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Sanitising vs. Disinfecting: What is the Difference?

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2 min read
Sanitising vs. Disinfecting: What is the Difference?

In the cleaning industry, words like “sanitise” and “disinfect” are often used interchangeably on bottle labels. However, from a hygiene and public health perspective, these two terms represent distinct cleaning processes with different chemical strengths and goals. Understanding the difference helps you maintain a healthy home environment.

Sanitising: Reducing Bacteria to Safe Levels

Sanitising is a milder process designed to reduce the number of bacteria on surfaces to safe levels (usually by 99.9%). It is commonly used on food-preparation surfaces, dining tables, and children’s toys. Common sanitising products include diluted dish soap, light vinegar sprays, or kitchen counter sprays.

Disinfecting: Killing All Germs

Disinfecting is a stronger chemical process that kills bacteria, viruses, and fungi on contact. It doesn’t necessarily clean dirty surfaces, but it eradicates the pathogens remaining on them. Disinfecting is crucial for high-touch areas like toilets, taps, door handles, and hospital equipment. Disinfectants include bleach solutions or commercial sanitising sprays containing active alcohols or quaternary ammonium compounds.

The Clean-First Rule

You cannot disinfect a dirty surface. Dirt and organic oils act as a shield, preventing disinfectants from reaching the germs underneath. Always wash the surface with soapy water first, wipe clean, then apply your disinfectant spray and let it air-dry to kill remaining germs.