How to Clean a Whiteboard: Best Methods for Removing Stains, Ghost Marks, and Old Ink
Whiteboards are one of those things that look effortless to maintain until they are not. Within a few weeks of regular use, what started as a bright white surface becomes a patchwork of grey smears, ghost marks from previous sessions, and the odd dried-on stain from a marker left uncapped overnight. The eraser that came with your markers barely touches it, and the board starts looking permanently used rather than properly clean.
The good news is that cleaning a whiteboard properly does not require expensive specialist products. The right combination of household materials removes virtually everything short of permanent marker damage. This guide covers the best methods for everyday cleaning, tackling stubborn ghost marks, and restoring a badly neglected whiteboard.
Why Whiteboards Get Dirty and Hard to Clean
Understanding why whiteboards deteriorate helps prevent the problem from recurring. Dry-erase markers contain pigments, a release agent (typically an oily solvent), and a polymer binder. When you write, the release agent sits between the pigment and the board surface, making the ink easy to wipe away when fresh.
Ghost marks develop when the release agent evaporates before you erase — this happens when ink is left on the board for an extended period, when cheap low-release-agent markers are used, or when the board surface itself has become porous through age or damage. Without the release agent, the pigment bonds more directly to the surface and an eraser alone cannot remove it.
The second common cause of hard-to-clean whiteboards is product build-up. Using too much whiteboard cleaning spray, or the wrong type of cleaner, leaves a residue on the surface that subsequent marker ink bonds to more strongly. The board becomes progressively harder to clean with each application of the wrong product.
What You Need to Clean a Whiteboard
| Item | Purpose | Where to Buy in the UK |
| Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) spray or solution | Best cleaner for ghost marks and dried ink | Amazon UK, Wilko, hardware stores |
| Microfibre cloths | Best wiping material — no lint, no scratching | Supermarkets, Amazon UK, Wilko |
| Dry-erase board eraser or soft cloth | Everyday fresh ink removal | Stationery shops, Amazon UK |
| Hand sanitiser (70%+ alcohol) | Emergency ghost mark cleaner | Boots, supermarkets |
| White toothpaste (non-gel) | Gentle abrasive for stubborn stains | Any supermarket |
| WD-40 | Conditioning spray for stained or aged boards | B&Q, hardware stores, Amazon UK |
| Magic Eraser / melamine foam pad | Last resort for very stubborn marks | Amazon UK, supermarkets |
Method 1: Everyday Cleaning (Fresh Ink)
For fresh ink written within the last few hours, proper erasing with the right tool is all that is needed — no liquids required.
- Use a quality felt-tip eraser or a clean, soft microfibre cloth
- Wipe in long, straight strokes rather than circular motions — circular wiping smears ink into a larger area
- After erasing, wipe the board with a clean, dry section of the microfibre cloth to remove eraser residue
- If the board still looks smeared, lightly dampen a section of the microfibre cloth with water and wipe the surface dry immediately
The most common everyday mistake is using the same eraser side repeatedly without cleaning it. An eraser loaded with old ink deposits that ink back onto the board with each pass. Turn or wash your eraser regularly, or replace it with a folded section of microfibre cloth that can be refreshed easily.
Method 2: Isopropyl Alcohol — The Best Cleaner for Ghost Marks
Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) — also called rubbing alcohol — is the most effective whiteboard cleaning solution available and significantly better than branded whiteboard cleaners, which are typically diluted IPA in an expensive spray bottle. IPA dissolves both fresh and dried marker ink, removes surface residue from previous cleaning products, and evaporates quickly without leaving streaks.
- Apply IPA to a clean microfibre cloth — do not spray directly onto the board as this can saturate the mounting and damage the board edge
- Wipe the board surface in straight, overlapping strokes covering the full width
- Allow the surface to dry for 30 seconds — IPA evaporates quickly
- Wipe with a fresh, dry section of cloth to remove any residue
- For heavy ghost marks, repeat the process twice — the second pass removes what the first pass loosened
- Concentration: 70% IPA is effective for cleaning. 99% IPA works slightly better on very stubborn marks but is more expensive and unnecessary for routine cleaning.
