The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (2024)

By Karrie on | Updated | 56 Comments

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (1)

Did you know you could create your own homemade drano? Well, it’s not really like drano because drano is full of a lot of scary chemicals and toxins, butit can get the clog out of backed up sinks and tubs like drano, and I think that is pretty awesome.

Last week, my tub decided it did not want to drain for me. I thought about going to the store to buy something to fix the clogged drain, but instead, decided to create my own solution (this doesn’t sound like me at all, wink wink) and it surprisingly turned out to be quite an easy task. My tub that took 15 minutes the night before to drain, now drained in 3 minutes. I couldn’t believe it. All this time I had been using those harsh chemicals, when I could have been using simple and safe ingredients to make my own.

My Homemade Drano Recipe uses safe all natural ingredients, unlike the store bought stuff which is full of scary chemicals. I love that it uses ingredients that I always have on hand, and is still effective. Are you ready to find out how to unclog a drain the natural simple way? Lets get to it.

My DIY Homemade Drano Recipe

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (2)

1 cup baking soda
1 cup lemon juice or vinegar
boiling water

First make sure water is drained from tub or sink. If it is slow draining, just be patient and wait for all the water to drain.

Remove any drain plugs or stoppers from the tub or sink. You want anopening big enough so you can really get the solution down the drain.

Next pour boiling water down the drain to help loosen up any gunk. Let water drain again.

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (3)

Next pour baking soda down drain. This was by far the hardest and most time consuming part. Try your hardest to get all of the baking sodadown there. Use a funnel if you have to!

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (4)

Next slowly pour in the lemon juice, and alsovinegar works just as good! The lemon juice will cause a reaction with the baking soda and thiswill result in some fizzing and bubbling action. Cover the drain with a cloth, or tub stopper so that the baking soda can work. We don’t want it to come up, we want it to break up the clog down below.

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (5)

Leave the cloth or drain plug for 30 minutes. During this time the foaming action will be breaking down the clog.

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (6)

After 30 minutes, uncover the drain and very slowly pour more boiling water down to flush the clog out. If you have plastic piping, it is best to avoid boiling water and instead use very hot water.

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (7)

Depending on how stubborn of a clog you have, you may need to repeat the process a few times, but it should work if you follow these steps. If you’re still having troubles it may be time to humble yourself and call the plumber. 🙂

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (8)

Lemon Juice-.48
Baking soda-.31
Water- Free

Total Cost-$0.79

A 32 oz. bottle of Drano cost about $4.00 at Walmart and my homemadeversion is only pennies! So yes, it is definitely worth the cost, and time to make. I love that it uses products that I already have in my kitchen, which means I don’t have to take an extra trip to the store. Plus, I don’t feel like I am going to die a horrible death from breathing in nasty chemicals and toxins. I love that this recipe is safe to use around my kids!

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (10)

DIY Homemade Drano Recipe

Clear a clogged sink with this DIY Drano recipe.

4.50 from 12 votes

Print Pin Rate

Course: homemade diy

Cuisine: Cleaners

Keyword: diy, drano

Prep Time: 5 minutes minutes

Waiting Time: 30 minutes minutes

Author: Karrie

Instructions

  • First make sure water is drained from tub or sink. If it is slow draining, just be patient and wait for all the water to drain.

    Remove any drain plugs or stoppers from the tub or sink. You want an opening big enough so you can really get the solution down the drain.

  • Next pour boiling water down the drain to help loosen up any gunk. Let water drain again.

  • Next pour baking soda down drain. This was by far the hardest and most time consuming part. Try your hardest to get all of the baking soda down there. Use a funnel if you have to!

  • Next slowly pour in the lemon juice, and also vinegar works just as good! The lemon juice will cause a reaction with the baking soda and this will result in some fizzing and bubbling action. Cover the drain with a cloth, or tub stopper so that the baking soda can work. We don't want it to come up, we want it to break up the clog down below.

  • Leave the cloth or drain plug for 30 minutes. During this time the foaming action will be breaking down the clog.

