I’ll be real with you, when I first came across NuroClean, it sounded like a cleaning miracle. A reusable spray bottle, eco-friendly dissolvable tablets, safe on all surfaces, and powerful enough to melt through grease, mold, and bathroom grime? Sign me up. I ordered it right away.
But after using NuroClean for a few weeks, I’ve got some thoughts. If you’re considering buying it, read this first. It might save you the frustration I went through.
What Is The Nuroclean?

NuroClean is a concentrated cleaning tablet that you dissolve in water to create a multi-surface spray cleaner. It usually comes in a “starter kit” with a reusable spray bottle and 6 tablets. The brand markets it as:
- Eco-friendly (since it reduces plastic waste)
- Pet- and child-safe
- Powerful enough to remove mold, grease, and stains
- Safe to use on tiles, glass, metal, wood, and plastic
It’s positioned as a modern alternative to bulky chemical cleaners, just drop a tablet in water, spray, and wipe.
Sounds perfect, right? Well… here’s how it actually went down for me.
My Experience Buying NuroClean
The website looked professional but very pushy. Lots of “LIMITED TIME ONLY” banners and upsell offers. I ordered the spray bottle + 6 tablets for around $13, but after checking out, I realized they’d sneakily added an extra charge for a “warranty” I didn’t agree to. That bumped it up to around $20.
No confirmation email, no tracking number, and the only communication was a vague order ID. It finally arrived after almost 4 weeks, shipped from Taiwan, in a thin mailer bag.
The Wait… and the Wait…
Shipping took almost a full month to arrive. No joke. No tracking info either. I emailed customer support twice. no reply.
When the package finally showed up, it came in a thin plastic mailer from Taiwan. Inside was a cheap-feeling plastic bottle and a ziplock with six little tablets.
By this point, I was already skeptical.
Using NuroClean at Home
I followed the instructions: fill the bottle with warm water, drop in a tablet, shake gently, and wait a few minutes for it to dissolve.
I dropped a tablet in warm water, let it dissolve, and sprayed it on my grimy kitchen backsplash. It had a mild lavender scent and left a faint shine after wiping. So far, okay.
But the real test? My moldy bathroom tiles and the greasy stove area.
- On mold: It didn’t do much. I sprayed, let it sit, scrubbed hard, and the mold stains were still there. I had better results with regular bleach.
- On grease: It helped a little, but I had to go over it several times, and it still felt a bit sticky after.
Basically, it worked like a very mild soapy water spray. Not awful, but definitely not the “powerful cleaner” they advertise it as.
Is NuroClean a Scam?
I don’t want to use the word “scam” lightly, but I will say this: NuroClean uses shady business tactics. From adding extra charges during checkout to ghosting customers when there’s a problem, to misleading product claims… it’s not a company I trust anymore.
Conclusion
Don’t let the slick marketing fool you. It might look like a miracle cleaner, but in reality, it’s just a weak solution in a bottle. There are far better options out there that don’t come with hidden charges or ghost-level customer service.
Save your money. I wish I had.
Check out Horsepower Scrubber I reviewed earlier.