Green algae on siding is super common — especially on the north side of a house or in humid climates. If your neighbor’s “0 effort” trick works, it’s almost certainly one of these methods (the ones pros use).
Here’s the safe, actually-effective way most homeowners swear by:
🧴 The Spray-and-Wait Method (No Scrubbing)
What you need:
- Outdoor cleaner with sodium hypochlorite
(like Wet & Forget or 30 SECONDS Outdoor Cleaner) - Garden sprayer or hose attachment
- Garden hose (water source)
How it works:
- Wet the siding lightly with water first.
- Spray the cleaner evenly over the green areas.
- Let it sit.
That’s the “zero effort” part. No scrubbing. - Over the next few days (with rain or light rinsing), the algae fades and disappears.
Most of these cleaners break down the organic growth at the root level so it doesn’t come back as quickly.
🧪 DIY Version (Budget Option)
If your neighbor is the DIY type, they probably used:
- 1 part household bleach
- 1 part water
- A few drops of dish soap
Spray it on, wait 10–15 minutes, rinse gently with a hose.
⚠️ Important:
- Protect plants (rinse them before and after).
- Never mix bleach with anything containing ammonia.
- Avoid pressure washing vinyl siding too aggressively — it can force water behind panels.
🏠 Pro Tip
Algae grows from moisture + shade. If it keeps coming back:
- Trim back trees
- Improve airflow
- Check gutters for overflow issues
If you tell me what kind of siding you have (vinyl, wood, fiber cement, brick), I can tailor the safest exact method.