One Powder. Every Surface. Nothing Wasted.

Ultraboost was engineered to clean Invisalign aligners to clinical standards. Then we realized it would clean everything else, too — better than anything you’re already using.

8 min read · Full dosing guide included

The bag that replaces the cabinet.

Most cleaning products are 90% water and marketing. They solve one problem, come in oversized packaging, and get shipped across the country at enormous carbon cost — mostly to deliver liquid you already have at home. Ultraboost is none of that. It’s a pharmaceutical-grade enzyme concentrate small enough to fit in your palm, powerful enough to replace nearly everything under your sink, and concentrated enough that a single bag lasts months. Engineered for the clinic. Refined for the home. Once you understand what’s in it, you’ll wonder why everything else is so diluted.


Where it came from

Ultraboost started as a professional-grade cleaner for ultrasonic dental devices — the kind orthodontists use to sanitize Invisalign aligners, retainers, and precision instruments. In that world, there’s no room for “mostly clean.” Protein biofilm, bacteria, and residue have to be gone. Not masked. Gone.

That meant building around two of the most powerful enzymes in industrial cleaning: a high-activity Protease (which destroys protein-based residue) and an Alpha-Amylase (which digests starch and food residue). Together at 65% of the formula, they deliver an enzyme payload 40–130 times greater than any consumer detergent on the market.

The rest of the formula does serious work too: a dental-grade surfactant, a pH-boosting mineral base, a corrosion inhibitor, and an activator — zero fillers, zero water, nothing that doesn’t earn its place.

“If it was good enough to clean instruments that go in your mouth, it’s more than good enough for your dishes, your gym kit, and your retainer.”


How to use it — the complete dosing guide

Ultraboost is concentrated by design. Less is more — and in most cases, a pinch is genuinely all you need. Here’s the full breakdown by use case:

Use Dose How to prepare
Ultrasonic cleaner
(Invisalign, retainers, jewelry)
1 pinch Add directly to water-filled tank. Run normal cycle. Rinse items under running water for 30 seconds after.
Dishwasher ¼ tsp Add to detergent compartment or directly to drum. Use alone or alongside your current detergent for a serious upgrade.
Laundry — normal load ¼ tsp Add to drum before clothes. Use standalone or as a booster. Not for wool or silk.
Laundry — heavily soiled ½ tsp Gym clothes, workwear, activewear with odor. Let sit in drum 5 min before starting cycle for best results.
Stain pre-treatment tiny pinch Dissolve in a few drops of warm water to make a paste. Apply to stain, let sit 5–10 min, then wash normally.
Water bottle / thermos 1 pinch Add to bottle with warm water. Shake 30 sec, let sit 5 min, rinse thoroughly. Destroys the biofilm that causes musty smell.
Jewelry soak 1 pinch Dissolve in a small bowl of warm water. Soak gold, platinum, diamonds 3–5 min. Gentle brush if needed. Rinse thoroughly.
Pet bowls 1 pinch Dissolve in warm water, scrub or soak 2 min. Rinse well. Removes the slimy biofilm ring dish soap leaves behind.
Hydration bladder 1 pinch Fill with warm water + pinch, shake, soak 15 min, drain and rinse. The only thing that actually kills hydration bladder funk.
Baby bottles 1 pinch Dissolve in warm water, soak 2 min, rinse thoroughly. Milk residue is pure protein — exactly what Protease was made for.

A note on rinsing. Because Ultraboost is enzymatic rather than chemical, always rinse treated items thoroughly under running water for at least 30 seconds before use on food-contact surfaces or anything worn in the mouth. The enzymes are inactivated by rinsing and pose no risk after a proper rinse — this is the same protocol used in clinical dental settings.


The use cases that will surprise you


Activewear and gym gear

That persistent smell in your gym kit — “permastank” — isn’t a laundering problem, it’s a biology problem. Bacteria colonize protein residues on synthetic fibers and no surfactant-based detergent can reach them. Ultraboost’s Protease literally digests the residues those bacteria live on. Add ¼ tsp to your wash and the smell doesn’t come back, because its source is gone.


Diamonds and fine jewelry

The reason your diamond ring looks dull isn’t the stone — it’s the invisible film of skin protein, lotion, and oil coating every facet. Ultraboost dissolves it. Soak your ring for five minutes and rinse. The difference is immediate and dramatic. Safe for solid gold, platinum, diamonds, sapphires, and rubies. Avoid pearls, opals, and costume jewelry.


Baby bottles and feeding equipment

Milk residue is pure protein — exactly what Protease was designed to eliminate. A pinch in warm water, a 2-minute soak, and a thorough rinse leaves bottles genuinely clean in a way that dish soap alone never achieves. No synthetic fragrance, no harsh chemicals.


Pet accidents and odors

Enzymatic cleaners are the gold standard for pet mess — every vet will confirm this. Ultraboost is enzymatic at levels no retail pet cleaning product comes close to. For bedding, add ½ tsp to the wash. For surface accidents, dissolve a pinch in a spray bottle of warm water, apply, wait 60 seconds, wipe.


Coffee makers and kitchen appliances

Coffee oils, milk scale, and food residue build up in ways that vinegar can’t fully address. Run a pinch dissolved in a full water tank through your machine (without coffee), followed by two plain water cycles. The enzyme action breaks down organic buildup that chemical descalers miss entirely.


Camping and outdoor gear

A 3oz bag weighs less than your phone and replaces your dish soap, laundry detergent, and gear wash for an entire trip. Use a pinch per task. The whole bag lasts a week in the backcountry for a family of four.


What not to use it on

Because Ultraboost is genuinely powerful, a few categories deserve a clear warning:

Wool and silk — these are protein fibers. The same Protease that destroys biofilm will gradually degrade wool and silk with repeated exposure. Use a dedicated wool wash for these fabrics.

Pearls — organic material, highly vulnerable to enzymatic and alkaline exposure. Never soak.

Opals and turquoise — porous stones that absorb solutions. Avoid.

Costume and plated jewelry — unknown coatings and adhesives react unpredictably. Stick to solid metals and natural stones.


A word on concentration

Consumer detergents — even premium ones marketed as “enzyme” products — typically contain 0.5–1.5% total enzyme by weight. The rest is water, fragrance, stabilizers, and surfactant. Ultraboost is 65% enzyme by weight, with no water and no fillers.

This is why the doses are so small. At a quarter teaspoon, you’re still delivering 10–50 times more enzyme activity per wash than a standard detergent pod. More powder doesn’t mean more cleaning — enzymes work at their own biological pace. What it does mean is that one small bag lasts a remarkably long time.

How long does a bag last? At ¼ tsp per use for laundry or dishes, a single 3oz bag yields approximately 68 uses — roughly two months of daily use. At a pinch per use for ultrasonic cleaning, the same bag covers 4–9 months of daily cycles.

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