorite releases chlorine gas, especially in warm, enclosed bathrooms. The CDC links routine bleach exposure to respiratory irritation and occupational asthma in cleaning workers. No.02 contains 0% chlorine and 0% VOCs. It removes soap scum, mildew stains, and buildup without creating the toxic air quality problem that bleach does. For facilities running daily bathroom cleaning schedules, that's a material difference in staff health.
How does this compare to Method or Seventh Generation bathroom cleaners?
Method and Seventh Generation are consumer-grade formulas sold in 828 mL spray bottles at ~$6-7 each. No.02 is a commercial-grade formula developed in a facility cleaning lab since 1994, sold in a 4L jug at $29.99 (~1,333 sprays, ~$0.023/spray). Method costs roughly $0.03/spray in a smaller bottle. Beyond price: No.02 is formulated for daily institutional use -- hotels, gyms, healthcare washrooms -- not occasional household cleaning. Same eco credentials, higher performance tier.
Can I use this on toilets?
Yes. Spray directly on the bowl interior, seat, base, and exterior surfaces. Let it sit 30-60 seconds on heavy buildup, then scrub and flush. No.02 is effective on porcelain, ceramic, and chrome -- all standard toilet materials. For toilet-specific deep cleaning (under the rim, heavy staining), apply generously and allow a longer dwell time. No harsh fumes, so you can clean enclosed stalls without ventilation concerns.