That headline is another classic “viral household hacks” list. Baking soda is genuinely useful—but posts like this usually overpromise and mix real science with exaggeration.
Let’s separate fact from hype.
🧂 What baking soda actually is
Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate, a mild alkaline compound that:
- Neutralizes acids
- Absorbs odors
- Acts as a gentle abrasive
- Reacts with acids to produce carbon dioxide (bubbles)
That’s it—no magic properties.
✅ Real, useful baking soda tricks
🧼 1. Deodorizing fridge & shoes
- Absorbs odors rather than masking them
- Works well in open containers
🧽 2. Cleaning sinks & surfaces
- Mild abrasive + deodorizer
- Good for grease and light stains
🍳 3. Cleaning burnt pots
- Soak with warm water + baking soda
- Helps loosen stuck food
👃 4. Neutralizing odors in carpets
- Sprinkle, wait, vacuum
- Helps with mild smells
🧺 5. Boosting laundry freshness
- Added to wash cycle
- Helps reduce odor and soften water slightly
⚠️ Common “viral hacks” that are misleading
❌ “Whitening teeth instantly”
- Can damage enamel if overused
- Not recommended for frequent use
❌ “Cures body problems / detoxes”
- No scientific evidence for “detox” effects in that sense
- Your liver and kidneys already handle detoxing
❌ “Removes all stains instantly”
- Works only on some fresh stains, not all
🧠 Important safety notes
- Don’t mix baking soda with strong acids casually (like vinegar in sealed containers → pressure buildup)
- Avoid overusing on delicate surfaces (wood, aluminum, polished stone)
- Inhaling large amounts of powder is not ideal
🧾 Bottom line
Baking soda is a cheap, versatile cleaning helper, not a miracle solution. It works well for:
- Odors
- Light cleaning
- Some laundry uses
But viral posts exaggerate it into a “fix everything” product—which it isn’t.
If you want, I can give you a real, practical baking soda + vinegar cleaning guide that actually works (and what not to combine).