Home care has a new job: Well-being

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Home care has a new job: Well-being

Americans are spending more time at home. What was a necessity during the pandemic became a preference enabled by technology. With home at the center, how people spend their time and how they care for their environment is changing.

New research from The Clorox Company suggests cleaning is becoming more frequent, more emotional, and more closely tied to how people view time and wellbeing. Engagement with cleaning is record high — in fact, many Americans report cleaning more now than they did even at the height of the COVID pandemic. Motivations have shifted, too: Cleaning is increasingly linked to self-care. Consumers find joy in the process and seek emotional rewards. In a volatile world, people turn to home care for stress relief, a sense of control and accomplishment.

These are among the many findings in the Home Care Redefined report, a comprehensive look at how life at home is evolving and what that means for the future of related Consumer Packaged Goods categories. Drawing on proprietary insights and broader industry data, the research explores how people are spending time at home, what they value in their spaces, and how domestic routines are adapting to new functional and emotional needs.

The takeaway: Cleaning is moving from the background of daily life to something more engaging and meaningful.

Cleaning finds a new meaning

According to the report, Americans continue to spend more time at home than they did before the pandemic, even as offices and social calendars have reopened. Homes are now workplaces, gathering spaces, gyms, entertainment venues and places of recovery — often all in the same day. That shift is reshaping home care.

One notable change is the rise of what is described as “in-the-flow” cleaning. Cleaning time now averages 25 minutes daily — more than during the pandemic and a new high. Instead of setting aside large blocks of time for chores, many people are tackling small tasks throughout the day: wiping down surfaces between meetings, refreshing spaces before guests arrive or tidying up to reset between activities.

This behavior reflects a deeper shift in motivation. Cleaning is no longer just about meeting expectations or maintaining standards. It is increasingly about how people want to feel in their homes.

Consumers frequently describe cleaning as a source of accomplishment and calm. In an environment defined by constant demands on attention, it offers a rare sense of completion and control. The importance of emotional payoff, from reduced stress to improved mood, has for the first time in our tracking surpassed the functional result.

For the industry, that shift opens the door to new types of innovation. Solutions that support flexible, intuitive, bite-sized, sensorially rich cleaning are better aligned with how people live today.

Greater focus on health at home

As time at home has grown more central to daily life, so has awareness of how the home environment affects our overall health.

People increasingly view their homes as a foundation for holistic wellbeing, spending an additional 5.6 hours per week cleaning. That includes managing germs, allergens and air and water quality, but also creating spaces that feel calm, safe and restorative. A clean home is not just about hygiene; it’s about peace of mind. According to the Home Care Redefined report, up to 93% of respondents said they feel good about themselves when their home smells good.

Confidence and reassurance are emerging as powerful drivers of behavior. Many people want to feel certain they are protecting their family’s health and making responsible choices, prompting greater interest in solutions that balance efficacy with ingredient transparency and align with personal values.

Younger generations are helping accelerate this shift, with many Gen Z influencers creating content that “rebrands” common household tasks — like calling dishwashing “bath time” for their plates. Rather than reacting to messes, they are approaching cleaning as preventive care — part of a broader wellness mindset that includes nutrition, fitness and mental health. Cleaning routines are increasingly seen as one piece of a larger self-care system.

For manufacturers, that evolution raises expectations. Performance remains essential, but so do trust, clarity, and emotional resonance. Products must deliver results while also supporting confidence and comfort in the home.

Convenience is no longer just about speed

Convenience has long shaped the home care category, but its meaning is changing. Speed still matters, but consumers are placing greater value on ease, flexibility, and even enjoyment. Convenience is also about simplicity, as evidenced by the three out of four consumers who prefer multi-purpose cleaners like wipes and sprays to specialized ones.

Many are looking for products that simplify decisions, serve multiple purposes, and reduce friction in everyday tasks. That demand is fueling interest in multi-use solutions and services that bring products directly into the home, helping people reclaim time and mental energy.

At the same time, a few long-standing frustrations persist. Laundry stands out as a category where satisfaction is relatively low and expectations are high. People want better results with less effort — and often feel the process is more demanding than it should be. Those gaps represent both a challenge and an opportunity for reinvention.

