Most people mop their floors, thinking they’re getting them clean. The uncomfortable truth, though, is that the moment you dunk the mop head back into the bucket, you’re no longer cleaning with fresh water. You’re spreading a diluted mix of soap and grime across the same surface you just wiped down. It’s a problem as old as the mop itself, and nobody has done much about it.
Joseph Joseph spent four years trying to solve it. The result is the UltraClean Microfibre Floor Mop Cleaning System, a complete rethink of what mopping should actually achieve. The goal was to design something that genuinely removes dirt rather than just diluting it and spreading it around. The solution required a patented mechanism and six prototypes before the team arrived at a final design.
Designer: Joseph Joseph


At the heart of the design is SprayClean technology, a patented mechanism built into the bucket’s slot. Each time you insert the mop head, a built-in scraper squeezes the dirty water into a sealed collection chamber while six nozzles spray fresh water onto the pad. The mop comes out clean and damp, not soaked, which means your floors dry faster, too.


The bucket is divided into two completely separate chambers. The upper reservoir holds up to 1.4 litres of clean water, enough to cover up to 70 m² on a single fill. That’s most of a typical home in one go. The bottom chamber is translucent, so you can watch the dirty water accumulate as you clean, which is simultaneously gross and oddly satisfying.


The mop head is designed with the same care. It rotates to access tight corners and lies flat to get under furniture, where dust and grime tend to hide. The telescopic handle adjusts to suit whoever’s doing the cleaning. The microfibre pad is machine-washable, and the system comes with three of them, so you’re not stuck waiting for one to dry between rooms.

For large open-plan spaces with a mix of hard flooring and tiles, the UltraClean removes the need to stop and change the water halfway through, a chore that most people skip anyway. And for kitchens, where floors tend to accumulate grease and food residue, mopping with genuinely fresh water each pass makes a noticeable difference in how clean the floor actually feels underfoot.
The UltraClean Microfibre Floor Mop Cleaning System retails for $90. It took four years and six prototypes to get here, which, given how long the classic mop and bucket pairing has gone essentially unchanged, seems like a reasonable investment. Cofounder Antony Joseph calls this the product’s delight factor, and given how satisfying it is to actually clean your floors properly, it’s hard to argue.

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