  • After 30 minutes, uncover the drain and very slowly pour more boiling water down to flush the clog out. If you have plastic piping, it is best to avoid boiling water and instead use very hot water.

  • Depending on how stubborn of a clog you have, you may need to repeat the process a few times, but it should work if you follow these steps. If you're still having troubles it may be time to humble yourself and call the plumber. 🙂

Check out more of my homemade recipes >>>here.

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (11)

About Karrie

Food is my love language. But so is saving money. So I like to combine the two a lot and make thrifty make ahead and freeze meals to save time. Because life is busy, and freezer meals can come to the rescue for all of us. And yes, they actually CAN taste good. Read more...

Reader Interactions

Psssst…

Make sure to follow along with @HappyMoneySaver onInstagram, connect with me onFacebookand pin along with me onPinterest!.

    Leave A Reply!

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Comments & Reviews

  1. Christina says

    The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (12)
    Worked for me as well. Only, I read it wrong and boiled 1 cup of lemon with 1 cup of vinegar. Put baking soda + a little bit of water. Then took the boiling combination and poured it over the baking soda. It cleared it right up! I had a slow drain, though, so not clogged. Still, wow. Thank you! 🙂

    Reply

  2. Christy says

    The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (13)
    Thank you so much! I do not like using things like Drano so this is a great alternative, I’m using it in my kitchen sinks to keep them running in top condition. The comments on here are embarrassing to the human race, I’m sorry for that. Keep up the good work, I look at your recipes for alternatives often.

    Reply

  3. JD says

    Worked after 3 doses! Wahoo!

    Reply

  4. Shirley says

    The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (14)
    My clog wasn’t anything substantial but I also had a smell starting. As far as I can tell the sink runs a little faster and the smell is gone. For me, it worked.

    Reply

  5. Terry says

    The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (15)
    Anyone who knows anything about science knows what a fraud this is! An acid and an alkali neutralize each other. The foam is just show. The boiling water by itself is more effective than that crap!

    Reply

    • Linda says

      Well ok then Einstein! You don’t have to be so rude. Move on!

      Reply

  6. Laura says

    Wow, I’m sorry people are so thoughtless with their comments on your helpful recipe.

    Reply

    • gay says

      really works for me

      Reply

  7. Craig says

    Where do you know of that vinegar occurs “naturally” in the wild?

    Reply

    • Rebekah says

      The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (16)
      I mean, lemon juice does. Vinegar is just an alternative.

      Reply

    • Kiki says

      Lmao, acetic acid (concentrated vinegar) is a very common biochemical molecule found in insect defenses, which is often derived by a symbiosis with bacteria (genera Acetobacter and Gluconacetobacter) that converts compounds in their food into acetic acid. This is just ONE example. Vinegar is very natural 🙂 nice try tho!

      Reply

  8. Donna says

    Does this work for toilets too

    Reply

  9. Angela says

    Just tried this and it worked well. Thank you!

    Reply

    • Wendy says

      I do this with the vinegar. Works very well.
      I don’t put boiling water in 1st. May try that next time.

      Reply

  10. david says

    The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (17)
    A very interesting article, thanks a lot!

    Reply

  11. Harvey says

    I have done this for a long time, not sure where I read about this before…possibly some handy-man magazine or something. 🙂

    I have seen some suggesting not to use boiling water for fear of damaging pipes.

    To avoid the possible pipe damage, I did use a small pot of water, but as i heated it up on the stove, i poured it down the drain just as “bubbles” that had formed on the side of the pot started to release. This made it hotter than my water heater, yet not really boiling yet, so (hopefully) no damage to the pipes.

    I also used vinegar instead of lemon juice, but that is only a preference/availability issue…as both facilitate the same “bubbling” result to break up the clog. The rest I did exactly as was described here, and it worked like a charm.

    Good luck!

    Reply

  12. Dajester says

    How is water free? Unless you have a well on your property, you still pay the city for water from your faucet.

