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Oct 30, 2024

15 Best Sneaker-Cleaning Products 2024 | The Strategist

18 items in this article 5 items on sale!

18 items in this article 5 items on sale!

Whether they’re a prized pair of Margielas or the beaten-up New Balances you wear to run errands, all sneakers get dirty. And there’s no miracle product to prevent that, says Eduard Shimunov of Financial District shoe-repair store Cobbler Express — “unless you put a bag over them,” he says. “Dirt is dirt. If you walk on the street, you’re going to get it onto your shoes.” At a certain point, you’ll need to do a cleaning to get rid of that dirt.

For more serious damage like discoloration, take your sneakers to a pro, who can mix a custom dye to disguise it. For daily-wear scuffs, grit, and stains, there are a ton of effective cleaning products for all types of kicks, at every level of complexity, which I’ve laid out in the picks below — from applying tinted leather cream with a toothbrush to tossing canvas sneakers in a tub with OxiClean and soaking overnight. (And if you want to avoid stains in the future, you can take the extra step of waterproofing your sneakers after cleaning them.) Although I’m not a sneakerhead myself, the test sits at the intersection of two of my obsessions — garment care and cleaning tasks that require attention to detail — so after consulting nine experts, I set out an arsenal of the top-recommended cleaning projects to test them on my own sneakers.

Update on October 28, 2024: Updated prices and checked stock for all products.

“The materials of sneaker uppers are all very soft and delicate,” says Raheem Rademaker, the founder of sneaker-cleaning company Weekend Ritual. Especially with high-end sneakers, he prefers “light and natural” ingredients instead of harsh chemicals, which “can either discolor it or really mess up the material.”

Shoe cleaning products aren’t required to provide a full list of their ingredients, so it’s difficult to compare formulas based on what they include or exclude. Still, the information some brands provide about their makeup — whether a product is natural or synthetic, wax based or oil based — can be helpful if you have a sensitivity to a certain ingredient, or if you’re partial to a specific type of solvent or wax that has worked well for you before.

Even the most basic sneakers are made of several different materials, from textiles and leathers to metal eyelets and rubber. A good sneaker cleaner can handle most of them: We’re favoring formulas that are equally effective on leather uppers, mesh paneling, rubber toe caps, and suede accents. The biggest division in intended use is between products designed for general use and those calibrated specifically for suede and nubuck, which are susceptible to water damage — “like having a shoe that’s a sponge,” per Edward Andrade of Cesar’s Shoe Repair. We’ve noted suede-appropriate picks below.

Choosing the right cleaner is half the battle; you’ll also need to apply it effectively to clean your upper, brighten your midsole, and remove grime from nooks and crannies in the stitching. “The important step in cleaning sneakers is, while brushing in a circular motion, letting the solution and brush work up a lather to break down the dirt and stains,” says Steven Tran, a cleaning expert at Jersey City, New Jersey, sneaker cleaning-and-restoration shop Sole Fresh. Liquid solutions, foams, and creams all appear on this list, and we’ve also researched the best brushes and microfiber cloths for lifting dirt and debris.

Ingredients: Coconut and jojoba oil–derived soaps | Intended use: All-purpose, works on suede | Medium: Liquid solution

Almost all of the sneaker-cleaning experts I consulted cited Reshoevn8r as their favorite all-purpose cleaner, good for cleaning most parts of a shoe with a natural formula that won’t cause damage or discoloration. Since sneakers contain so many components, the most important quality for a sneaker cleaner is an ability to clean multiple kinds of material without damaging others. Reshoevn8r fits the bill: It works on leather, suede, nubuck, textiles, metal, rubber, and more. Waleed Cope, the founder of Soap Box, a Brooklyn laundry and sneaker-cleaning store, says the product can work miracles on retro Jordans, Adidas Ultraboosts, Yeezy Boost 350s, Balenciagas, and Nike Air Force 1s. Another benefit is its natural, mild formula: “It has the least harsh chemicals,” says Rademaker. “In my experience, it gets out stains and stubborn dirt a lot better than the other sneaker cleaners out there,” and the oil-derived soaps also help to condition leather.

