Removing urine scale – get your toilet clean again
Difficulty: Easy · Time: approx. 8 hours
Those yellow-brown deposits in your toilet are urine scale – a hard layer of limescale and urine residue that ordinary cleaning eventually can't shift any more. The good news: acid dissolves urine scale reliably, no aggressive specialist chemicals needed.
Household remedies like citric acid or vinegar essence work best – they only need one thing: time. Ideally plan the job overnight, so the soaking time does most of the work and all that's left for you is a quick scrub.
What you'll need
- Citric acid (powder) or vinegar essence
- Kettle for hot (not boiling) water
- Toilet brush
- A cup or small ladle for scooping
- Rubber gloves
- Optional: a pumice stone made for ceramics, for stubborn layers
Step by step
- 1
Lower the water level in the bowl
Push the water towards the drain with a few firm strokes of the toilet brush or scoop it out with a cup. The less water left in the bowl, the less diluted the acid will be when it hits the scale.
- 2
Pour in the acid solution
Dissolve 2–3 tablespoons of citric acid powder in hot – not boiling – water, or use vinegar essence. Pour 2–3 cups of it into the bowl so all the deposits are covered.
- 3
Let it work for several hours
Close the lid and let the solution work for several hours, ideally overnight. Don't flush during this time – otherwise the acid is gone before it has dissolved the scale.
- 4
Scrub and flush
Scrub the loosened deposits off firmly with the toilet brush and flush once. Light urine scale is usually completely gone by now.
- 5
Treat stubborn spots again
Sprinkle citric acid powder directly onto the still-damp spots and work it in with the brush. If that's not enough, a hydrochloric-acid-based toilet gel will do it – put on gloves and ventilate well. As a last resort, use a wet pumice stone made for ceramics.
- 6
Prevent it coming back
Clean the toilet regularly with an acidic cleaner and always include the flush rim – that's where urine scale settles first. That way a thick layer never builds up again.
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Upload a photo →Frequently asked questions
- Where does urine scale come from in the first place?
- Urine scale forms when limescale from the flushing water reacts with urine residue. The harder your water, the faster the yellow-brown layer grows – especially under the flush rim and at the waterline.
- Does cola work against urine scale?
- A little – cola contains phosphoric acid and can loosen light deposits. Citric acid is much stronger and cheaper, though, and not sticky. Fine in a pinch, but not really a plan.
- Does the acid attack the ceramic or the seals?
- Citric acid and vinegar won't harm the ceramic glaze. Just be careful with chrome parts and rubber seals: don't leave acid sitting on them for hours, and rinse with clear water afterwards.