Tile is easy — it's the grout that ages a floor. Grout is porous, sits slightly below the tile surface, and quietly absorbs every drop of mop water and tracked-in Tampa sand until "beige" becomes its permanent color. Here's how to reverse that, and how to make the results last.

The baking-soda + peroxide method

  1. Mix a paste: roughly two parts baking soda to one part 3% hydrogen peroxide (the brown-bottle kind). For greasy kitchen grout, add a drop of dish soap.
  2. Apply along the grout lines and let it sit 10–15 minutes. Patience does half the scrubbing.
  3. Scrub with a stiff grout brush or an old toothbrush, working in short strokes along the line. An electric scrubber attachment saves your knees on big floors.
  4. Rinse with clean water and dry. Mop the residue away with fresh water — leftover paste dries white and chalky.
Skip the harsh stuff: undiluted bleach weakens grout over time, and acid-based cleaners can dissolve it outright (and etch nearby stone). If the gentle method fails, the problem usually isn't the cleaner — the grout is stained through and needs professional steam extraction or re-coloring.

Why mopping makes grout dirtier

Surprise: a traditional string mop is grout's worst enemy. Dirty mop water settles into the recessed grout lines and dries there — you're effectively painting the grout with dirt soup. Use a microfiber flat mop with a two-bucket system (or rinse the pad often), and change the water as soon as it looks gray.

Seal it — the step everyone skips

Once your grout is clean and fully dry (give it 24 hours), apply a penetrating grout sealer. It takes one evening, costs little, and means spills wipe up instead of soaking in. Reapply roughly once a year in showers and kitchens, less often elsewhere. Sealed grout is the difference between a 10-minute touch-up and an all-knees afternoon.

Pro tip: test whether your grout is sealed by flicking a few drops of water on it. If the water beads, the seal is good; if it darkens as it absorbs, it's time to re-seal.