6Pack Kitchen Cleaning Brush, Green

Features

  • Kitchen dish brush set includes 2 dish cleaning brushes, 1 dish scouring pad, 1 tile lines brush, 2 groove gap brushes.
  • Dish Scouring Pad is soft and firendly for the surface; It can clean the dish, sink, tableware, stainless steel and etc.
  • Dish cleaning brushes have nylon bristles which are easily scrub the stains away; Built-in scraper removes baked-on spots; It can clean the pots, pans, dishes and etc.
  • Tile lines brush helps to clean the corners of your home; It can clean the tile seam, car, tiny gap and etc.

Specifications

Color Green
Size 7 Pack
Unit Count 6

This 6-piece kitchen cleaning set includes two dish brushes, a scouring pad, a tile-seam brush, and two groove gap brushes for cleaning dishes, sinks, tile seams and other small crevices. The dish brushes have nylon bristles and a built-in scraper for removing baked-on residue, while the soft scouring pad is suitable for surfaces such as stainless steel and tableware.

Model Number: WSLV-01

Holikme 6Pack Kitchen Cleaning Brush, Green Review

4.6 out of 5

Why I reached for this set

A good brush set earns its keep the day you have baked-on gunk on a pan, mildew staging a comeback in a grout line, and crumbs lodged in a window track—all before lunch. That’s the kind of week I had when I put the Holikme brush set to work. It’s a 6-piece, green-accented kit that aims to cover dishes, tile seams, and the tiny, grimy places in between. After several weeks rotating these pieces through the kitchen and bathroom (and a few odd jobs around the house), here’s how it fared.

What’s in the box

  • Two dish brushes with nylon bristles and a built-in scraper
  • One handled scouring pad
  • One tile-seam (grout) brush
  • Two narrow groove/gap brushes for tight spaces

It’s a straightforward lineup, and importantly, there’s enough variety to dedicate tools to different zones—kitchen vs. bath—without cross-contamination.

Build and ergonomics

The handles are simple molded plastic with green accents. They’re lightweight but don’t feel fragile, and the larger tools have enough length to keep knuckles out of messes. There’s no rubber overmolding or soft-touch material, but the plastic is contoured enough to keep a steady grip, even with wet hands.

The bristles on the dish brushes are nylon and on the stiffer side. The tips aren’t rounded or feathered; they’re cut flat, which gives them bite on stuck-on residue. The grout and gap brushes are very compact, with tapered heads and stiffer clusters concentrated at the tip for directional scrubbing. The scouring pad is the softest piece in the kit, with just enough flex in the backing to conform to curves and corners.

Small detail I appreciated: every piece has a hanging hole, so drying and storage are easy if you have hooks. There’s no included caddy, though, so plan for where these will live.

Cleaning performance in the kitchen

  • Pots and pans: The built-in scrapers on the dish brushes are genuinely useful. On sheet pans with caramelized drips or a stainless skillet with browned fond, I could loosen the residue with the scraper and follow with the bristles to finish the job. The stiffness helps cut through grease film without needing excessive pressure.

  • Non-stick cookware: I would not use these brushes on delicate non-stick or seasoned cast iron. The bristles are stiff and the cut ends can mar softer coatings. A softer sponge is safer for those surfaces; I restricted these brushes to stainless, enameled cast iron, glass, and durable bakeware.

  • Sinks and fixtures: The scouring pad and the smaller groove brush made quick work of the lip where the sink meets the counter and around faucet bases. The pad is gentle enough for stainless without swirling it up when used with a non-abrasive cleaner.

  • Counter seams and appliances: The narrow gap brushes are perfect for the crumb line where a stove meets a counter, the seam around a dishwasher handle, and the slider track of a microwave door. A few passes with a spray cleaner and these brushes pull out grime that sponges just gloss over.

Beyond the kitchen

  • Bathroom grout and corners: The tile-seam brush is sized well for standard grout lines and the crease where tubs meet walls. It’s stiff enough to dislodge mildew and soap scum without ballooning out or splaying. The scouring pad shines on the flat expanses of a tub or shower wall and its slight flex helps it ride into rounded corners.

  • Window tracks and sliding doors: One of the groove brushes became my dedicated tool for window tracks. A quick vacuum, spritz of cleaner, and the brush lifts sandy debris from the corners that cloths can’t reach.

  • Upholstery and mats: A pleasant surprise—on fabric doormats and removable pet pads, the soft scouring pad drags up embedded hair better than most traditional sponges. It’s not its primary purpose, but it’s become a handy trick.

Where it shines

  • Stuck-on food and baked residue: The scraper + stiff bristles combo on the dish brushes is the right pairing for heavy cleanup.

  • Tight spaces: The two groove/gap brushes target the places where gunk hides—faucet bases, appliance seams, window tracks. They’re small but mighty.

  • Grout lines: The dedicated tile-seam brush has the right profile and stiffness to scrub the channel of grout efficiently without shredding.

  • Value coverage: One kit that competently handles dishes, grout, crevices, and general scrubbing is hard to argue with. It’s an easy way to outfit a new place or reset a cleaning kit.

Where it falls short

  • Delicate surfaces: The bristle stiffness is a double-edged sword. I avoided using the dish brushes on non-stick cookware, soft plastics, or lacquered finishes. If you need a brush safe for those, you’ll want softer, flagged bristles or a sponge.

  • Scouring pad longevity: The pad is effective but will wear faster than the brushes if you’re frequently tackling rough surfaces. It’s not a quick-release or replaceable head, so once it’s done, you’re replacing the whole piece.

