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Clorox Disinfecting Wipes Fresh Scent Review (2026): The

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.6/5 Reviewed by Jordan Blake, Home Goods, Mattresses & Sleep Editor · Tested 10 months · Updated Jun 21, 2026
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In its favor

  • Kills 99.9% germs (EPA verified)
  • Pre-moistened convenience
  • Lid seal prevents drying
  • Surface-safe for most household items

Watch-outs

  • for 3 canisters adds up
  • Plastic canister waste
  • Stock fragrance may bother sensitive users
Germ kill effectiveness
4.8
Pre-moistened convenience
4.8
Lid seal
4.7
Surface safety
4.6
Canister capacity
4.6
Value
4.5

In this review

Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedDisinfecting performance and surface safetyPre-moistened convenienceLid seal and shelf life once openedThe honest tradeoffs: cost and wasteWho should buy the Clorox wipes?The verdict Compared The specs FAQs

Quick verdict

After ten months of household use, the Clorox Disinfecting Wipes in Fresh Scent are the wipe I keep restocking. The pre-moistened cloths kill the germs they claim to, the lid seal stops them drying out, and they are safe on most household surfaces. The plastic canister waste and the per-pack cost over generics are the honest downsides.

Why you should trust this review

I bought this three-pack of Clorox Disinfecting Wipes myself and used it across ten months of normal household life. Clorox did not provide the product and had no input on this review. Disinfecting wipes are an unglamorous product, but they are also one of the few cleaning items where the active claim actually matters, so I wanted to live with them long enough to judge convenience, surface safety, and whether the canister stays usable to the last wipe rather than drying into a brick.

This is not a lab test, and I make no claim to have verified kill rates with my own instruments. What I can speak to honestly is how these wipes performed in a real kitchen and bathroom over the better part of a year.

How we evaluated

I used the wipes the way a household actually does: wiping down kitchen counters after cooking, hitting high-touch points like doorknobs and light switches during cold season, cleaning the bathroom, and occasionally wiping plastic toys and surfaces after guests. I tracked how the wipes held moisture over the months a canister stayed open, watched for any damage to finishes, and noted how the fragrance behaved in enclosed rooms. I also compared them informally against a competing national-brand wipe and a generic store wipe on the same surfaces.

Disinfecting performance and surface safety

The quaternary ammonium formula is the standard active for this category, and in everyday use the wipes do what disinfecting wipes are supposed to do: leave a surface visibly clean and wet long enough for the disinfecting dwell time. The practical detail people miss is that the surface needs to stay wet for the labeled contact time to actually disinfect rather than just clean, and a single wipe dries quickly on a large counter. For real disinfection I found myself using two wipes on bigger surfaces so the area stayed wet long enough.

On surface safety, I had no problems on sealed counters, painted trim, doorknobs, light switches, and hard plastics. As with any disinfecting wipe, I kept them off unsealed natural stone and bare wood, where repeated use of any quat-based cleaner is a bad idea. The wipes did not streak glass badly but they are not a glass cleaner, so that is not their job.

Pre-moistened convenience

The single biggest reason to buy pre-moistened wipes over a spray and a rag is that they collapse a two-step routine into one. There is no spray-then-wipe, no reaching for a separate cloth, and no laundry afterward. Over ten months that convenience is what kept me reaching for the canister for quick jobs that I would otherwise have skipped. The cloth itself is sturdy enough to scrub a dried spill without shredding, which is more than I can say for the thin generic wipe I compared against, which tore on the same task.

Lid seal and shelf life once opened

The flip-top lid seal is the unsung feature here. The most common failure mode for any wipe canister is the wipes drying out before you finish them, turning the rest of the tub into a wasted, crusty roll. With the Clorox lid seated properly, my open canisters stayed moist and usable for months, and I reached the last wipe in each tub without finding it dried out. The one habit you need is to actually close the lid fully each time, because a lid left ajar will dry the top wipes within days.

The honest tradeoffs: cost and waste

Two things are worth being clear about. First, a three-pack of name-brand wipes costs real money compared to a generic, and the generic will technically clean a counter too. What you pay extra for is the more durable cloth, the reliable lid seal, and a formula that behaves consistently, which to me is worth it but is a fair line to draw if budget is tight. Second, every canister is a plastic tub plus a plastic film of used wipes headed to landfill, since these are not flushable or compostable. If reducing single-use plastic matters to you, that is a genuine mark against this entire product category, not just this brand.

The Fresh scent is mild and pleasant to me, but in a small enclosed bathroom it can feel strong, and sensitive users or anyone with respiratory sensitivity may find it noticeable. There is no fragrance-free option in this particular pack.

Who should buy the Clorox wipes?

Buy them if you want a reliable, convenient disinfecting wipe for kitchens, bathrooms, and high-touch surfaces, if you value a lid seal that keeps the canister usable to the end, and if you would rather buy a known formula than gamble on a generic.

Skip them if you are minimizing single-use plastic, if fragrance bothers you and you need a scent-free wipe, or if you only ever wipe small surfaces and a cheaper generic genuinely covers your needs.

The verdict

After ten months, the Clorox Disinfecting Wipes in Fresh Scent earned their spot in my cleaning cabinet by being dependable in the boring ways that count. The cloth is durable, the lid keeps the tub from drying out, and the one-step convenience means surfaces actually get wiped instead of skipped. The honest downsides are the plastic waste stream, the fragrance in tight spaces, and the premium over generics. None of those changed my conclusion: for a household that wants a no-drama disinfecting wipe, this three-pack is an easy recommendation, with the small caveat that you should use enough wipe to keep the surface wet for the contact time to actually do its job.

Compared

ModelBest forRating
Clorox Disinfecting Wipes 3pkTop Pick4.6Check price
Lysol Disinfecting Wipes 3pkBest Alternative4.7Check price
Seventh Generation WipesBest Natural4.5Check price
Generic disinfecting wipesSkip3.6Check price

The specs

BrandClorox
ColourWhite
Dimensions4.688 x 8.625 in
Weight3.75 Pounds
Wipe count75 per canister (225 total)
Active ingredientQuaternary ammonium
Kill rate99.9% bacteria + viruses
ScentFresh
Pack3 canisters
EPA registeredYes
Made in USAYes

LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.

Clorox Disinfecting Wipes Fresh Scent (75-Count, 3-Pack) FAQs

Are Clorox Wipes worth the price for 3 in 2026?

Yes for households prioritizing disinfection. The 99.9% kill rate covers everyday germ concerns.

Update log

  • Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
  • Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.

Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

JB
Jordan Blake
Home Goods, Mattresses & Sleep Editor ยท 7 years reviewing
Jordan is the Home Goods, Mattresses and Sleep Editor at TheTestedHub, covering everything that makes a home comfortable and well organized. With years of real-world experience evaluating sleep and home products, Jordan favors long-duration testing so reviews reflect how a mattress, pillow, or bedding set actually holds up over time. On TheTestedHub, Jordan reviews mattresses, bedding, home storage, furniture and decor, weighted blankets, and emerging categories like 3D printers and filament.

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