Utah has some of the hardest water in the country. If your sprinklers have ever hit your windows — and they have — you've got spots. Here's what actually works to remove them, and the point at which you need a pro to save the glass.
Why Utah hard water eats glass
Utah County water carries heavy concentrations of calcium, magnesium, and dissolved minerals. When sprinkler overspray hits glass, the water evaporates fast under the Utah sun — but the minerals stay behind. Each cycle lays down another microscopic layer. After a few months, you can see them. After a year, they're baked into the glass surface.
The dangerous part: hard water doesn't just sit on the glass — it etches into it. Given enough time and heat, those mineral deposits become part of the window. At that point no amount of regular cleaning will get them off, because there's nothing to "clean" — the glass itself is damaged.
What works on fresh spots
If you catch them early (within a few weeks of the overspray), you have options. These work in order of strength:
1. White vinegar + water (50/50)
Soak the glass, let it sit 5 minutes, squeegee off. Works on spots that are a few weeks old or less. If it doesn't cut the spots in one pass, it's too late for vinegar — move up the list.
2. CLR or Lime-Away (diluted)
Stronger acids. Will handle spots up to a few months old. Wear gloves, test a small area first, and do not use on tinted windows — the acid will strip the tint film. Rinse thoroughly.
3. Bar Keepers Friend paste + soft cloth
Mildly abrasive. Works on slightly older spots but requires physical scrubbing. Never use on coated, tinted, or Low-E glass — the abrasive will scratch or strip the coating.
What doesn't work (but people try anyway)
- Regular glass cleaner (Windex, etc.) — Useless on mineral deposits. The surfactants don't dissolve calcium.
- A Magic Eraser — It's an abrasive. On modern coated glass, it will leave scratches you can't fix.
- Steel wool — Same problem. Permanent scratches, especially on tempered or tinted glass.
- Razor blades — Will scrape off fresh paint and labels but won't touch etched minerals, and modern tempered glass can scratch from a razor in ways traditional annealed glass won't.
When the spots are beyond DIY
If vinegar, CLR, and Bar Keepers Friend don't work, the minerals have etched into the glass surface. At that point, you need a glass restoration process — which is what we do on houses that haven't been cleaned in a year or two.
Restoration uses a specialized acid-based treatment paired with a polishing compound applied with a mechanical buffer. Done right, it lifts mineral deposits without damaging the glass or stripping coatings. Done wrong, it can scratch, cloud, or damage the window permanently.
This is the service we end up doing for homes in Orem, Lehi, and Saratoga Springs that have been dealing with years of sprinkler overspray and finally want it handled. It's more expensive than regular cleaning — but it's a one-time restoration, not a recurring cost, and it beats the alternative (window replacement).
The only way to prevent it
Two things stop hard water spots from ever becoming a problem:
- Redirect your sprinklers. If your heads are spraying any part of the house — walk outside at 6am when they're running and watch. Adjust any head that hits glass or siding.
- Regular cleaning. Every 3–6 months, fresh water spots come off in a single pass. It's only the ones that sit through a full summer that become permanent.
That's really it. Fix the sprinklers, stay ahead of the buildup, and your windows will last the life of the house.
Already past the DIY stage?
We restore badly-spotted glass on Utah County homes every week. Free estimate — we'll tell you honestly whether it's fixable and what it'll cost.
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