  • No storage solution: A simple stand or caddy would go a long way to organizing and drying the set. Hooks work, but it’s extra setup.

  • Mixed plastic robustness: The larger brushes feel sturdier than the smallest ones. Nothing failed on me, but the gap brushes flex a bit under heavy force. They’re designed for finesse work anyway, so apply pressure accordingly.

Durability and maintenance

After several weeks of use, bristle splay is minimal on the dish and grout brushes, which is a good sign. The nylon rinses clean, doesn’t hold odors, and dries quickly when hung. The scouring pad shows wear earlier, as expected for its softer material.

I hand-washed everything with hot, soapy water after dirty jobs and let the pieces air dry. There’s no dishwasher-safe marking, and I wouldn’t chance high heat on the pad or the glue joint between pad and handle. If you want these to last, avoid harsh chemicals that can embrittle plastics and don’t store them bristle-down in standing water.

Usability notes and tips

  • Assign zones: Dedicate one dish brush to cookware, one to the sink, and keep the grout and gap brushes for bathroom and fixtures. Color-coding isn’t built in, so label with a marker to avoid cross-use.

  • Let the scraper do the work: On baked-on messes, scrape first, then scrub. You’ll save your bristles and your elbow.

  • Short, targeted strokes in grout: Don’t mash the grout brush; the stiffer tip works best with light pressure and repeated strokes.

  • Replace early, not late: Retire the scouring pad when it starts to pill or flatten noticeably; performance drops quickly after that point.

Value

This is a budget-friendly set that covers a lot of ground. It won’t replace a truly gentle sponge for delicate pans or a powered scrubber for deep restoration work, but for everyday maintenance and periodic heavy scrubs, it punches above its weight. The overall build quality is better than I expect at this price—especially the dish brushes and the grout brush.

Final recommendation

I recommend the Holikme brush set for anyone who needs a compact, versatile cleaning kit that leans toward effective scrubbing rather than delicate polishing. It excels at removing stuck-on food, clearing grime from seams and fixtures, and freshening grout lines, and it does so with simple, durable tools that are easy to keep clean.

Skip it if your primary need is caring for sensitive non-stick cookware or high-gloss finishes—these bristles are too assertive for that. Otherwise, as a foundational set for kitchens and bathrooms, it’s a practical, affordable pick that earns a spot under the sink.



Project Ideas

Business

Niche Grout & Seams Cleaning Service

Start a local cleaning micro-service focused on grout, tile seams, sink crevices and appliance seams, using the tile-seam and groove brushes as signature tools. Market short, affordable 'detail' appointments (30–60 minutes) for kitchens and bathrooms; upsell repeat maintenance visits or a monthly plan.


DIY Cleaning Kit Product Line

Repackage the 6-piece set into themed DIY kits (e.g., 'Apartment Deep Clean', 'Stainless Steel Care', 'Car Interior Detail') with printed instructions, eco-friendly cleaners, and a branded pouch. Sell on Etsy, Amazon, or at local markets and include video tutorials or QR codes linking to how-to demos.


Subscription Replacement Brush Heads

Offer a subscription service sending replacement brushes/pads every 3–6 months to consumers who want fresh bristles. Bundle with tips on extending brush life and offer add-ons like specialty scrapers or scented cleaning pads. Use a low-cost acquisition channel (social ads showing before/after grout) to build recurring revenue.


Workshops & Classes: Clean & Upcycle

Host paid workshops teaching people to deep-clean kitchenware and then upcycle used brushes into crafts (e.g., textured prints or decor). Charge for materials and promote on local community boards; sell the cleaning kits and finished craft items on-site to increase per-attendee revenue.


B2B Micro-Detail Packs for Auto & Rental Businesses

Create small-detailing packs (brushes + scouring pad + instructions) tailored to car-detailers, property managers, or short-term rental cleaners for finishing touches in tight spots. Offer bulk pricing and co-branding (add the client's logo to packaging) and pitch time-saving benefits for staff training and turnover reduction.

Creative

Textured Printmaking Tools

Use the various brushes and the scouring pad as texture stamps for paper, fabric, or clay. Drag the tile-seam brush or groove brushes through ink or paint and press onto paper for repeating seam/line patterns; press the scouring pad into clay for a subtle pebbled surface. Combine multiple brushes to build layered prints and package sets of prints or handmade cards.


Miniature Landscaping and Dioramas

Repurpose the small brushes as tools for creating grass, thatch, or rock textures in model train scenery, dollhouses, or terrarium dioramas. The groove gap brushes can mimic tiny hedges or roots, while the scraper and nylon bristles can distress faux rocks and pathways for realistic weathering effects.


Custom Soap and Bath Bomb Texture Makers

Use the brushes to create interesting surfaces on handmade soaps and bath bombs: drag the scouring pad for a frothy top, stamp with the tile-seam brush for ridged designs, or score with the scraper. Bundle soaps with a small cleaned brush as a novelty gift set for handmade soap sellers.


Upcycled Brush Sculptures & Wall Art

Combine multiple brushes, handles removed and arranged into radial or grid patterns, to make textured wall hangings or small sculptures. Paint the set (or keep the green for contrast), mount on reclaimed wood, and use the bristle edges to cast shadows and 3D effects—sell as eco-themed home decor.


Jewelry and Small-Parts Cleaning Station for Makers

Convert the set into a dedicated bench station for cleaning tiny metal findings, watch parts, or beads. Use the nylon-bristle brushes and the scraper to remove polishing compound and solder flux; include labeled sections and an old tray to catch debris—great for craft fairs to demo jewelry cleaning techniques.