Window and Glass Cleaning: How to Get Streak-Free Results Every Time

Window and Glass Cleaning: How to Get Streak-Free Results Every Time

Streaky windows and smudged glass surfaces aren't caused by using the wrong cleaner — they're caused by using the wrong technique. Many people apply a quality glass cleaner with a clean cloth and still end up with streaks, smears, and residue that looks worse in certain lighting than before they started.

Window cleaning tips that actually address the root causes of streaking transform the process from frustrating to straightforward. Once you understand why glass streaks and what prevents it, clean windows stop being an occasional achievement and become a reliable, repeatable result.

Close-up of hand cleaning window with squeegee outdoors using yellow gloves.

Why Glass Streaks: The Root Causes

Understanding what causes streaks makes the solutions obvious:

Residue buildup from previous cleaning. Many commercial cleaners contain surfactants, silicones, or fragrance compounds that don't evaporate completely. Each cleaning session adds a thin layer. Eventually, even perfectly applied cleaner leaves residue because the surface itself is contaminated. Dirty cloths. A cloth that's been used for other cleaning tasks carries particles, grease, and detergent that it transfers to glass. Microfiber cloths, in particular, lose their lint-free quality if washed with fabric softener or washed with cotton items. Cleaning in direct sunlight. Cleaner evaporates faster than you can wipe it, leaving concentrated residue before you can remove it. Glass cleaning in direct sun or on hot glass almost always produces streaks. Hard water minerals. Tap water contains dissolved minerals that leave white spots as they dry. Using tap water in cleaning solutions on windows produces the mineral deposits that wipe off but return every time. Wiping pattern. Random wiping moves residue around rather than removing it. Directional patterns with intentional strokes remove residue in sequence.

Choosing the Right Glass Cleaner

Commercial Glass Cleaners

Most name-brand window cleaners work well for light to moderate soil on indoor glass. The formula matters less than the application technique for most uses.

Avoid: cleaners with added fragrance oils or "protectant" compounds. These leave residue that builds up over time and creates exactly the filming effect you're trying to avoid.

DIY Glass Cleaning Solutions

For streak-free results on heavily soiled windows, these are reliable formulations:

Basic window cleaner: Mix 2 cups warm water, 1/2 cup white vinegar, and 1/4 cup rubbing alcohol (70% concentration). The alcohol accelerates evaporation and prevents streaking. For heavy residue or buildup: Add a small drop of dish soap to the vinegar solution for the first cleaning, then follow with a plain vinegar-and-water rinse. Soap helps lift residue; the rinse removes soap film. Distilled water is worth using. Substituting distilled water for tap water eliminates mineral spotting entirely — particularly valuable for windows in hard water areas.

Microfiber Cloths vs. Squeegees

Microfiber cloths are the best tool for interior glass — mirrors, glass tabletops, glass cabinet fronts, shower doors. Use lint-free flat-weave microfiber (200–250 GSM). Never wash glass cloths with fabric softener. Squeegees are the professional standard for exterior windows. A squeegee removes solution in a single controlled pass without the streaking risk of cloth wiping. A professional-quality squeegee with a good rubber blade lasts years. Newspaper works well for glass in a pinch. The carbon-based ink and pressed-paper texture polish glass effectively without leaving lint. Use only black-and-white newspaper — colored inks can transfer.

Interior Glass Cleaning Technique

Mirrors

  • Spray directly onto a cloth, not onto the mirror — this prevents cleaner from seeping behind the mirror and causing black edge spots over time
  • Wipe in S-strokes from top to bottom with moderate pressure
  • Buff dry immediately with a second dry microfiber cloth using circular motions
  • Check from multiple angles in different lighting — streaks often hide at certain angles
  • Glass Tabletops and Cabinet Fronts

  • Remove loose dust with a dry cloth first — dragging particles across glass creates fine scratches
  • Apply cleaner and wipe horizontally, then vertically, to cover the entire surface
  • Buff dry immediately
  • Shower Glass

    Shower glass is one of the most challenging glass surfaces because it accumulates soap scum and mineral deposits simultaneously. Daily cleaning is far easier than weekly deep cleaning.

    Daily maintenance: A squeegee after every shower removes water before minerals deposit. Takes 30 seconds and prevents almost all mineral buildup. For existing mineral deposits: White vinegar or a commercial lime scale remover applied with a cloth and allowed to dwell for 10–15 minutes dissolves mineral bonds. A non-scratch scrubber removes loosened deposits. For soap scum: Dish soap diluted in warm water cuts soap scum effectively. Rinse thoroughly after.
    Detailed view of a mirror being cleaned using a water sprayer, indoors.

    Exterior Window Cleaning Technique

    Squeegee Method (Professional Standard)

  • Wet the window thoroughly with soapy water (a few drops of dish soap in a bucket works well)
  • Use the squeegee blade in overlapping vertical strokes from top to bottom, overlapping each stroke by an inch
  • Wipe the squeegee blade with a clean cloth after each stroke
  • Remove solution drips from the window frame with a cloth
  • Cleaning windows from inside vs. outside: If windows open fully, cleaning from inside (with squeegee technique) is easier and produces the same results. For fixed windows, exterior cleaning from a ladder requires the same technique applied from outside.

    Hard Water Stains on Exterior Glass

    White mineral stains from sprinkler water or rainwater evaporation require acidic cleaners to remove:

    • White vinegar (full strength) applied with a cloth and left for 10–15 minutes dissolves light deposits
    • Commercial hard water stain removers with oxalic acid handle heavy buildup
    • Fine steel wool (0000 grade) removes stubborn stains that chemical methods don't fully address — use cautiously and only on tempered glass, not coated glass

    Window Cleaning Schedule

    Interior windows and mirrors: As needed, typically monthly in average conditions Exterior windows: Two to four times per year in most climates — more frequently in areas with road salt, heavy pollen seasons, or near the ocean Shower glass: Daily squeegee + monthly deep cleaning for mineral and scum buildup

    Equip yourself with the right window cleaning tools — microfiber glass cloths, professional squeegees, and effective glass cleaners — from our home cleaning collection for streak-free results on every glass surface in your home.

    Back to blog