I Bought A Golf Grip Cleaner. Here’s How It Compares To Dish Soap
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I Bought A Golf Grip Cleaner. Here’s How It Compares To Dish Soap

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I Bought A Golf Grip Cleaner. Here’s How It Compares To Dish Soap

I’ve always cleaned my golf grips the same way: warm water, a little Dawn dish soap and a microfiber cloth.

It works.

It removes dirt, gets rid of that slippery feeling and gives your grips a bit of life again. But after doing it a few times, you start to realize something—if the grip still doesn’t feel right, it’s probably just worn out.

That’s why this grip cleaner caught my attention.

It claims to restore tackiness, not just clean. And that’s the part I’ve never been fully convinced dish soap can do. It makes grips less slippery but bringing back that original tack? That’s a different story.

So I gave it a try.

First test: Putter grip

Before going all-in, I tested the GEKO 2-in-1 grip cleaner on a putter grip that had clearly seen better days.

The product itself is simple. A few sprays directly onto the grip, wipe it down and you’re done. There is no strong smell or residue and the process is about as easy as it gets. It took less than a minute for the entire process on my putter grip.

And based on how little you need per use, one bottle should last quite a while.

What it did

The first thing I noticed was how well it cleaned.

It brought back the original color of the grip and removed most of the built-up grime and staining. From a pure cleaning standpoint, it did exactly what you’d expect and maybe a little better than soap and water.

As for tackiness?

It improved it. Slightly.

The grip felt better than before, no question. But it didn’t feel noticeably tackier than what I typically get from a good dish soap cleaning. If you’re expecting it to fully bring a worn grip back to life, that’s probably not realistic.

Still, for a grip that was in need of a serious cleaning, it did a good job.

Second test: Driver grip

I tried the same process on a driver grip that had lost most of its tack but had not been on the club all that long.

Same results.

It cleaned extremely well, made the grip feel a bit more secure and likely extended its usable life. But, again, the difference in tackiness compared to dish soap wasn’t dramatic.

Dish soap versus grip cleaner

Here’s how I’d break it down:

  • Cleaning power: Very similar, maybe a slight edge to the spray for convenience
  • Tack restoration: Slight improvement but not a game changer over dish soap
  • Ease of use: This is where the spray wins easily
  • Cost: Dish soap is still the cheaper option

The biggest difference isn’t performance. It’s convenience and, for some, that will be worth the cost.

When this makes sense (And when it doesn’t)

After using it, here’s where I think this product fits:

✔ Worth it if:

  • You want something convenient you can keep in your bag
  • You notice a grip getting slick after the range and want it to be ready for play
  • You don’t want to deal with a full cleaning setup at home

✖ Not worth it if:

  • Your grips are already worn out and need replacing
  • You’re expecting it to fully restore original tack
  • You’re fine sticking with a sink and some dish soap

One thing worth mentioning: after reading some reviews, some users are using it on golf shoes and even other equipment like tennis and pickleball gear. It seems to work well as a general cleaner which adds a little extra value.

Final thoughts

The GEKO 2-in-1 grip cleaner isn’t going to save a grip that’s past its prime.

But it does exactly what it promises: it cleans well, improves feel slightly and makes it easier to maintain your grips more often.

For me, the biggest win is convenience. Being able to spray and wipe a grip in seconds is something dish soap just can’t compete with.

Whether that convenience is worth the extra cost is up to you.

For You

For You

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Sombre Nouille

      3 months ago

      I am much more aggressive than most of you with my old grips. I use dish soap on a scotch-brite pad, warm-hot water and I go to town scrubbing as hard as I can until it oozes black dirt.
      With older grips that are really shiny and pretty much dead (I am not talking about ’70s era Victory grips, though), I also use a sharp metal file, going generously at it on the dry grip, shedding tons of rubber before proceeding with the dish soap and scotch brite. I have tried sandpaper too but not with the best success.
      All in all, I’d say you can delay replacement by a few months. It is shocking how well some grips recover.

      Reply

      John P

      3 months ago

      I love the idea of whitewall cleaner for my putter grip but most people don’t keep that around any more.

      I use a product called Simple Green. It is a non-toxic de-greaser and is very easy to use. If you want to keep it in the bag; just buy an empty spray bottle on Amazon.

      Reply

      KP

      3 months ago

      Gripmaster leather grips ( Roo Swingers) are the way to go. They don’t wear out, they wear in. And to freshen them up, all you need to do is wipe them down With a wet warm cloth. The super tackiness returns. Yes, they are expensive, but depending on how many rounds you play a season, they could last you for years.

      Reply

      Robert Pace

      3 months ago

      I use soap and water when new and maybe half way through life span. After I use mix of water and isopropyl alcohol roughly 70/30 with 70 being water then scrubbing with a brass brush. When the foam is gone the grips are clean. Tackiness is as good as its going to get. I let them air dry.

      Reply

      Jim

      3 months ago

      I just get a toothbrush and some toothpaste. Scrub them and rinse with cold water. Takes all the oil from your hands off . Works great.

      Reply

      James Bishop

      3 months ago

      Tire Brite or other whitewall tire cleaner. I’ve been using it for years. Just spray it on and wipe it off with a towel. A friend (RIP) who owned a golf shop gave me this tip many years ago.

      Reply

      Eye4golf

      3 months ago

      I use dawn very little on a very small nylon brush every week. I have 6 yr old Star tour + 360 wraps and they are as tacky as when they were new. Don’t wear glove and only slight wear on them in forefinger area and I use air to rotate it a little twice a year. Very clean, extremely tacky and easy and inexpensive. Dawn is my solution.

      Reply

      CB

      3 months ago

      I’ve never used the Geko cleaner personally but have had a couple of people say they really like it. Maybe I’ll give it a try this spring! Overall though some good tips shared here and definitely one of the cheaper things one can do to help on the equipment side of things.

      Reply

      Ian

      3 months ago

      My G15 irons still have original grips after 16 years. Showing a bit of wear but still come up tacky after cleaning with dish or laundry soap after 5-6 games.
      Just picked up my new Srixon ZXI4’s so the trusty old Pings will be sold after one more Dawn soap cleanse.

      Reply

      Scott

      3 months ago

      Dawn power wash or some watered down Simply Green work the best in my opinion. It’s cheap and both you can spray on. Also I’m a tour velvet guy so for the cost I can replace my grips twice as often as most of the other grip options out there.

      Reply

      dr. bloor

      3 months ago

      I wipe grips down with Windex after the usual soap-and-water scrub for better tackiness. Works fine for me.

      Reply

      David Bassett

      3 months ago

      I’ve done exactly the same thing for years and the results are terrific.

      Reply

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