How to Remove Limescale from Showerheads Without Scrubbing
If your shower pressure has slowly dropped over the last year, limescale is the most likely culprit. The fix is hands-off and takes less than an hour.
Sam Rivera
Feb 26, 2025
If your shower pressure has slowly dropped over the last year, limescale is the most likely culprit. The fix is hands-off and takes less than an hour.
Sam Rivera
Feb 26, 2025
Cleaning is one of those tasks where the shortcut you save ten seconds on rarely matters β but the habit you build tonight compounds for years. That's the lens we use on every job, and it's the lens this guide is written from.
Anything that lives on the counter gets put away, not moved. The goal is a completely bare surface so you can actually see what you're cleaning.
Hit every surface β counters, stovetop, the front of the appliances, the splashback β and let the cleaner sit for 60 seconds. Dwell time is the part most people skip, and it's doing 80% of the work.
Top to bottom, back to front. Long overlapping strokes beat circles every time β they push residue toward the edge instead of smearing it around.
Save the floor for the end so anything that drops while you're working gets picked up at the same time. A flat microfibre mop head under your foot works better than a full-size mop for a quick pass.
Pick the item you use least and put it away where it actually belongs. Tomorrow you'll thank yourself.
Pro tip
If you only have energy for one step, do step two. Dwell time does the work of three passes with a cloth. The cheapest upgrade you can make to your cleaning is learning to wait.
Most deep cleans are just ten nightly resets stacked on top of each other. Build the habit for two weeks and the weekend scrub basically disappears β you've already done the work, one minute at a time.
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