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Kill germs on surfaces with these easy and affordable DIY disinfectant wipes. Made with simple but strong antiviral ingredients, these DIY Lysol or Clorox wipes are easy to make to keep your home clean. Oh… and they smell amazing!

DIY Lysol wipes

Disclaimer: We are not medical professionals, and we don’t play them on the internet. We are not chemical formulators, pharmacists, or anything other than moms who like to DIY germ-fighting household products. This is not medical advice! Use at your own risk.

Make sure to use at least 60% alcohol in your DIY Lysol or Clorox wipes, or they will not be effective. Studies have shown a minimum of 62% alcohol is effective.

Also check out our DIY disinfectant spray and DIY hand sanitizer!

Why You Should Make These DIY Disinfectant Wipes

  • It’s incredibly effective! So long as you use at LEAST 60% alcohol. I used much higher.
  • It’s ridiculously cheap! You can find 16 oz. 91% isopropyl alcohol – the bulk ingredient of the wipes – for $0.99.
  • It’s easy to customize the scent. I used a combination of lemon and tea tree (I’ll tell you why in a minute), but you can really customize these wipes to smell whatever is most appealing to you.
  • Hydrogen peroxide majorly helps kill germs.

What To Use These Wipes On

Should go without saying, but these wipes are not for use on yourself or others, no matter how gross your kids are!

You can use this on most surfaces, especially places that are high-touch like sink handles, fridge handles, doorknobs, phones, and remotes. We definitely recommend testing on a small area before wiping down any furniture with finishing or that has been painted.

Ingredients

While these DIY Lysol wipes only use paper towels and 4 other ingredients, each one has a purpose:

  • alcohol, preferably ethanol (ethyl alcohol AKA Everclear)
  • distilled water
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • essential oils
DIY Lysol wipes

How to Make DIY Lysol or Clorox Wipes

I used a 1-gallon Anchor Hocking jar with a lid and didn’t have to smush the paper towels down to fit at all. It worked perfectly, but you could also use a large plastic jar.

Make sure you use sharp non-serrated knife when cutting the paper towel roll in half. I cut through the paper towels, all the way around the roll, then gently spread the two sections apart and cut through the inner roll

I used 30 drops of lemon essential oil and 15 drops tea tree. The wipes smelled incredible!

Make sure to use select-a-size paper towels or you’ll have massive wipes!

DIY disinfectant wipes

Isopropyl Alcohol or Ethanol?

So which one should you use in your wipes? And what’s the difference?

Rubbing alcohol, also called isopropyl alcohol, is frequently used on skin and is most commonly what is in hand sanitizer and in alcohol wipes (like what you would find at a doctor’s office). Ethanol, or ethyl alcohol, is much more commonly used in drinks and spirits.

Both are great for killing germs, but some research shows isopropyl alcohol is especially good at killing bacteria, while ethanol is especially great at destroying viruses.

So whether you use ethanol (ethyl alcohol AKA Everclear, etc.) or isopropyl alcohol, it really depends on what you’re after!

Note again that you need a 62-71% ethanol solution for effectiveness.

Use a Little Water

It may seem logical to use pure alcohol for disinfecting products, but some research actually shows that

absolute ethyl alcohol, a dehydrating agent, is less bactericidal than mixtures of alcohol and water because proteins are denatured more quickly in the presence of water.”

For that reason, we use mainly alcohol in our DIY disinfectant and add a bit of water + a little hydrogen peroxide + essential oils for our mix.

Essential Oils

We like to use essential oils when making disinfectants for:

  • scent and
  • antiviral and cleaning properties

If you don’t have any at home, check out what Amazon has for organic pure essential oils here.

Here’s a list of what we like to use for antiviral or cleaning recipes (Bold denotes an oil studied for its antiviral properties):

  • tea tree
  • eucalyptus
  • thyme
  • rosemary
  • cinnamon
  • clove
  • orange
  • chamomile
  • lemon
  • peppermint
  • lavender

Tea tree, eucalyptus, and thyme were actually studied for their antiviral properties, so we include these in most of our disinfectant blends. Clove, orange, rosemary, and cinnamon are known for their antiviral properties, too.

We love lemon because it just smells clean, but also because study showed it was actually more effective at decreasing stress than lavender.

Hydrogen Peroxide

Some research has shown that certain viruses “can be efficiently inactivated by surface disinfection procedures with 62–71% ethanol, 0.5% hydrogen peroxide or 0.1% sodium hypochlorite within 1 minute.”

Disinfectant wipes, spray, and hand sanitizer

But How Do I Know if it’s 62-71% Alcohol?

It’s more complicated than you’d think, calculating solutions, but there’s a great resource out there to help you. I asked my mathematician friend to help me out, and he wrote up a very clear explanation of this calculation. Check it out!

In his calculation, we’re aiming for about 75% final alcohol percentage.

You can also use this online calculator:

DIY Hand Sanitizer / Disinfectant Recipes calculator – We’re making about 16 ounces here, which is 473 milliliters.

I use a little less hydrogen peroxide than this calculator suggests and I aim for a lower overall alcohol content, based on the above data, but you can simply use a bit less and the alcohol percentage will stay higher, MAKING SURE you do end up with at least 60% alcohol content, though. Reminder: it will not be effective at less than 60% alcohol content.

DIY Lysol wipes

Don’t forget to check out our DIY disinfectant spray and DIY hand sanitizer!

