Prime Members: 3 Bottles Of Amazon Brand Presto Biobased All-Purpose Cleaner For $6.74 Shipped From Amazon After $7 Price Drop

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3 Bottles Of Amazon Brand Presto Biobased All-Purpose Cleaner For $6.74 Shipped From Amazon After $7 Price Drop

This was selling for $13.49 last week and is now the lowest price ever from Amazon.

 

 

This sale is for Amazon Prime members only.  You can sign up for a free trial of Prime here. A prime trial is also free with Amazon Family (which also gets you 20% off diapers and wipes among other benefits) or Amazon Student.

  • Powerful plant-based formula cuts grease and grime for a deep clean
  • Includes 3 bottles of 22-ounce all-purpose cleaner; ships with spray nozzle detached
  • 91% USDA Certified Biobased All-Purpose Cleaner, Unscented
  • Free of VOCs and chlorine bleach
  • If you’re not happy with any of our Presto! Products, we’re happy to refund you-it’s that clean and simple
  • An Amazon brand

Amazon offers free shipping with $35+ orders or get free next-day shipping on all orders with a free trial of Amazon Prime. Prime members can share benefits with a Household member here, allowing them to double up on Amazon Prime promos!  A 6 month trial and discounted Prime membership is available with Amazon Student. EBT/Medicaid Cardholders can save on Prime Membership here.

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14 Comments On "Prime Members: 3 Bottles Of Amazon Brand Presto Biobased All-Purpose Cleaner For $6.74 Shipped From Amazon After $7 Price Drop"

All opinions expressed below are user generated and the opinions aren’t provided, reviewed or endorsed by any advertiser or DansDeals.

Mendy770

Can you use it on pesach

Pesach

Same question

No

Thank you for letting us know that you have the same question. I’m pretty sure the guy with your answer wasn’t going to answer, but now will because you have the same question. Many thanks for your comment.

So that\'s what you\'re adding!

If you do and it gets in his eyes, the back label says to flush them thoroughly with water. But considering that someone answered one of the questions that they don’t think it’s for cleaning animals, I wouldn’t recommend using it on yourself, either. 😉

Jonathan R

Unless you are planning to eat it, I don’t see why not.

YAAKOV WASSE

Does it have a hechsher?

Jonathan R

From the picture it doesn’t look like, but unless you are planning on eating it, which I wouldn’t recommend, I don’t know why an hechsher would be relevant

Liam K. Nuj

There are many people who may feel it’s relevant because it may come in contact with food or food utensils. Natural cleaning products may pose a greater concern than traditional chemical based products because the natural product may not be “unfit for a dog’s consumption” (a common reason to be lenient for an otherwise non-Kosher or non-Passover product).

Jonathan R

Fair enough. This product is only 91% “natural.”

Liam K. Nuj

(Addendum to my previous comment):
There are, in fact, GARBAGE BAGS with a hechsher because many bakeries use garbage bags when they store their Challahs and other baked goods. (Some brands of garbage bags are smeared with possibly non-Kosher oils.)

Mendy770

I see what your saying. however, when spraying many times it can go on places that are food related and like mentioned above if a dog can eat it then need to be worried however it seems a dog will not eat this

Liam K. Nuj

FYI: there are many streams within Orthodox Jewry. That link you posted is from the O.U. (Orthodox Union). While it is the most known of all the hechsherim, it is mostly followed by the more centrist and left streams of Orthodox Jewry. There are many other groups of Jews within Orthodox Jewry that follow more stringent hechsherim. The O.U. tends to employ more leniencies to certain issues than most of the more stringent hechsherim.
One type of item on the list that’s in your link that jumped out at me: paper goods (plates, cups, towels, etc.). Many paper goods are manufactured with corn starch, which is kitniyos and is considered forbidden for Passover use by many Jews. While the “consensus” of the rabbis at the O.U. may allow paper goods without specific Passover certification (based on whatever good reasons they have), there are still many Orthodox Jews that prefer to be more stringent.

Dina

You have bigger problems with garbage bags than non-kosher oils. Garbage bags can have powders that are not safe for human consumption. Please do not use garbage bags for food storage!

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