- Where to buy: IPA spray bottles are available on Amazon UK, at Wilko, and at hardware stores such as Screwfix and B&Q. 500ml costs approximately £3 to £5.
- Hand sanitiser substitute: In an emergency, hand sanitiser with 70%+ alcohol content works almost as well as IPA solution. Apply to a cloth and wipe as above.
Method 3: Removing Stubborn Ghost Marks and Stains
Method 3a: Dry-Erase Marker Trick
This sounds counterintuitive but works reliably: writing over ghost marks with a fresh dry-erase marker and then erasing immediately can remove the ghost mark along with the fresh ink. The solvent in fresh marker ink reactivates the dried pigment in the ghost mark, allowing both to be wiped away together.
- Use a broad-tip black or dark dry-erase marker
- Scribble over the ghost mark area completely
- Erase immediately — within 10 seconds — with a microfibre cloth
- The ghost mark should come away with the fresh ink
This method works best on relatively recent ghost marks. For marks that have been on the board for weeks or months, IPA is more effective.
Method 3b: White Toothpaste (Non-Gel)
Plain white toothpaste contains mild abrasive particles (calcium carbonate) that can remove stubborn staining without scratching most whiteboard surfaces. Use only non-gel, non-coloured toothpaste — coloured or gel toothpastes can stain the board.
- Apply a small amount of toothpaste to a damp microfibre cloth
- Rub gently in circular motions over the stained area
- Wipe clean with a damp cloth, then dry immediately
Do not use this method on painted whiteboard surfaces or on soft whiteboard films — the abrasive can damage the coating. Suitable for hard melamine and porcelain whiteboard surfaces.
Method 3c: WD-40 for Aged or Neglected Boards
WD-40 is one of the most effective treatments for whiteboards that have been neglected for an extended period — particularly for ghost marks that have been building up over weeks or months. The solvents in WD-40 penetrate dried ink deposits that IPA alone cannot fully dissolve.
- Spray a small amount of WD-40 onto a microfibre cloth (do not spray directly onto the board)
- Wipe over the affected area
- Allow to sit for 30 seconds
- Wipe clean with a fresh microfibre cloth
- Follow immediately with an IPA wipe to remove any WD-40 residue — this step is important, as WD-40 residue left on the board will cause subsequent marker ink to smear
WD-40 has a distinctive smell that ventilates within a few minutes in a normal room. It is safe for most whiteboard surface types including melamine, porcelain, and glass.
Method 4: How to Clean a Whiteboard With Permanent Marker On It
If someone has accidentally used a permanent marker on a whiteboard — a common and deeply frustrating occurrence — the options are more limited but not hopeless.
- Dry-erase marker method: The dry-erase marker trick (Method 3a) sometimes works on fresh permanent marker marks — write over the permanent mark with dry-erase marker, then wipe immediately. This works because the solvents in dry-erase ink can partially dissolve fresh permanent marker.
- IPA for permanent marker: High-concentration IPA (90%+) applied directly to a cloth and rubbed firmly over permanent marker stains can remove a significant portion of the mark, particularly if the permanent marker was applied recently.
- Acetone (nail varnish remover): Acetone dissolves permanent marker effectively but can damage some whiteboard surfaces — test on an inconspicuous corner first. Apply to a cloth, rub firmly, then wipe clean with IPA to remove residue.
- Accept residual staining: Permanent marker on a whiteboard often leaves some residual discolouration even after cleaning. If the mark is in a heavily used area of the board, it may become invisible over time as the board’s general patina equalises.
How to Maintain a Whiteboard and Prevent Ghost Marks
- Erase within a few hours of writing: The longer marker ink sits on the board, the harder it becomes to remove. Erasing within 2 to 4 hours prevents most ghost mark problems.
- Use quality markers: Cheap whiteboard markers with low solvent content leave more stubborn marks. Brands such as Expo, Staedtler, and Nobo are consistently better performers than supermarket own-brand alternatives.
- Cap markers when not in use: Uncapped markers dry out and leave last-minute concentrated ink deposits on the board that are much harder to remove than a fresh mark.
