Skip to main content
    Chemicals & Detergents

    Sodium Hypochlorite

    Sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) is the active ingredient in household bleach and the primary disinfectant used in professional soft washing. It is sold to exterior cleaners in 12.5% concentration (commonly called "SH" or "pool shock"), roughly twice the strength of consumer bleach. When applied in a properly mixed soft-wash solution, it kills algae, mold, mildew, lichen, and bacteria at the cellular level within minutes and breaks down into salt water and oxygen.

    In depth

    Sodium hypochlorite is not a cleaner — it is a sanitizer. It does not dissolve dirt; it kills the biology that is causing the black streaks, green haze, and gray shadowing on a home's exterior. Used responsibly with surfactants, proper dilution, and thorough pre-soaking and rinsing of plants, it is the safest and most effective chemistry for house washing and roof cleaning. Misused, it damages plants, bleaches fabric, and corrodes metal — which is why dilution, dwell, and rinse discipline separate pros from hacks.

    How this shows up on our jobs

    Sodium hypochlorite is the killing agent in every house wash, roof wash, and soft-wash job we perform. We mix it fresh on-site, downstream it at safe dilutions, and pre-soak landscaping before every application.

    Services where this matters

    Related terms

    Soft Wash

    Soft washing is a low-pressure exterior cleaning method that uses biodegradable detergents and a controlled bleach solution to kill the algae, mold, mildew, and bacteria that cause staining — rather than scouring them off with brute force. A soft wash rig delivers cleaning fluid at roughly 60-200 PSI, comparable to a strong garden hose, which is safe on siding, shingles, painted surfaces, screens, and caulking. The chemistry does the work: the solution dwells on the surface, breaks down the organic growth at the cell level, and is then rinsed clean with fresh water.

    Downstreaming

    Downstreaming is the technique of injecting soap or cleaning solution into the pressure washer's water line on the low-pressure side of the pump — downstream from the pump, hence the name. A chemical injector pulls detergent from a bucket through a siphon hose whenever a low-pressure (soap) nozzle is attached. When the technician swaps to a high-pressure nozzle, the injector automatically stops drawing chemical, allowing for a clean rinse without switching lines.

    Surfactant

    A surfactant (short for "surface-active agent") is a chemical compound that lowers the surface tension of water so it can wet, spread, penetrate, and cling to a dirty surface instead of beading up and running off. In exterior cleaning, surfactants are blended with sodium hypochlorite and water to let the mix "stick" to vertical surfaces long enough for the bleach to kill organic growth at depth.

    Chem Ratio

    Chem ratio refers to the final dilution of cleaning chemistry at the surface — the percentage of active ingredient after the downstream injector, surfactant, and rinse water have all combined. For soft-wash work, the target ratio at the surface is typically 1-2% sodium hypochlorite for siding and 2-4% for roofs, down from a 12.5% concentrate in the bucket. Achieving the right ratio depends on injector flow rate, hose length, nozzle size, and pump pressure — and it is rarely a fixed number across all rigs.

    Biocide

    A biocide is any chemical agent that kills living organisms — bacteria, fungi, algae, mold, mildew, lichen. In exterior cleaning, the most common biocides are sodium hypochlorite (bleach), quaternary ammonium compounds ("quats"), and hydrogen peroxide. Each has a place: sodium hypochlorite is the fastest and most cost-effective broad-spectrum kill; quats provide residual antimicrobial action that slows regrowth on treated surfaces; peroxide is the mildest and is used where chlorine would damage the substrate.

    Need this service in Madison?

    The Total Wash Co. handles sodium hypochlorite and every other exterior cleaning service in the greater Madison, WI area. Get a free, no-obligation quote.