DIY Lysol wipes
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5 from 12 votes

DIY Disinfectant Wipes (DIY Lysol or Clorox Wipes)

Kill germs on surfaces with these easy and affordable disinfectant wipes, made with simple but strong antiviral ingredients. A DIY version of Lysol or Clorox wipes!
Keyword antiviral, cleaning, disinfectant
Prep Time 2 minutes
Soaking Time 5 minutes
Servings 200 wipes
Calories
Author Cheryl Malik
Cost 3

Ingredients

  • ½ roll select-a-size paper towels
  • 18 ounces 95% ethanol, like Everclear or 99% isopropyl alcohol
  • 5 ounces water
  • 2 tablespoons hydrogen peroxide
  • 45 drops essential oils

Instructions

  • Cut your roll of paper towels in half using a non-serrated knife. Squeeze one half of the paper towels into a large jar.
  • Mix all the liquid ingredients together in a spouted measuring cup, bowl, or pitcher and pour over the paper towels. Let solution soak into the paper towels, and then pull out cardboard insert.
  • Optional step: Flip the paper towels over to help the liquid absorb. If your roll of paper towels comes out easily from your container, I recommend this step to help with saturation. If not, no big deal!
  • Pull the center paper towel out just a bit to help make the wipes easier to remove from the jar.

Video

Notes

Important to Remember

You must absolutely make sure your mixture is 60%+ alcohol, or it will not be effective.
My mathematician friend wrote an equation for calculating the desired final alcohol percentage,so check out his super helpful walk-through of this if you need help.
For other types of alcohol, use this online calculator to help you know how much water to use. This calculator produces a final solution 75% alcohol, and we use slightly different amounts of other ingredients in our recipe. However, it is generally very helpful in knowing about how much water you can to use.

Essential Oils

Types of essential oils to use:
  • tea tree
  • eucalyptus
  • thyme
  • rosemary
  • cinnamon
  • clove
  • chamomile
  • peppermint
  • lavender
Tea tree, eucalyptus, and thyme were actually studied for their antiviral properties, so we include these in most of our disinfectant blends. 
Disclaimer: We are NOT chemists, doctors, or medical professionals. We do not play them on the internet. We are simply sharing a recipe for an alcohol-based cleaning spray that we’ve used for years and hope others will enjoy.
Continue to use germ-fighting best practices as recommended by the CDC, such as regular, proper hand-washing, coughing or sneezing into your elbow, etc. Visit their site for more information.

Nutrition

Net Carbs: 0g

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36 Comments

  1. I’m making this for our small business. I have managed to obtain 12% hydrogen peroxide – should I just reduce the peroxide to a bit less than 1/2? Enquiring minds want to know 😉

    Diane

    1. That’s a good question! I will say I honestly don’t know for sure, but I would probably replace the extra tablespoon of hydrogen peroxide with more alcohol 🙂5 stars

  2. Shouldn’t these be stored in an opaque container as sunlight will breakdown the hydrogen peroxide, thus rendering ineffective.

    1. The risk with hydrogen peroxide is POSSIBLE decomposition after exposure to light. I would not keep these outside in a glass jar for a very long time and expect the hydrogen peroxide to work quite as well 🙂 That said, it’s a very small amount, and if you don’t go through these quickly, it’d be best to keep them in a dark container. We go through ours way too fast for our hydrogen peroxide to have a chance to decompose – ha! However, the primary “effective” ingredient here is high-proof alcohol.5 stars

  3. I heard that everclear alcohol can evaporate within 1 minute if not sealed in an airtight container, because without alcohol, they’re not effective. I noticed you are not using an airtight container. How do you know if the alcohol, or how much has been evaporated?

  4. I was wondering if these can be made without the Hydrogen Peroxide and still be effective? I am allergic to it and am unable to use it even mixed with things. Normally, I would use gloves if coming in contact with it but as we all know those are hard to come by right now. Thank you for any help and for this “recipe”!

      1. Okay. Thanks for your reply. I have 91% rubbing alcohol so do you know how much water to add? That online calculator link takes me to an unsafe site that my computer won’t allow me to open. Thanks

      2. How long is the recipe effective or it’s shelf life? The typical bleach disinfectant recipe has to be made daily which is a bummer.

  5. What you’re trying to do here is great. But both ethanol alcohol and hydrogen peroxide can be corrosive when used on certain surfaces. Actually, tee tree oil is known to have antiviral properties.

    1. You’re right! That’s why we mention to test on a small patch on a surface before wiping down the whole area. 🙂 We did know about tea tree’s antiviral properties! Check out the link to the study we posted. Very interesting stuff!5 stars

  6. With the essential oils added in do you think it would still be safe to use around cats? Many essential oils are dangerous for them. Is it just best to leave them out if we do have pets? Ty!

  7. Since paper towels are also hard to come by and I’m working on my paper waste, I wonder if this could also be done with cloth napkins/towels?

    1. Absolutely! We have a ton of microfiber towels we use in the same way ourselves. I would fold them up in squares and layer as many as possible. You might only need about half the solution, since there’s really no way to get as many in a container as you get with the paper towels. You can also try fabric baby wipes, which are a great size and thickness for this sort of thing.5 stars

      1. You can also take old baby receiving blankets, cut them in 6×6, fold them up and place in container…… works great and you’re also recycling….. use and wash and reuse!!

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