6 min read
How to Clean Stone Floors | Expert Tips from a Floor Care Specialist

Published on 10 Dec 2025
If you’ve chosen a natural stone floor, you haven’t simply picked a surface, you’ve brought a piece of the earth’s quiet history into your home. After more than a decade cleaning, restoring, sealing, and polishing stone floors, I’ve learned that natural stone is a material that rewards awareness. When you understand the stone beneath your feet, cleaning becomes easier, the surface stays beautiful for longer, and maintenance becomes a mindful ritual rather than a chore.
Before we dive deeply into the process, here’s the simplest version of how to clean and maintain your stone floor, and if you ever need expert help, our stone floor cleaning and restoration services in London are here to support you.
Quick Answer: How to Clean Stone Floors
Step 1 — Dry Clean Daily:
Use a soft dust mop or vacuum cleaner (hard floor mode) to remove dust and dirt, the biggest cause of scratches.
Step 2 — Wet Clean Weekly:
Use warm water and a pH-neutral stone floor cleaner. Damp-mop only, avoid acidic or alkaline products.
Step 3 — Blot Spills Immediately:
Never wipe a spill on natural stone. Blot it with an absorbent cloth to prevent stains from penetrating.
These three steps form the foundation of cleaning natural stone safely and effectively.
Why Natural Stone Requires Mindful Care
I’m Johnny Czarnota, founder of Silver Lining Floor Care. After years restoring natural stone floors, I’ve come to see each surface as more than a floor — it’s a geological narrative that deserves respect.
The Natural Stone Institute (NSI) emphasises that the first step in natural stone care is understanding your stone, its properties, and its needs. That simple insight has guided nearly every restoration project I’ve ever taken on.
The truth is, stone is durable, but it is not invincible. A porcelain tile may tolerate harsh cleaning products, but natural stone reacts to them, sometimes instantly, often permanently.
This guide will help you look after your stone floor properly so you can keep your natural stone floor clean, easier to maintain, and beautiful for decades.
Know Your Stone: The Essential First Step
Before you clean a stone floor, you need to understand what type of stone you’re dealing with. This influences everything from the floor cleaner you choose to how often you reseal the surface.
I once worked on a limestone kitchen where the owners had been mopping it with vinegar. They thought they were avoiding chemicals, but vinegar is acidic, and limestone reacts instantly. We had to restore the floor with specialised polishing equipment. A neutral cleaner would have saved them thousands.
If you have limestone specifically, you can learn more on our limestone cleaning and polishing page.
Stone Types & How They React to Cleaners
| Stone Type | Porosity Level | Sensitivity to Acid | Sensitivity to Alkaline | Recommended Cleaning Method | Notes From Experience |
| Marble | Low | Extremely High | Medium | pH-neutral cleaner | Polishes beautifully but etches easily |
| Limestone | High | Extremely High | Medium | Neutral cleaner | Absorbs fast — sealing is essential |
| Travertine | Medium–High | High | Medium | Damp mop, neutral cleaner | Porous pockets hold dirt |
| Sandstone | Medium | Low | Medium | Neutral cleaner, gentle scrub | Stains from oils quickly |
| Granite | Low | Low | Medium | Neutral cleaner | Hardwearing but still benefits from sealing |
If you have a travertine floor, our travertine cleaning and restoration service may be helpful.
Daily Routine: Keep Clean with Gentle Preventive Care
Most stone damage isn’t chemical, it’s caused by tiny particles of dust and dirt that scratch the surface. Preventing this is the heart of maintaining your natural stone floor.
Daily Stone Floor Care Checklist
☐ Sweep or dust mop to remove dirt
☐ Use a vacuum cleaner on hard floor mode
☐ Shake out entrance mats to catch grit
☐ Blot spills immediately
☐ Inspect high-traffic areas
☐ Avoid household cleaning products near the floor
This routine keeps your stone floor easier to maintain and protects the surface from micro-abrasion.
Pros & Cons of Common Cleaning Products
| Cleaner Type | Pros | Cons | Safe for Stone? |
| Neutral Cleaner | Safe, effective | Requires routine use | ✔ Yes |
| Acidic Cleaner | Removes limescale | Etches marble & limestone | ✘ No |
| Alkaline Cleaner | Degreasing power | Strips sealer | ✘ No |
| Bleach/Ammonia | Strong disinfectant | Damages stone | ✘ No |
| Steam Mop | No chemicals | Breaks down sealer | ✘ No |
| Tile Cleaner | Convenient | Unpredictable pH | ✘ No |
Spot Cleaning & Stain Prevention
Stone is porous. Fast action prevents stains from settling.
- Blot — don’t wipe
- Rinse gently with clean water
- Dry fully
Oil stains require a more mindful approach because they penetrate quickly.
Deep Cleaning: When Weekly Cleaning Isn’t Enough
If your floor looks dull or uneven despite weekly maintenance, it might need a deep clean.
A product like Lithofin Power Clean can break down stubborn residue. In severe cases, it can be used neat for short periods. Always use soft brushes.
Sealing: Protecting Your Natural Stone Floor
A stone sealer is an invisible shield that reduces porosity and protects against stains. The Natural Stone Institute recommends sealing marble, limestone, sandstone, and travertine regularly. If you want a deeper understanding of why sealing matters and how to do it correctly, you can explore our full guide on sealing natural stone floors in London
The Water Bead Test
Drop water onto the stone:
- If it beads → protected
- If it darkens → reseal soon
Most natural stone floors benefit from resealing every 12–24 months.
Stone and Tile: Why They Need Different Care
Many homeowners treat stone and tile the same — but they shouldn’t.
Stone vs Tile Care Differences
| Feature | Natural Stone | Porcelain/Ceramic Tile |
| Porosity | High | Low |
| Needs Sealer | Yes | Rarely |
| Sensitive to Cleaners | Yes | No |
| Maintenance Level | Moderate–High | Low |
| Risk from Spills | High | Low |
| Recommended Cleaner | Neutral stone cleaner | Tile cleaner |
Professional Cleaning: When to Ask for Help
If your floor has etching, oil stains, deep scratches or dull polish, professional cleaning may be needed.
When you’re ready for support, you can review our stone floor pricing or explore our main stone floor cleaning and restoration service to see how we can help.
Key Takeaways
- Stick to neutral cleaners
- Know your stone before applying any cleaning method
- Daily dusting prevents scratches
- Weekly damp-mopping keeps floors clean
- Blot spills immediately
- Deep clean when needed
- Reseal regularly
Avoid acidic or alkaline household cleaning products
Conclusion
Cleaning and maintaining natural stone floor tiles is not just a chore; it’s a practice in care, awareness, and respect for a material shaped by nature. When you treat your natural stone floor with consistency and the right cleaning products, it becomes easier to maintain and a joy to live with.
And when life happens — scratches, stains, wear, my team at Silver Lining Floor Care is always here to restore your floors with craftsmanship and care.
Sources & Expert References
- Natural Stone Institute – Care & Cleaning of Natural Stone
https://www.stonepartnership.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/NSI_CareandCleaningBrochure-compressed.pdf
- Natural Stone Institute – Consumer Stone Care Guide
https://www.naturalstoneinstitute.org/consumers/care/
- Getty Conservation Institute – Stone Conservation (Updated Edition)
https://www.getty.edu/publications/resources/virtuallibrary/9781606060469.pdf
- Marshalls UK – Natural Stone Cleaning & Maintenance Guidelines
https://www.marshalls.co.uk/media/5nslrbft/mlp-com-cleaning-maintenance-guidelines-natural-stone-2011.pdf