# Plant-Based vs Chemical All-Purpose Cleaners: The Commercial Buyer's Guide

> **In This Guide**
- [What Is a Plant-Based All-Purpose Cleaner?](#what-is-plant-based)
- [How Do Plant-Based and Chemical Formulas Actually Differ?](#key-differences)
- [Does a Plant-Based Cleaner Per

- **URL:** https://janitori.com/blogs/the-clean-room/plant-based-vs-chemical-all-purpose-cleaners-the-commercial-buyers-guide

**In This Guide**
- [What Is a Plant-Based All-Purpose Cleaner?](#what-is-plant-based)
- [How Do Plant-Based and Chemical Formulas Actually Differ?](#key-differences)
- [Does a Plant-Based Cleaner Perform as Well as a Chemical One?](#performance)
- [Which Costs Less Per Use — Plant-Based or Chemical?](#cost-analysis)
- [Which Surfaces Can You Safely Use a Plant-Based Cleaner On?](#surface-guide)
- [Should You Choose No.03 or No.04 MAX for Your Facility?](#janitori-line)
- [Frequently Asked Questions](#faq)

For facilities managers and procurement teams, choosing between plant-based and synthetic chemical all-purpose cleaners involves more than environmental preference. The choice affects WHMIS documentation requirements, worker exposure profiles, surface compatibility, and total cost of ownership. This guide compares both formula categories across the metrics that matter for commercial and industrial operations.

JANITORI™ has manufactured plant-based commercial cleaners in Canada since 1994. [All-Purpose No.03](/products/all-purpose-cleaner-janitori-no-03) (ready-to-use spray, 4L $17.95, 20L $129.95) and [All-Purpose MAX No.04](/products/all-purpose-cleaner-max-janitori-no-04) ($34.95, dilutable concentrate) are both plant-derived and biodegradable, built for daily commercial multi-surface cleaning.

 **Key Takeaways**
- Plant-based surfactants clean everyday soil — desks, counters, food residue — at parity with synthetic formulas; synthetic petrochemical cleaners still cut carbonized grease faster, where a dedicated degreaser is the right tool either way.
- No.03 is a ready-to-use spray (no mixing); No.04 MAX is the true concentrate, diluting 5 mL per 2 L water so one 4 L jug makes up to 1,600 L of solution.
- Compared spray-to-spray, plant-based No.03 costs about the same per use as a typical synthetic RTU cleaner — the real savings come from switching to a dilutable concentrate like No.04 MAX, not the ingredient story alone.
- WHMIS 2015 classifies most plant-based all-purpose cleaners non-hazardous at use concentration, cutting PPE and staff-training requirements compared with higher-classified synthetic formulas.

## What Is a Plant-Based All-Purpose Cleaner?

A plant-based all-purpose cleaner uses surfactants derived from renewable botanical sources — most commonly coconut oil, corn glucose, or citrus extract — instead of petroleum. These surfactants perform the same core function as petroleum-derived counterparts: lowering water surface tension to lift and suspend soil particles for removal. The practical difference shows up in biodegradability and in regulatory classification under [WHMIS 2015](https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/environmental-workplace-health/occupational-health-safety/workplace-hazardous-materials-information-system.html).

A plant-based all-purpose cleaner is not inherently less effective than a synthetic one. For general-purpose soil types — surface films, body oils, food residue, and light dirt — plant-derived surfactants perform at parity. Where synthetic formulas maintain a historical edge is in heavy carbonized grease and aggressive industrial soil, where higher-alkaline petrochemical cleaners offer more aggressive cutting power. For those applications, a dedicated degreaser is the correct tool regardless of formula preference.

