Introducing Clorox Screen+ Sanitizing Wipes

By Kyra Caskey, Senior Director of Marketing – CloroxPro

Wherever we go, technology is showing up to make our lives easier. At the same time, these shared spaces — whether it’s offices, schools, healthcare or food-service facilities, retail establishments, or other settings — are becoming breeding grounds of germs that can make people sick.

Our Clorox Professional business has launched breakthrough innovation designed specifically for cleaning and sanitizing touch screens, laptops, tablets, keyboards, and other sensitive electronics often found in public spaces.

Here are some things to know about our new Clorox Screen+ Sanitizing Wipes:

Designed for daily use, they effectively clean and sanitize in one step, without leaving drips, streaks, or scratches.

This bleach-free sanitizer kills 99.9% of bacteria,1 safeguarding facilities.

Fingerprints, dust, and smudges can be removed without damaging delicate screens,2 when used as directed.

This innovation further builds on CloroxPro’s mission of championing a cleaner and healthier world where everyone thrives.

Hello, hi-tech hygiene! 😊

By the numbers

The potential market for screen wipes is large and growing:

48M

Chromebook laptops in U.S. schools3

55%

Percentage of retail checkouts that are self-service4

>110K

Ordering kiosks in food-service facilities5

55%

Percentage of people who list screens among most important items to be regularly cleaned and disinfected in a workplace

And the “ick” factor (and need) is real:

100%

Percentage of workspace samples contaminated with Staph and E. coli6

Your electronics may be:
5X Germier than a toilet seat7
2X Germier than a trash can8
11X Germier than a public bus handle9

<50%

Percentage of people who frequently clean their screens or electronics10

  1. When used as directed on hard, nonporous surfaces, wipes kill Klebsiella pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, and E. coli. ↩︎
  2. Always follow manufacturer instructions. ↩︎
  3. https://www.theregister.com/2023/08/08/4_in_5_chromebooks_sold_to_us_students/ ↩︎
  4. https://www.grocerydive.com/news/self-checkout-takes-lead-for-dominant-checkout-format-in-grocery/648650/#:~:text=Dive%20Brief:%20*%20Self%2Dcheckout%20terminals%20are%20now,combat%20rising%20labor%20costs%20and%20labor%20shortages. ↩︎
  5. https://datos-insights.com/press-release/global-demand-for-self-ordering-kiosks-continues-to-soar/ ↩︎
  6. 4. Ide N, Frogner BK, LeRouge CM, Vigil P, Thompson M. What’s on your keyboard? A systematic review of the contamination of peripheral computer devices in healthcare settings. BMJ Open [Internet]. 2019 Mar;9(3):e026437. Available from: https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/3/e026437. ↩︎
  7. Based on a 2025 CloroxPro Study (N=60 electronic devices) and a 2024 CloudZero Study (N=1 toilet seat). ↩︎
  8. Based on a 2025 CloroxPro Study (N=60 electronic devices) and a 2024 CloudZero Study (N=1 public trash can) ↩︎
  9. Based on findings from a 2025 CloroxPro Study (N=60 electronic devices) and a 2024 CloudZero Study (N=1 public bus handle) ↩︎
  10. CloroxPro Clean Index 2024. Data for this report was collected in a September 2024 online survey of 1,000 consumers, a nationally representative U.S. general population based on age, gender, region, race/ethnicity, and income, and 511 cleaning industry professionals defined as frontline workers, decision makers, building service contractors, and infection preventionists who work in education, government, or healthcare settings. ↩︎