Updated: May 9, 2026.
Exercise Mat Buying Basics
Start with the full HealthGlean exercise mat guide, then use these explainers to match thickness and material, keep grip consistent, and replace worn mats before they become distracting or unsafe.
A mat can become slippery because of sweat, dust, body oils, lotions, cleaning residue, trapped moisture, or surface wear. Cleaning should remove residue without leaving a slick film or damaging the material. The safest default is to follow the mat maker's care instructions first.
Cleaning And Grip Rules
- Wipe sweat and dust after use, especially on closed-cell and grippy yoga surfaces.
- Use only a cleaner the mat maker allows, or a small amount of mild soap in water when the maker says that is acceptable.
- Avoid oils, heavy fragrances, body lotions, and cleaners that leave residue on grip surfaces.
- Let the mat dry fully before rolling, folding, stacking, or putting it into a bag.
- Avoid prolonged direct sunlight, high heat, hot cars, and damp storage unless the maker specifically allows it.
- Test a new cleaner on a small area before wiping the full practice surface.
Cleaning Vs Disinfecting
| Goal | What It Means For Mats | Practical Check |
|---|---|---|
| Routine cleaning | Removes sweat, dust, oils, and dirt from the surface. | Usually the right default after ordinary home use. |
| Disinfecting | Uses a chemical product to kill listed germs when label directions are followed. | Only use if the label and mat maker both allow it. |
| Contact time | How long the surface must stay wet for the disinfectant to work. | Do not spray and immediately wipe if the label requires dwell time. |
| Material compatibility | Some disinfectants, vinegar, alcohol, essential oils, or harsh cleaners can damage grip or rubber. | Follow the mat brand's care page and cleaner label. |
CDC says cleaning with soap or detergent removes germs and dirt from surfaces, and EPA emphasizes reading disinfectant directions and following contact time. For exercise mats, that matters because too much chemical cleaner can damage the mat, while too little contact time may not disinfect anything.
Odor And Slipperiness Checks
- If the mat smells new, air it out in a ventilated area according to maker instructions.
- If the mat smells musty, check whether it was rolled damp or stored in a humid space.
- If hands or feet slide, remove lotion residue, dust, sweat film, or leftover cleaner before blaming the mat.
- If grip does not recover after proper cleaning and drying, surface wear may be the issue.
- If a cleaner changes the surface texture, color, tack, or smell, stop using it on that mat.
Use this with the exercise mat buying guide. If your mat is cracked, curled, compressed, or still slippery after proper care, read when to replace an exercise mat.
Sources And References
We checked these references on May 9, 2026. Exercise-mat materials, thickness, density, surface texture, grip coatings, cleaning directions, disinfectant compatibility, certification claims, and warranties can change, so verify the exact product page and care label before buying or cleaning a mat.
- CDC when and how to clean and disinfect your home
- EPA six steps for safe and effective disinfectant use
- Liforme mat care guidance
- Gaiam yoga mat wash and compatibility notes
- MedlinePlus exercise injury prevention
Informational note: This article is general education and shopping guidance, not medical advice. Exercise mats may make some home workouts more comfortable, but they do not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent injury, pain, balance problems, skin irritation, allergy, infection, or other health conditions.