I used the Reshoevn8r soap on a pair of Li-Ning running shoes, a cushy foam-soled ’90s dad shoe with a mixed mesh and leather upper and a complicated lacing system across the tongue and eyelets full of nooks and crannies where grime could hide. I hadn’t cleaned them in years and thought they might be beyond help. But a few squirts of Reshoevn8r in a bowl of water (the soap is concentrated, so make sure to distill per the brand’s instructions) and a lot of buffing later, they look as good as new. I used a soft-bristle brush for the upper and a hard-bristle brush for the dingy soles, supplementing with a toothbrush to get into the nooks and crannies (a technique suggested by Richard Brown, the founder of sneaker-restoration company Proof Culture). The soap worked miraculously well on every part of the shoe, and the whole thing took about 30 minutes — which means I’ll procrastinate less next time they need a cleaning.

Ingredients: Coconut and jojoba oil–derived soaps | Intended use: All-purpose, works on suede | Medium: Liquid solution

Jason Markk is the other brand mentioned by many of the experts I consulted. Although Reshoevn8r is a slight favorite, some experts contend that Jason Markk is better, especially on leather. Daryll Blanding, one of the co-founders of Clean Sneaker Care in Detroit, contends that Jason Markk’s all-purpose cleaner has a “slight edge” over Reshoevn8r’s. “It has really good conditioning properties” on leather, he notes. “It brings out the color and gives it a nice sheen.”

Tran agrees that the cleaner works great on leather shoes, and Blanding also likes it for suede: “We get all types of dirt levels in the shop, and we’ve been using it consistently for the past two weeks, and it has been handling everything,” he says, including a pair of suede Yeezys.

Ingredients: Oil-derived soaps, doesn’t contain harsh chemicals or abrasives | Intended use: All-purpose | Medium: Foam

The Jason Markk starter kit is “the most complete care system as far as consumers taking care of their sneakers at home,” says Blanding. Although there are several kits from sneaker care brands, I like the Essentials kit for its versatility and long-term usefulness. It comes with our favorite brush and microfiber cloth, plus the brand’s foaming cleanser, which works on suede as well as other materials.

Ingredients: Unlisted | Intended use: All-purpose; works well on suede and nubuck | Medium: Foam

For a suede-specific product, Tran suggests using the Foam Tex kit from sneaker customization company Angelus. “We like to use Foam Tex on delicate materials that should not be heavily saturated,” he says. (Tran also notes that the product works well on UGGs.)

Ingredients: Contains beeswax and mink oil | Intended use: Leather | Medium: Cream

Saphir is the “the crème de la crème of shoe care,” according to shoemaker Lauren Brinkers, and the brand’s Renovateur leather cream has a cult following among cobblers and footwear experts. (According to Joe Rocco of Jim’s Shoe Repair in midtown, it’s the product Hermès uses on bags.) Rocco uses a rag or an old shirt to apply the cream to sneakers, and then rubs the sneakers with the cloth until the dirt is lifted.

Ingredients: Contains beeswax and calendula wax | Intended use: Leather | Medium: Cream

Rocco also uses this cream by Spanish brand Tarrago, the maker of our best-in-class waterproofing spray, and says that it “does the trick.” The cream also comes in an impressively wide color range, which you can find on the brand’s website — from melon green to fire-truck red — which can help tailor your shoe-cleaning routine more closely to a pair of brightly colored sneakers.

Ingredients: Sodium percarbonate, sodium carbonate, surfactants and polymer; chlorine bleach-free | Intended use: Textiles | Medium: Powder

To clean laces, insoles, and canvas sneakers like Vans and Keds, you don’t need to get more complicated than OxiClean. Strategist senior editor Jen Trolio recommends soaking them in a basin with a scoop of OxiClean “for at least a few hours, but ideally overnight,” then rinsing well. The method “completely revitalized a mud-covered pair of slip-ons for one of my kids,” she says, and even for shoes that see less heavy-duty use, “it’s a really nice brightener” and gets sneakers close to new. (One caveat: The soaking method will damage any material that can’t get wet, so check if your shoes have leather or suede accents.)

Both Trolio and Brown also recommend OxiClean for cleaning removable insoles, which can be as simple as adding them to a load of laundry in a garment bag, and the detergent is also Rademaker’s go-to for cleaning shoelaces. He soaks in a bowl of water with half a scoop of OxiClean and says “it gets the white laces so bright white.”