- Clean the eraser regularly: A dirty eraser deposits old ink back onto the board. Tap erasers against a hard surface to dislodge loose particles, or wash fabric erasers with mild soap and water and allow to dry fully before use.
- Monthly deep clean: Once a month, clean the entire board with IPA and a fresh microfibre cloth even if it looks visually clean. This removes the thin layer of marker residue that builds up invisibly with normal use and causes progressive ghosting problems.
- Avoid using household surface sprays: Products like kitchen cleaner, washing-up liquid, or multi-surface spray leave residue on whiteboard surfaces that causes ink to bond more firmly. Stick to IPA for whiteboard cleaning.
What NOT to Use on a Whiteboard
| Avoid | Why |
| Rough cloths or paper towels | Scratch the whiteboard surface — use microfibre only |
| Bleach or bleach-based cleaners | Damages the whiteboard coating and discolours the surface |
| Washing-up liquid / dish soap | Leaves a soapy residue that causes ink to stick |
| Multi-surface spray (kitchen cleaner) | Residue causes ghost marks to worsen over time |
| Abrasive pads (Scotch-Brite) | Scratches hard whiteboard surfaces; damages soft film boards |
| Coloured or gel toothpaste | Can stain the board surface |
| Too much water | Can seep into board edges and damage the backing material |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best way to clean a whiteboard?
The best method for routine whiteboard cleaning is isopropyl alcohol (IPA) applied to a microfibre cloth. IPA dissolves dry-erase marker residue, removes ghost marks, and evaporates without leaving streaks or residue. For a quick everyday clean of fresh ink, a quality eraser or dry microfibre cloth is sufficient. For stubborn ghost marks that have built up over time, WD-40 applied to a cloth (followed by an IPA wipe to remove residue) is the most effective treatment.
How do you remove ghost marks from a whiteboard?
Ghost marks are best removed with isopropyl alcohol (IPA) on a microfibre cloth — wipe firmly in straight strokes, allow to dry, and repeat if needed. Alternatively, the dry-erase marker trick works well for recent ghost marks: scribble over the ghost mark with fresh dry-erase ink, then erase immediately. For stubborn built-up ghosting from weeks of use, WD-40 on a cloth followed by an IPA wipe is the most effective combination.
Can you use hand sanitiser to clean a whiteboard?
Yes — hand sanitiser containing 70% or more alcohol works well as an emergency whiteboard cleaner. Apply a small amount to a microfibre cloth and wipe the board surface. It is slightly less effective than pure IPA solution on very stubborn marks, but perfectly adequate for routine cleaning and light ghost mark removal.
How do you clean a whiteboard without whiteboard cleaner?
Isopropyl alcohol from a hardware shop or chemist is more effective and cheaper than branded whiteboard cleaner, which is typically diluted IPA in an expensive bottle. For a completely household-based approach, hand sanitiser (70%+ alcohol) applied to a microfibre cloth works well. For stubborn marks, white non-gel toothpaste on a damp cloth provides gentle abrasive cleaning without specialist products.
Why does my whiteboard still look dirty after cleaning?
If the board still looks grey or smeared after cleaning, the most likely cause is product residue build-up — from previous applications of kitchen cleaner, washing-up liquid, or commercial whiteboard spray that has left a film on the surface. Clean the board thoroughly with IPA, then wipe with a dry microfibre cloth. You may need to repeat this two or three times to fully dissolve the residue layer. Going forward, use only IPA for cleaning to prevent re-accumulation.
Final Thoughts
Cleaning a whiteboard properly requires the right materials rather than expensive specialist products. Isopropyl alcohol and microfibre cloths are the core combination that handles the vast majority of whiteboard cleaning tasks — from everyday maintenance to stubborn ghost marks — at a fraction of the cost of branded whiteboard cleaners. WD-40 is the effective last resort for boards that have been heavily neglected.
The most important preventive measure is simply erasing regularly and cleaning the board with IPA once a month. A whiteboard that is maintained properly stays clean effortlessly; a board that is neglected requires progressively more effort to restore. Five minutes of monthly maintenance saves hours of deep-cleaning work later.

