Cleaning Products comparison

Dawn Original Dish Soap vs. Lysol Bathroom Cleaner

Best for: Cutting grease on dishes

Quick verdict

If your goal is a cleaner, lower-tox option for everyday use, Lysol Bathroom Cleaner is usually the better swap in this category.

TOXIC CHEMICALSLysol Bathroom CleanerUSE WITH CAUTIONDawn Original Dish Soap

Note: This is educational content, not medical advice. If you have specific sensitivities (e.g., nickel allergy), your best choice may differ.

The Final Verdict

Dawn Original Dish Soap edges out as the lower-concern choice in this pair, but neither is a perfect non-toxic material.

Dawn Original Dish Soap

USE WITH CAUTION

Cutting grease on dishes

Materials

  • Synthetic surfactants (sodium lauryl sulfate)
  • artificial fragrance
  • dyes

Common claims

  • Cuts grease fast
  • Used by wildlife rescuers

Concerns / watch-outs

  • Contains synthetic fragrance (undisclosed parfum chemicals)
  • Contains artificial dyes
  • Formaldehyde-releasing preservatives in some variants

Notes

The dominant market dish soap, but contains undisclosed fragrance chemicals and artificial dyes. Effective, but not a top pick for low-tox households.

Lysol Bathroom Cleaner

TOXIC CHEMICALS

Bathroom surface disinfection — tubs, tiles, sinks

Materials

  • Sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate
  • HCl (hydrochloric acid)
  • synthetic fragrance

Common claims

  • Kills 99.9% of germs
  • Removes soap scum and hard water stains

Concerns / watch-outs

  • Contains hydrochloric acid — corrosive to skin and respiratory tract
  • Synthetic fragrance blend undisclosed
  • VOC emissions during use; ventilate thoroughly
  • Not safe for marble or natural stone

Notes

Highly effective disinfectant, but the acid content makes it genuinely caustic. Avoid if you have asthma or children in the home.

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Data sourced from the ToxinChecker dataset. Ratings reflect material safety research, not medical advice.