## What Defines a Synthetic Chemical Cleaner?

Conventional synthetic all-purpose cleaners use petroleum-derived surfactants — alkyl ethoxylates, linear alkylbenzene sulfonates — combined with synthetic pH builders, optical brighteners, and synthetic fragrances. While effective across a broad soil spectrum, these formulas carry more demanding WHMIS classification requirements and elevated worker exposure risk. The [U.S. EPA notes](https://www.epa.gov/indoor-air-quality-iaq/volatile-organic-compounds-impact-indoor-air-quality) that VOC-emitting products, including many conventional cleaners, can raise indoor VOC concentrations well above outdoor levels — a real factor for staff cleaning occupied spaces for a full shift.

## How Do Plant-Based and Chemical Formulas Actually Differ?

Plant-based and synthetic chemical all-purpose cleaners differ most in surfactant source, WHMIS hazard classification, and biodegradability. Plant-based formulas are typically non-hazardous at use concentration and readily biodegradable; synthetic formulas more often carry Irritant or Corrosive classifications and slower degradation profiles. Day-to-day cleaning performance is comparable between the two.

 | Factor | Plant-Based | Synthetic Chemical

 | Surfactant source | Coconut, corn, citrus-derived | Petroleum / petrochemical

 | Biodegradability | Readily biodegradable | Varies; slower degradation

 | WHMIS hazard class | Generally non-hazardous | Often Irritant or Corrosive

 | VOC content | Low to zero | Moderate (fragrances, solvents)

 | Drain disposal | No special handling required | May require dilution or local permit

 | LEED / BOMA eligibility | Eligible with third-party certification | Generally ineligible

 | Food contact surfaces | Compatible with post-rinse | Rinse or separate protocol required

 | Staff training complexity | Low — simpler SDS profile | Higher — PPE + handling protocols

## Does a Plant-Based Cleaner Perform as Well as a Chemical One?

Yes, for the soil types most commercial facilities deal with day to day. Plant-based surfactants clean surface films, food residue, and light dirt at parity with synthetic formulas. Synthetic petrochemical cleaners keep an edge only on heavy carbonized grease and aggressive industrial soil, where a dedicated degreaser is the right tool regardless of formula base.

## General Surface Cleaning

For routine daily cleaning of hard surfaces — desks, countertops, fixtures, walls, and equipment exteriors — plant-based all-purpose cleaners perform at parity with synthetic alternatives. Dwell time for light soils is 30–60 seconds and rinsing requirements are equivalent. For facilities running daily cleaning rotations across large surface areas, the lower WHMIS classification means simplified staff training and reduced PPE overhead.

## Commercial Kitchen Surfaces

In light-duty commercial kitchen applications — break rooms, cafeteria prep counters, and service area cleaning — plant-based cleaners handle cooking oil residue, general food spills, and stainless steel maintenance effectively. For heavy carbonized grease on commercial range hoods, fryer surrounds, or exhaust systems, switch to a dedicated degreaser: [Industrial Degreaser No.71](/products/degreaser-janitori-no-71) ($26.95/4L) or [Degreaser MAX No.72](/products/degreaser-max-janitori-no-72) for extreme buildup.

## Washroom and Restroom Surfaces

Plant-based all-purpose cleaners are appropriate for general washroom surface maintenance between scheduled deep cleans. They are not disinfectants. If your facility requires kill-claim compliance — healthcare, food service, schools, or outbreak response — use a [Health Canada DIN-registered](https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/drugs-health-products/drug-product-database.html) disinfectant in addition to the all-purpose cleaner. See: [Commercial Disinfectant vs Regular Cleaner: What Facilities Managers Need to Know](/blogs/the-clean-room/commercial-disinfectant-vs-regular-cleaner-what-facilities-managers-need-to-know).

## LEED and Green Building Compliance

Facilities pursuing LEED v4 certification or BOMA BEST scores require documentation of environmentally preferable cleaning products. Plant-based concentrates meeting Green Seal GS-37 or EcoLogo criteria qualify for points under LEED O+M Maintenance protocols. Synthetic chemical cleaners generally do not meet the threshold for these credits, making product selection a compliance variable for certified facilities.