Social media is also shaping perceptions of convenience. According to a survey from American Home Shield, 58% of respondents said they consumed social media about cleaning, housework, or chores. Cleaning routines, product hacks and dramatic “oddly satisfying” transformations have become a staple of online content, influencing how people approach tasks at home and raising expectations for results and ease.

Why importance of home care is growing

Taken together, these shifts suggest home care is becoming more central to how people manage their time, health and daily lives. What was once considered routine maintenance is increasingly seen as part of a broader effort to create homes that support wellbeing and productivity.

That has implications beyond product performance. It points to a category that is more closely connected to culture, emotion and everyday experience than ever before.

As homes continue to evolve, the meaning of home care will continue to evolve with them. The question is no longer just how people clean, but why — and what role those routines play in the way they live today.

This story was produced by The Clorox Company and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

 

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Larry Elder is an American lawyer, writer, and radio and television personality who calls himself the "Sage of South Central" a district of Los Angeles, Larry says his philosophy is to entertain, inform, provoke and to hopefully uplift. His calling card is "we have a country to save" and to him this means returning to the bedrock Constitutional principles of limited government and maximum personal responsibility. Elder's iconoclastic wit and intellectual agility makes him a particularly attractive voice in a nation that seems weary of traditional racial dialogue.” – Los Angeles Times.

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Hugh Hewitt is one of the nation’s leading bloggers and a genuine media revolutionary. He brings that expertise, his wit and what The New Yorker magazine calls his “amiable but relentless manner” to his nationally syndicated show each day.

When Dr. Sebastian Gorka was growing up, he listened to talk radio under his pillow with a transistor radio, dreaming that one day he would be behind the microphone. Beginning New Year’s Day 2019, he got his wish. Gorka now hosts America First every weekday afternoon 3 to 6pm ET. Gorka’s unique story works well on the radio. He is national security analyst for the Fox News Channel and author of two books: "Why We Fight" and "Defeating Jihad." His latest book releasing this fall is “War For America’s Soul.” He is uniquely qualified to fight the culture war and stand up for what is great about America, his adopted home country.

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Sean Hannity is a conservative radio and television host, and one of the original primetime hosts on the Fox News Channel, where he has appeared since 1996. Sean Hannity began his radio career at a college station in California, before moving on to markets in the Southeast and New York. Today, he’s one of the most listened to on-air voices. Hannity’s radio program went into national syndication on September 10, 2001, and airs on more than 500 stations. Talkers Magazine estimates Hannity’s weekly radio audience at 13.5 million. In 1996 he was hired as one of the original hosts on Fox News Channel. As host of several popular Fox programs, Hannity has become the highest-paid news anchor on television.

Michelle Malkin is a mother, wife, blogger, conservative syndicated columnist, longtime cable TV news commentator, and best-selling author of six books. She started her newspaper journalism career at the Los Angeles Daily News in 1992, moved to the Seattle Times in 1995, and has been penning nationally syndicated newspaper columns for Creators Syndicate since 1999. She is founder of conservative Internet start-ups Hot Air and Twitchy.com. Malkin has received numerous awards for her investigative journalism, including the Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL) national award for outstanding service for the cause of governmental ethics and leadership (1998), the Reed Irvine Accuracy in Media Award for Investigative Journalism (2006), the Heritage Foundation and Franklin Center for Government & Public Integrity's Breitbart Award for Excellence in Journalism (2013), the Center for Immigration Studies' Eugene Katz Award for Excellence in the Coverage of Immigration Award (2016), and the Manhattan Film Festival's Film Heals Award (2018). Married for 26 years and the mother of two teenage children, she lives with her family in Colorado. Follow her at michellemalkin.com. (Photo reprinted with kind permission from Peter Duke Photography.)

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Home care has a new job: Well-being

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Home care has a new job: Well-being

Americans are spending more time at home. What was a necessity during the pandemic became a preference enabled by technology. With home at the center, how people spend their time and how they care for their environment is changing.

New research from The Clorox Company suggests cleaning is becoming more frequent, more emotional, and more closely tied to how people view time and wellbeing. Engagement with cleaning is record high — in fact, many Americans report cleaning more now than they did even at the height of the COVID pandemic. Motivations have shifted, too: Cleaning is increasingly linked to self-care. Consumers find joy in the process and seek emotional rewards. In a volatile world, people turn to home care for stress relief, a sense of control and accomplishment.