Ingredients: Not listed; biodegradable with no harsh chemicals | Intended use: All-purpose | Medium: Single-use wipe

The longer you go without cleaning your sneakers, the harder it is to get the dirt out — so for true sneakerheads, Rocco recommends using wipes to do a minor cleaning every day. “They’re almost like baby wipes, but for sneakers,” he explains. “A lot of times the dirt stays on too long. If you have leather shoes and the wipes, you could just wipe the shoes every time you wear them.” Blanding is also a big believer in sneaker wipes. “I’ve been carrying some form of a wipe for the past 15 years,” he says.

Materials: Walnut handle, hog’s-hair bristle | Intended use: Cotton mesh, suede, premium leather

“Aside from the solutions, using the proper brush is key to cleaning sneakers,” says Tran. “Hard brushes should only be used on the undersole and some midsoles. A medium brush can be used all around the sneaker but should not be used on delicate materials such as suede, nubuck, or satin. A soft-bristle brush is key when dealing with delicate materials.”

If you’re investing in sneaker care, it’s a good idea to have both a soft-bristle brush and a hard-bristle brush at your disposal. For softer bristles, I love this boar-bristle tool by Jason Markk, which was first recommended to me by sneaker enthusiast Zach Higgins, the fiancé of former Strategist staffer Chloe Anello, who described it as “one brush to rule them all.” (The brand also makes a stiff-bristle brush, below.) He has had problems with the wood handles of similar Reshoevn8r brushes splitting due to moisture, but he says the Jason Markk version has held up. I used it to clean the upper of my Li-Ning running shoes, and it gently buffed out stains without fraying a fabric collar, snagging mesh panels, or scratching leather.

Material: Microfiber | Intended use: All-purpose

Jason Markk also makes “hands down the best microfiber towel,” according to Blanding, an essential tool for cleaning all parts of a sneaker that offers finer control than a brush. Although a less expensive option will also work, Blanding says that a higher-quality towel makes a difference in sneaker-cleaning because it’s less likely to leave lint and small fibers behind.

Material: Microfiber | Good for: All-purpose

For a less expensive microfiber cleaning cloth, cleaning experts recommend Amazon Basic’s affordable pack of 24 cloths, which have over 40,000 five-star reviews. (They also come in handy for banishing dust, cleaning countertops, and drying wooden cutting boards to avoid warp.)

Ingredients: Hydrogen peroxide–based; bleach-free | Good for: Textiles, stitching | Medium: Pen

If you’re doing a quick spot cleaning on a textile like canvas or mesh on your way out the door, or trying to lift stains on some of the smaller nooks and crannies of your sneakers — like the stitching along the sole — Brown suggests a Tide detergent pen.

Material: Melamine foam | Good for: Soles and midsoles | Medium: Sponge

A sneaker-cleaning hack I learned from a former roommate: Magic Erasers. The melamine sponges work wonders on a dingy white midsole or rubber toe cap. One caveat: Avoid using them on delicate, scratch-prone materials like leather or suede, since they are abrasive. “Magic Erasers are good for midsoles or soles, not for the uppers of the sneakers,” says Rademaker.

Material: Stainless steel | Good for: Soles

Rademaker tested out several other tools before he discovered that a cuticle pusher is the perfect tool for digging stubborn pebbles and grime out of sneaker soles. He uses “a gentle scrape” to dig grit out of ridges and crevices, then dry-brushes the sole and cleans with the Reshoevn8r solution.

• Edward Andrade, owner of Cesar’s Shoe Repair• Daryll Blanding, co-founder of Clean Sneaker Care• Lauren Brinkers, shoemaker• Richard Brown, founder of Proof Culture• Waleed Cope, founder of Soap Box• Zach Higgins, social-media strategist and sneaker enthusiast• Raheem Rademaker, founder of Weekend Ritual• Joe Rocco, owner of Jim’s Shoe Repair• Steven Tran, cleaning expert at Sole Fresh• Jen Trolio, Strategist senior editor

Additional reporting by Hilary Reid and Jenna Milliner-Waddell.

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