    Reply

    • Mary B Brown says

      Give me a break, I admit water isn’t free, but let me tell you, At the age of 10, I walked 3/4 of a mile ( one way) to carry a bucket of water home, from the fresh water spring, for drinking and cooking every day in the summer after the closest spring dried up. I also carried a bucket of water every day for an elderly man, who needed fresh water every day, He gave me a dollar when he got his Old Age Pension check, kinda like a SS check, back in the day. No, we did not have a car, or a mule, I can’t even think of any one giving a damn about a gallon of water to unclog their drains. unless they don’t have any. I can’t but wonder how someone like you would do , if you had to walk a mile and a half for water to drink, water for your dish washer, automatic washer, shower, and flushing your toilet.

      Reply

  13. Milly says

    I tried your method, but as I worked, I realized a flaw. I use diluted baking soda shampoo and diluted vinegar conditioner. Apparently my hair should have dissolved by now and I should never have a clogged shower drain. Since neither of those have happened, I’m going to say this method does not magically get rid of hair. It probably does get rid of other grim we’ll though (hence why i’m using it on my hair).

    I ended up securing an anchor to long tweezers with a rubber band (didn’t want to lose the tweezers!). I got a ton of hair out with the extra depth. Now it drains well.

    Reply

    • Ricki says

      My entire family has long hair so this is often a problem. Could you email me a picture of how you assembled this? Thanks so much.

      rickilsmith97@gmail.com

      Reply

      • Betrice says

        I am an older woman and my hair is where I can sit on it. My daughter also had long hair down to her waist when she lived with us. It was an adventure to keep things running free but I stumbled on a system that really worked for me. My mom came to stay with us from out of state after having an operation that required stitches. Since she was not with her regular physician when the stitches were to come out, a physician friend offered to do the honors. He came with a kit that included special scissors that grab on and hold onto thread. The tip ends are skinny and have horizontal ridges inside to grip and a locking system in between the handle to make sure it holds tight. They are small enough to side into the tub drain and pull everything up. Sometimes it is a bit of a challenge to have the glob pass up the crossbars of the drain but you just have to go at it from a different side. Once you figure out how to work with the tool, the whole process is less than 5 minutes! Keep them under the bathroom sink with the Comet and other cleaning supplies. Now mine are stainless steel but I have seen them at Harbor Freight for less than $10. Its the perfect solution.

  14. Stephanie Liddle says

    I would have liked this to work but it didn’t. It actually made it worse. Maybe mine was just too clogged.

    Reply

  15. Kevin Szabo jr says

    Thank you for sharing. This is the best way to unclog a sink drain. Not only is it very easy it’s also safe.

    Reply

« Older Comments

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe (2024)

FAQs

The Best DIY Homemade Drano Recipe? ›

Pour 1/2 cup baking soda, followed by 1/2 cup vinegar down drain. Plug drain and let sit for one hour. Then, pour a pot of boiling water down drain. Repeat if necessary.

What is a homemade alternative to Drano? ›

Use Baking Soda and White Vinegar

Another natural DIY Drano alternative is to mix baking soda with white vinegar. These two household ingredients have a chemical reaction with each other that works to break up clogs. Pour ½ cup of baking soda down the drain, then follow it up with ½ cup of white vinegar.

Can you use vinegar and baking soda as Drano? ›

4 Steps to Unclog Your Drain with Baking Soda & Vinegar
  1. Start by pouring a pot of boiling water down the drain.
  2. Next, pour a cup of baking soda and 1 cup water/1 cup vinegar solution.
  3. Cover with the drain plug and wait 5 to 10 minutes.
  4. Pour boiling water down the drain again.

What is the best chemical to unblock drains? ›

Caustic Soda

It causes a chemical reaction when it comes into contact with organic matter in a clogged drain or slow drain. Dirt, food, hair, etc., can all be cleared up using caustic soda.

How long does baking soda and vinegar take to unclog a drain? ›

Let hot water run for a minute to warm up the pipes. Drop in 1/2 cup of baking soda down the drain. Pour in 1 cup of vinegar, cover the drain with a plug and let sit for 10 minutes – you will hear fizzing. Rinse with more hot water.