These are among the many findings in the Home Care Redefined report, a comprehensive look at how life at home is evolving and what that means for the future of related Consumer Packaged Goods categories. Drawing on proprietary insights and broader industry data, the research explores how people are spending time at home, what they value in their spaces, and how domestic routines are adapting to new functional and emotional needs.

The takeaway: Cleaning is moving from the background of daily life to something more engaging and meaningful.

Cleaning finds a new meaning

According to the report, Americans continue to spend more time at home than they did before the pandemic, even as offices and social calendars have reopened. Homes are now workplaces, gathering spaces, gyms, entertainment venues and places of recovery — often all in the same day. That shift is reshaping home care.

One notable change is the rise of what is described as “in-the-flow” cleaning. Cleaning time now averages 25 minutes daily — more than during the pandemic and a new high. Instead of setting aside large blocks of time for chores, many people are tackling small tasks throughout the day: wiping down surfaces between meetings, refreshing spaces before guests arrive or tidying up to reset between activities.

This behavior reflects a deeper shift in motivation. Cleaning is no longer just about meeting expectations or maintaining standards. It is increasingly about how people want to feel in their homes.

Consumers frequently describe cleaning as a source of accomplishment and calm. In an environment defined by constant demands on attention, it offers a rare sense of completion and control. The importance of emotional payoff, from reduced stress to improved mood, has for the first time in our tracking surpassed the functional result.

For the industry, that shift opens the door to new types of innovation. Solutions that support flexible, intuitive, bite-sized, sensorially rich cleaning are better aligned with how people live today.

Greater focus on health at home

As time at home has grown more central to daily life, so has awareness of how the home environment affects our overall health.

People increasingly view their homes as a foundation for holistic wellbeing, spending an additional 5.6 hours per week cleaning. That includes managing germs, allergens and air and water quality, but also creating spaces that feel calm, safe and restorative. A clean home is not just about hygiene; it’s about peace of mind. According to the Home Care Redefined report, up to 93% of respondents said they feel good about themselves when their home smells good.

Confidence and reassurance are emerging as powerful drivers of behavior. Many people want to feel certain they are protecting their family’s health and making responsible choices, prompting greater interest in solutions that balance efficacy with ingredient transparency and align with personal values.

Younger generations are helping accelerate this shift, with many Gen Z influencers creating content that “rebrands” common household tasks — like calling dishwashing “bath time” for their plates. Rather than reacting to messes, they are approaching cleaning as preventive care — part of a broader wellness mindset that includes nutrition, fitness and mental health. Cleaning routines are increasingly seen as one piece of a larger self-care system.

For manufacturers, that evolution raises expectations. Performance remains essential, but so do trust, clarity, and emotional resonance. Products must deliver results while also supporting confidence and comfort in the home.

Convenience is no longer just about speed

Convenience has long shaped the home care category, but its meaning is changing. Speed still matters, but consumers are placing greater value on ease, flexibility, and even enjoyment. Convenience is also about simplicity, as evidenced by the three out of four consumers who prefer multi-purpose cleaners like wipes and sprays to specialized ones.

Many are looking for products that simplify decisions, serve multiple purposes, and reduce friction in everyday tasks. That demand is fueling interest in multi-use solutions and services that bring products directly into the home, helping people reclaim time and mental energy.

At the same time, a few long-standing frustrations persist. Laundry stands out as a category where satisfaction is relatively low and expectations are high. People want better results with less effort — and often feel the process is more demanding than it should be. Those gaps represent both a challenge and an opportunity for reinvention.

Social media is also shaping perceptions of convenience. According to a survey from American Home Shield, 58% of respondents said they consumed social media about cleaning, housework, or chores. Cleaning routines, product hacks and dramatic “oddly satisfying” transformations have become a staple of online content, influencing how people approach tasks at home and raising expectations for results and ease.

Why importance of home care is growing

Taken together, these shifts suggest home care is becoming more central to how people manage their time, health and daily lives. What was once considered routine maintenance is increasingly seen as part of a broader effort to create homes that support wellbeing and productivity.

That has implications beyond product performance. It points to a category that is more closely connected to culture, emotion and everyday experience than ever before.

As homes continue to evolve, the meaning of home care will continue to evolve with them. The question is no longer just how people clean, but why — and what role those routines play in the way they live today.

This story was produced by The Clorox Company and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

 

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