How to Get Rid of Scuff Marks

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Removing Scuff Marks from Hard Floors

If you have hard flooring anywhere in your home, you probably have some scuff marks. These scuff marks are the remnants of hard rubber or plastic items that were ground into the surface of the floor – usually the result of dark-soled shoes or the rubber feet of chairs, walkers or step ladders. At first glance cleaning these things may seem like a real pain, but with the right strategy they really are quite easy.

Before trying any of the following methods, check the care instructions for your particular type of flooring to make sure that it won’t become damaged or discolored.

Fight Rubber with Rubber

If the scuff is small and light, and the floor is not too porous, you may be able to get the scuff out with a regular rubber pencil eraser.

How to Get Rid of Scuff Marks

For scuffs that resist regular erasers, there are commercial ‘scuff erasers’ available which are essentially just regular erasers made from a harder rubber – but there’s no need to buy one of these as long as you have some tennis shoes laying around. Grab an old tennis shoe and then while applying as much force as possible, press and twist the sole of the shoe into the scuff. With enough force the scuff should come right up – putting the shoe on and grinding your heel into it is the easiest way to do this (see below).

Use your hand…
Step 1

…or your foot (remember: PUSH and TWIST).
Step 2

Voila!
Step 3

Cleaners and Solvents

If grinding the sole of an old tennis shoe into the scuff still won’t remove it then there are plenty of chemical alternatives that should do it for you:

  • Baking Soda Scrub: Make a paste out of baking soda and water and use that to scrub the scuff out.
  • GooGone: Products like GooGone and adhesive removers will break down the rubber, making it easier to clean. Be careful using products like this on granite and hardwood floors.
  • Lighter Fluid: Scrub with a clean, white towel dipped in a little naptha (lighter fluid).
  • Toothpaste: Oddly enough, scrubbing with toothpastes can also do the trick.

Have another method of removing scuff marks? Add it here using the form below!





 

 
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  1. t Says:

    how about removing scuff marks from polished concrete floors?

  2. randy Says:

    spray nine works wonders, one spray then wipe clean…just like magic!!

  3. Sybil Says:

    I have debunked the rubbing alcohol theory. I am going to try the tennis ball trick…. I see people in Target using that one all the time!

  4. Cheldon Says:

    some scuff marks can be removed by rubbing it with your hands. not those stubborn ones though…

  5. KAH Says:

    Using baking soda works but depending on the floor it can strip the wood of some of its color. I recommend using an eraser or tennis ball.

  6. AMG Says:

    Mr. Clean Magic Eraser is the BOMB!!! It takes out scuff marks, those dirty little refrigerator handles, marks on doors, everything! I buy them by the case!

  7. A1C Groves Says:

    Back in Basic Military Training, we had a big problem with boot polish scuffs (Air Force still wears black boots). So to combat that, we got neutral shoe polish and rubbed it into the black scuffs. I think it killed the wax, but it sure worked.

  8. zc4238 Says:

    Rubbing Alcohol. I have a bottle with a sprqay attachment and i spray and wipe. works perfectly.

  9. va Says:

    Clorox wipes

  10. Nancy Hoeft Says:

    I’m a teacher and we have lots of scuff marks in the hallways at school. We stick a tennis ball on the end of a yard stick and just rub them away. It works quickly and requires no scrubbing, bending, or cleansers.

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