## Which Costs Less Per Use — Plant-Based or Chemical?

It depends which JANITORI™ format you compare. Spray-to-spray, plant-based No.03 costs about the same per use as a typical synthetic RTU cleaner — the ingredient story alone doesn't move the cost needle. The real cost advantage comes from switching to a dilutable concentrate like No.04 MAX, which yields far more finished solution per dollar than any RTU product, plant-based or synthetic.

 | Product | Format / Price | Yield | Cost Per Use

 | All-Purpose No.03 (JANITORI™) | Ready-to-use spray — 4L $17.95 | ~1,333 sprays (3 mL/spray) | ~$0.013/spray

 | All-Purpose MAX No.04 (JANITORI™) | Concentrate — 4L $34.95 | Up to 1,600L solution (5 mL per 2L water) | ~$0.022/L

 | Typical RTU chemical brand | RTU spray — $4–8/L retail | 1L RTU per L purchased | $4–8/L

A facility using 200 litres of diluted all-purpose solution per month spends roughly $4–5/month on No.04 MAX concentrate, versus $800–$1,600/month for the same volume of typical RTU chemical spray — a difference of approximately $9,547 to $19,147 per facility, per year. That gap comes from the concentrate's dilution ratio, not from the plant-based formulation itself; a facility staying on RTU product (plant-based or synthetic) won't see savings anywhere close to this.

## Which Surfaces Can You Safely Use a Plant-Based All-Purpose Cleaner On?

Plant-based all-purpose cleaners are compatible with most commercial hard surfaces — stainless steel, laminate, painted walls, vinyl, and glass — at standard use. A few surfaces need caution or a diluted mop-bucket application instead of direct spray: hardwood, natural stone, and food-contact areas requiring a post-clean rinse.

 | Surface | Compatibility | Notes

 | Stainless steel | Compatible | No.03 RTU spray; wipe and dry to prevent water spots

 | Laminate countertops | Compatible | No.03 RTU spray for daily use

 | Painted walls and surfaces | Compatible | Avoid extended wet contact; wipe and rinse

 | Vinyl and rubber flooring | Compatible | Dilute No.04 MAX for mop-bucket application; good daily maintenance

 | Glass and mirrors | Compatible | No.03 RTU spray; buff dry with microfibre

 | Hardwood floors | Use with caution | Dilute No.04 MAX per SDS; wring mop thoroughly, moisture-sensitive

 | Natural stone (marble, granite) | Test first | Some stones pH-sensitive; verify with surface manufacturer

 | Food contact surfaces | Compatible with rinse | Post-rinse required before direct food contact

## Should You Choose No.03 or No.04 MAX for Your Facility?

Choose No.03 if you want a ready-to-use spray with zero mixing. Choose No.04 MAX if your facility cleans at high volume and dilution economics matter more than spray-bottle convenience.

## All-Purpose Cleaner No.03 — Ready-to-Use

No.03 is JANITORI™'s standard multi-surface plant-derived cleaner, formulated ready-to-use for daily cleaning cycles across commercial facilities. Spray directly onto the surface, wipe, and rinse if required — no mixing or measuring. Made in Canada, EST. 1994.
- **Format:** Ready-to-use spray, no dilution required
- **Sizes:** 4L ($17.95), 20L ($129.95)
- **Best for:** Hotels, arenas, offices, schools, commercial kitchens (general surfaces)
- **WHMIS:** Non-hazardous at recommended use [Shop All-Purpose No.03 →](/products/all-purpose-cleaner-janitori-no-03)

