Why Florida Windows Streak More Than Anywhere Else
If you've ever cleaned your windows on a sunny Florida afternoon and ended up with more streaks than when you started, you're not alone. Florida presents a uniquely challenging window cleaning environment — one that catches most homeowners off guard.
Three factors work against you here that don't exist in most of the country:
Salt air deposits — Coastal and near-coastal homes accumulate a fine mineral film from Atlantic sea breeze and the Intracoastal. This film doesn't come off with a quick wipe — it requires the right solution and technique.
Hard water mineral buildup — Florida's irrigation systems use hard groundwater loaded with calcium and magnesium. Every time your sprinkler system hits your windows, it deposits white mineral film that dries fast in the heat.
Heat and direct sun — Cleaning solution evaporates in seconds on a hot, sunny day, leaving soap residue behind before you can squeegee it off. This is the #1 cause of streaks in Florida.
The 5-Step Florida Window Cleaning Process
🚿
Pre-Rinse
→
🧴
Apply Solution
→
🖌️
Scrub Glass
→
🪟
Squeegee
→
✨
Detail Edges
Tools You'll Need
🪟
Squeegee
12–18" brass or stainless channel. Replace rubber blade when worn.
🧹
Scrubber Sleeve
Microfiber or lambswool applicator on a T-bar handle.
🪣
Bucket
Wide bucket that fits your T-bar. A squeegee bucket clip helps.
🧻
Microfiber Cloths
For detailing edges and wiping the squeegee blade. Have 6+ ready.
💧
Garden Hose
For pre-rinsing exterior glass. Low pressure only on impact windows.
🔪
Razor Scraper
For stuck-on paint, stickers, or construction debris. Use wet glass only.
Professional window cleaning tools including squeegee, scrubber sleeve, and microfiber cloths
The Right Cleaning Solution for Florida
The biggest mistake Florida homeowners make is using the wrong cleaner. Ammonia-based cleaners like Windex leave residue in heat. Glass-only products miss the mineral buildup problem. Here's what actually works:
DIY Professional Solution
1 gallon warm water
2–4 drops of dish soap (Dawn original — less suds = less streaks)
2 tablespoons white distilled vinegar (cuts salt and mineral deposits)
⚡ Pro Tip: Professional window cleaners use a product called Titan Labs or Unger's Glass Gleam — available on Amazon. A few drops per gallon goes a long way and dramatically reduces streaking compared to household products.
What NOT to Use on Florida Windows
❌ Ammonia-based cleaners (Windex) — Evaporates too fast in Florida heat, leaves residue
❌ Paper towels — Leave lint fibers on glass, especially visible in sunlight
❌ Newspaper — Old advice that doesn't work with modern ink-free papers
❌ Hard tap water without softener — Florida water is very hard; using it directly in your solution re-deposits minerals
Step-by-Step: How to Clean Windows Streak-Free
1
Choose Your Time of Day
This is more important than technique. Never clean windows in direct sunlight — solution evaporates before you can squeegee it, leaving soap streaks. Clean early morning, late afternoon, or on an overcast day. In Florida, overcast rainy-season days are ideal — humidity keeps the glass wet longer.
Cleaning windows on the shaded side of a Florida home in morning light
2
Pre-Rinse the Glass
Use a garden hose to rinse exterior windows from top to bottom. This removes loose dirt, salt crystals, pollen, and spider webs that would otherwise be dragged across the glass by your scrubber and cause scratching. For regular (non-impact) windows, a standard hose setting is fine. For impact windows, use the gentlest setting.
⚡ Pro Tip: After pre-rinsing, look at the glass at an angle in available light. If you see a hazy white film, that's mineral/salt deposit buildup. It won't come off with water alone — you need your cleaning solution and light scrubbing.
3
Apply Solution with Your Scrubber
Dip your scrubber sleeve into the bucket and let it absorb the solution. Apply to the glass using overlapping horizontal strokes, working top to bottom. Press firmly enough to move dirt, but you're not scrubbing a floor — let the solution do the work on mineral deposits. Spend extra time on areas with visible buildup near the bottom of the pane where water pooling causes more deposit.
Applying window cleaning solution with a professional T-bar scrubber on Florida home
4
Squeegee Top to Bottom
This is where most people go wrong. Place the squeegee at the top corner of the glass with the rubber blade flat against the surface. Pull across in a firm, even stroke. At the end of each pass, wipe the blade with a microfiber cloth to remove the dirty solution. Overlap each stroke by about an inch so you don't leave lines between passes. Work top to bottom — never bottom to top.
Horizontal stroke method — Best for wider windows. Pull left to right, overlap each row.
Fanning method — Professional technique. Arc the squeegee in a continuous S-pattern without lifting. Harder to learn but faster.
⚠️ Warning: If your squeegee rubber is nicked, torn, or hardened, it will leave lines no matter your technique. Replace the rubber (not the whole squeegee) every season — they cost about $3.
5
Detail the Edges and Sill
Use a dry microfiber cloth to catch any drips that ran down the frame or collected in the corners. Wipe the window sill to remove any solution that dripped down — it will streak the wall below if left. For interior windows, check the sill and tracks for water that came in through gaps and dry it before it damages the wood or paint.
Detailing window edges with microfiber cloth for streak-free finish
5 Mistakes That Always Cause Streaks
Cleaning in direct sun — The #1 cause. Solution evaporates before you squeegee it.
Not changing squeegee blade — A worn blade deposits dirty water back on the glass with each pass.
Too much soap — Excess suds leave a residue haze. Two drops per gallon is enough.
Using tap water directly — Florida's hard water re-deposits minerals. Mix solution with filtered or softened water when possible.
Skipping the pre-rinse — Dry dirt and salt crystals dragged by your scrubber cause micro-scratches and uneven cleaning.
Impact Windows: Special Considerations
Most South Florida homes built after 2002 have impact-resistant windows. These look like regular windows but contain a laminated inner layer — and they require specific care:
Never use a razor scraper on impact glass — it will scratch the soft coating on some products
Avoid abrasive scrubbers — microfiber and lambswool only
Inspect frames carefully — Impact window frames are often aluminum and can oxidize. Avoid leaving cleaning solution sitting on frames.
Low-pressure rinse only — High-pressure water can force water past impact window seals over time
Rather Have a Pro Handle It?
We clean windows on hundreds of South Florida homes every month — impact glass, jalousie, picture windows, and everything in between. Starting at $124. Free estimates.
DIY window cleaning works well for maintenance cleaning on single-story homes. But there are situations where professional service is the right call:
Multi-story windows — Ladder work on second and third-floor glass is genuinely dangerous without proper equipment and training
Heavy mineral buildup — If your windows have white haze that doesn't come off after cleaning, that's hard water etching that requires professional-grade mineral remover or polishing
Large home with many windows — What takes a pro 2 hours takes most homeowners a full weekend
Screens, tracks, and frames — A full professional cleaning includes screen removal and washing, track cleaning, and frame detail that most DIY cleanings skip
Before selling your home — Clean windows dramatically improve the first impression for buyers. Professional cleaning is worth every dollar before listing.