How to Remove Stickers and Adhesive
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There is a surprising number of products that come with into your home with stubborn stickers. A lot of stores still use price stickers, for instance, and glassware almost always has a sticker that gives you some kind of information about your item. Peeling them off is laborious and can leave residue behind—but I found a couple of tips on social media, both of which work fabulously.
Adhesive removal hack 1: The melamine sponge
I don’t even remember where I first heard that you should use a melamine sponge, like a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser, to quickly do away with stickers and adhesive residue, but I do know it was somewhere on TikTok. I do remember where I first tried it, though: A few months ago, I ordered a new glass table and, while putting it together, noticed the manufacturer had stuck informational stickers directly to the glass. How kind of them! An old TikTok hack popped out of my long-term memory. I grabbed a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser (the Ultra Foamy, to be exact), dampened it, and started to scrub. The sticker dissolved. It disappeared. It was gone before I even realized it; I was scrubbing at nothing.
Any melamine sponge can do this, though I do prefer the Ultra Foamy just because its suds are something serious. To demonstrate how well this works, I identified a sticker that has been stuck on another table for a few weeks; my goal was to remove half with the Magic Eraser and half with the second hack, which I’ll introduce shortly—but once again, the Ultra Foamy worked too well. The whole sticker, which I wasn’t able to easily pry up with my own fingernails, came off instantly, with the majority dissolving on the spot and the rest easy to pick up by hand. Too bad for my demonstration, but lucky for me overall. It happened so fast and perfectly that there was no point in taking a mid-scrub action photo. Where once there was an errant tanning sticker to remind me of summer, now there was nothing: No sticker, no adhesive residue, no anything.
Adhesive removal hack 2: The hair dryer
With my plan to use the same sticker to demonstrate both hacks literally scrubbed, I started looking for another truly stuck-on sticker I could remove with the second method: the trusty hair dryer. I found a six-year-old candle I never use because its scent is sentimental to me. If any sticker were truly stuck on, it was the one that has had over half a decade to lurk under this candle.
This hack is very popular on TikTok, where creators show off how easily and well it works. It’s simple: Blast the sticker with the hair dryer for a few seconds and you’ll suddenly be able to pull up the edge. (If it’s a larger sticker, it may take a minute or two.) What’s more, the adhesive all the way across the sticker will be melted, so it peels right off without tearing or leaving streaks.
I recommend this technique for big, full stickers, but not for dealing with the remnants of old, semi-removed ones. If you have adhesive goo stuck to something but no actual sticker to yank on, melting it will just make a mess you have to scrub up. You’ll be reaching for the melamine sponge anyway, so just skip the hair dryer and go straight to that.
So, back to my candle. I assessed the sticker on the bottom and found it was fully and completely stuck with no lifting whatsoever and definitely no weak spot I could start to peel. I flipped it over on a flat surface, hit it with my beloved Dyson, and, after just two minutes, was able to pull the entire thing straight off without leaving even a little residue behind.
Credit: Lindsey Ellefson
Both of these hacks work perfectly and I prefer them to others I’ve tried. Acetone, for instance, does work, but it takes forever to break down the sticker and adhesive, leaving a streaky mess that you have to keep scrubbing at. (Plus, if you have your nails painted, you have to wear gloves for that one.) Similarly, soap and water can dissolve the paper part of a sticker if you have the patience, but it takes way too long and, again, requires way too much scrubbing. Vinegar also works, but it stinks. The Magic Eraser powers through adhesive and the hair dryer makes any sticker peelable in no time, all without you having to do too much or stink up the place.