## All-Purpose Cleaner MAX No.04 — Dilutable Concentrate

No.04 MAX is JANITORI™'s concentrated plant-based formula for operations that clean at scale. Dilute 5 mL per 2 litres of water and one 4L jug makes up to 1,600 litres of ready-to-use solution — dramatically reducing chemical inventory and handling volume for large facilities.
- **Dilution:** 5 mL per 2L water (1:400 ratio)
- **Price:** $34.95 / 4L
- **Best for:** Warehouses, large-footprint facilities, high-volume cleaning operations, facilities with limited storage
- **WHMIS:** Non-hazardous at recommended dilution [Shop All-Purpose MAX No.04 →](/products/all-purpose-cleaner-max-janitori-no-04)

Both products are part of JANITORI™'s [biodegradable cleaning products line](/collections/biodegradable-cleaning-products) — plant-derived, Made in Canada, EST. 1994. For a deeper comparison of concentrate-vs-RTU economics across the whole all-purpose line, see: [Concentrated vs Ready-to-Use All-Purpose Cleaner: Which Is Better for Your Facility?](/blogs/the-clean-room/concentrated-vs-ready-to-use-all-purpose-cleaner-which-is-better-for-your-facility)

## Frequently Asked Questions

## Are plant-based all-purpose cleaners as effective as chemical ones for commercial use?

For general daily cleaning — surface films, food residue, body oils, and light dirt — plant-based cleaners perform at parity with synthetic chemical alternatives. For carbonized grease or aggressive industrial soil, a dedicated degreaser is the correct tool regardless of formula type. Plant-based does not mean low-performance in standard commercial applications.

## Do plant-based cleaners require different PPE than chemical cleaners?

Generally no. Plant-based cleaners at recommended use concentration are classified non-hazardous under WHMIS 2015 and don't require PPE beyond standard practice — gloves and eye protection where splashing is possible. Synthetic chemical cleaners more often carry higher WHMIS hazard classifications requiring additional training documentation and PPE; consult the product's SDS to confirm requirements for your specific formula.

## Can I use a plant-based all-purpose cleaner as a disinfectant?

No. All-purpose cleaners — plant-based or synthetic — are not disinfectants. Disinfection requires a Health Canada DIN-registered product with verified kill claims. Use an all-purpose cleaner to clean first (remove soil and biofilm), then apply a registered disinfectant if your facility protocol requires active pathogen control.

## Do I need to dilute JANITORI™ No.03 before use?

No. No.03 is formulated ready-to-use — spray it directly onto the surface, wipe with a damp cloth or mop, and rinse if required. For heavily soiled areas, let it sit 30–60 seconds before wiping. If you want a dilutable concentrate for high-volume facilities, use No.04 MAX instead.

## What dilution ratio should I use for No.04 MAX?

Mix 5 mL of No.04 MAX per 2 litres of water — a 1:400 ratio — for general commercial cleaning. One 4L jug makes up to 1,600 litres of ready-to-use solution at this ratio. For heavier soil, increase the concentrate slightly per the product's SDS dilution guidance.

## Is JANITORI™ All-Purpose No.03 appropriate for LEED-certified facilities?

Plant-based formulas meeting Green Seal or EcoLogo criteria are eligible for LEED v4 O+M Maintenance product credits. Contact JANITORI™ for current certification documentation applicable to your facility's LEED submission. Made in Canada products also contribute to regional procurement credits in some certification frameworks.

## Related Articles
- [Concentrated vs Ready-to-Use All-Purpose Cleaner: Which Is Better for Your Facility?](/blogs/the-clean-room/concentrated-vs-ready-to-use-all-purpose-cleaner-which-is-better-for-your-facility)
- [Biodegradable Cleaning Products: Complete Buyer's Guide for Canadian Facilities (2026)](/blogs/the-clean-room/biodegradable-cleaning-products-complete-buyers-guide-for-canadian-facilities-2026)
- [Commercial Disinfectant vs Regular Cleaner: What Facilities Managers Need to Know](/blogs/the-clean-room/commercial-disinfectant-vs-regular-cleaner-what-facilities-managers-need-to-know) [Shop the Full JANITORI™ Line →](/collections/all)