What household product will unclog a drain? ›

Baking soda and vinegar is a tried-and-tested mixture for unclogging drains. Since you probably have these ingredients lying around, this is also one of the most cost-effective drain cleaners you can make at home. Pour one cup of baking soda down the affected drain, immediately followed by one cup of white vinegar.

What home remedy can you use to unclog a drain? ›

Baking Soda + Vinegar

Pour 1/2 cup baking soda, followed by 1/2 cup vinegar down drain. Plug drain and let sit for one hour. Then, pour a pot of boiling water down drain.

Is baking soda and vinegar stronger than Drano? ›

Using baking soda and vinegar to unclog a drain is an effective and natural cleaning method, which some people prefer over harsher chemicals. It works great for weaker drain clogs. By using this mixture periodically, you may be able to avoid clogs altogether (and the need for a more powerful cleaner like Drano).

Why not to use baking soda and vinegar in drain? ›

When you mix baking soda and vinegar, the resulting chemical reaction produces carbon dioxide gas. This gas can build up inside your pipes, causing pressure to build up and potentially leading to cracks or leaks in older pipes.

Which is better Drano or baking soda and vinegar? ›

While you can have better luck with a combination of baking soda and vinegar, it's best to use Dran-O, available at Target, or another chemical drain cleaner if your drain is clogged.

Can you use hydrogen peroxide to unclog a drain? ›

Hydrogen Peroxide – Mix 1 cup of hydrogen peroxide and 1 quart of water. Pour this mixture down your clogged drain and let it sit for 20-30 minutes. Be especially careful as this chemical can cause burns.

What liquid do plumbers use to unclog drains? ›

Liquid-Plumr® Clog Destroyer Plus+ Pipeguard™ comes in a thick gel formula that works through the toughest drain clogs. Pour two cups (16 oz.) down the drain and wait 15 minutes.

What happens if you put too much baking soda in a drain? ›

Too much baking soda put down a drain can clog it. It can harden and become a solid, cement-like mass.

Can you leave baking soda and vinegar in drain overnight? ›

Leave it in the drain for an hour or two or overnight, and then flush the drain with hot tap water. For larger drains, such as tubs and kitchen sinks, use about a quarter-cup of baking soda, a half-cup of water to move the powder down, and 2 cups of vinegar.

What do you mix with vinegar to unclog a drain? ›

Start by pouring a pot of boiling water down your drain. Then add a cup of baking soda followed by a cup of white vinegar. Let the mixture sit for about an hour and then flush the drain with hot water. If the clog persists, you may need to use a plunger to help remove the clog.

How do you unclog a drain without Drano? ›

Using a solution of baking soda, vinegar, and hot water

For this method, pour a half-cup of baking soda down the drain, followed by a half-cup of white vinegar and, then, plenty of hot water. If none of these methods work, it may be time to call a plumbing expert for help.

Can vinegar clear a drain? ›

Cleaning your sink drain with baking soda and vinegar is a highly effective way to treat minor clogs. "The combination of vinegar and baking soda triggers a chemical reaction that helps break down the clog," says Oliveira. For severe or persistent clogs, you should contact a professional plumber for assistance.

Why do plumbers say not to use Drano? ›

Because of its corrosive nature, Drano can cause toilet bowls to crack, PVC pipes to melt or break and the glue that holds pipes together can be eaten away. If any of these things happen, you're going to be left with an inoperable plumbing system and costly repairs.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Maia Crooks Jr

Last Updated:

Views: 6116

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (43 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Maia Crooks Jr

Birthday: 1997-09-21

Address: 93119 Joseph Street, Peggyfurt, NC 11582

Phone: +2983088926881

Job: Principal Design Liaison

Hobby: Web surfing, Skiing, role-playing games, Sketching, Polo, Sewing, Genealogy

Introduction: My name is Maia Crooks Jr, I am a homely, joyous, shiny, successful, hilarious, thoughtful, joyous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.