Spring Cleaning Is Miserable. Here’s How AI Makes It Bearable


Spring cleaning is one of those chores that’s easier to dread than actually do. You’ve got to get every nook and cranny, making it feels like a Herculean task. But if we’re being honest, the mental weight is usually what stops people before they’ve even started. That’s where AI turns out to be surprisingly useful — not as a replacement for the actual scrubbing, but as the planner that can break an overwhelming job into something that feels doable.

Cleaning out the closet piled high with defunct gadgets, wires of unknown origin and old trash. Organizing the junk drawers and consolidating half-empty bottles and jars crowding the kitchen counters and shower nooks. The grime. The scrubbing. The rubber gloves. In other words: misery.

AI Atlas

Before you descend to do battle in the dirt dungeons or decide to put off the entire thing until next year, check out this guide for how AI tools can help you tackle even the most ambitious of spring cleaning jobs.

Long-term results

One of the most frustrating parts of cleaning up around the house is the inevitable cycle of future grime. Cleaning only begets more cleaning. In an effort to stave off the need to reclean areas most prone to recurring nastiness, I asked Claude AI to write me a foolproof recipe for a cocktail of cleaning products that would keep things sparkling longer than usual.

Claude’s list included a suggestion to apply ceramic coating to my countertops and appliances, and to use a product that claims to chemically bond to glass for a longer-lasting, nonstick, hydrophobic barrier. (Just make sure to double-check whether you should be mixing certain products or using others on your particular countertops before trusting AI, which has been known to hallucinate and present incorrect ideas as facts.)

The AI tool also suggested that microfiber clothes are the best at trapping dirt and that fabric softener could keep furniture and carpets cleaner for longer.

A screenshot of an AI-generated list of cleaning products

Claude/Screenshot by CNET

A screenshot of an AI-generated list of cleaning products

Claude/Screenshot by CNET

Hands off

Toilets. Clogged drains. The sinister recesses behind the refrigerator. All areas we’d prefer to avoid touching with our sensitive fingertips. Anyone who has spent 15 minutes squatting under a toilet bowl to scrub its nether regions can attest to the unpleasantness of the task, and rubber gloves provide little solace in the chore.

I asked Google’s Gemini to generate a list of techniques, gadgets and tools to ensure whoever cleans the dankest parts of the home suffers as little as possible.

Gemini recommended power-cleaning tools with extension poles and an overnight soak with a powerful acid for a particularly gnarly toilet. Take this advice with a grain of salt and a thick pair of goggles.

A screenshot of an AI-generated list of techniques for cleaning toilets without touching them

Gemini/Screenshot by CNET

A screenshot of an AI-generated list of techniques for cleaning toilets without touching them

Gemini/Screenshot by CNET

It even warned me about mixing bleach with acidic cleaners (a very important note), and offered to find long-handled power scrubbers and pumice sticks to buy online with highly rated reviews. Now that could be helpful.

Fake it till you make it

Sometimes, the clutter in a room or space is so overwhelming that the idea of starting the cleanup makes you want to just burn it all down. Before you commit insurance fraud, check out an AI tool that’s designed to help you visualize what a nice, clean space might look like should you undertake the effort of organizing chaos. 

Deptho AI, an in-browser application designed to give homeowners, real estate agents and contractors a look at the bare bones of a room before a renovation, was able to take my work-in-progress living room down to the bare floors and naked walls. This tactic shows the potential for positive impact when the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak.

A photo of my living room and an AI-generated image of my living room without any furniture in it

Rachel Kane/Deptho AI

Maybe this will inspire me to finally finish painting the ceiling this spring. 





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