Don't throw out your used tea bags — this trick helps eliminate fridge odors as good as baking soda

Inside view of a refrigerator
(Image credit: Getty Images)

We've all been there. You open the fridge and some odor hits you before you even spot the culprit. You clean the shelves, ditch the leftovers, wipe everything down, and somehow the smell still lingers. The usual fix is a box of baking soda shoved in the back, but while it does the job, it's not exactly leaving your fridge smelling great.

There is, in fact, a better option — and it's probably sitting in your bin right now. Used tea bags work as surprisingly effective natural deodorizers, thanks to the tannins in tea leaves that trap odor-causing bacteria and moisture while releasing a light, fresh scent at the same time. Two birds, one tea bag.

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How to use tea bags as fridge deodorizers

Save used tea bags instead of throwing them away. After brewing tea, let the bags cool completely, then place them in a small bowl or plate. Put a bowl with 2-3 used tea bags inside your fridge. Position it on a middle or lower shelf where air circulates freely, not tucked behind items where airflow is blocked.

Leave the tea bags in place for several days. They'll absorb moisture and odors continuously while releasing a subtle tea scent. Replace the tea bags with fresh used ones every few days or when you notice they've dried out completely.

Any type of tea works, though black tea tends to have the highest tannin content and may be slightly more effective. The process is identical regardless of tea type.

This method works particularly well after cleaning out the fridge when lingering smells from spoiled food remain even after wiping everything down. The tea bags tackle odors that surface cleaning misses.

Why tea bags absorb fridge odors

Tea leaves contain tannins, complex chemical compounds that give tea its astringency and dark color. These tannins are naturally absorbent and bind to odorous molecules and bacteria, neutralizing them instead of just masking smells.

Beyond the chemistry, the physical structure of the tea leaf helps, too. Because tea leaves are highly porous, they act like a natural carbon filter (similar to the material used in the best air purifiers), to trap odors inside their fibers.

Tea bags also absorb moisture, which is often the source of bad fridge odors. Excess moisture creates an environment where bacteria thrive and produce unpleasant smells. By absorbing that dampness, tea bags reduce the conditions that cause odors in the first place.

Unlike baking soda, which neutralizes odors through alkaline properties but leaves no scent, tea bags add a light, pleasant aroma to the fridge.


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Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.

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