Soft washing can be really dangerous if you’re not careful. The chemicals, the heat, the way your body moves all day, it adds up. And the tricky thing is, it’s not always the big accidents that get you, it’s the small things over time that accumulate in your body that can cause real damage.
So if you’re gonna do this for the long haul, you’ve got to be careful with the health risks that come with soft washing.
1. What You Breathe and Touch: Chemical Exposure

Soft washing puts you in constant contact with chemicals, and most of the time, it doesn’t seem like a big deal until something goes wrong. Bleach mist and surfactants float in the air while you spray, especially when the wind blows. If you don’t use a respirator, you breathe that stuff in all day. It causes headaches, sore throats, coughing, or worse. Over time, it damages your lungs and makes you sensitive to chemicals you used to handle just fine.
Then your skin takes a hit. Getting sprayed or splashed may not feel like much at first, but soft wash mixes cause chemical burns, rashes, or dryness that keeps getting worse. Some guys even develop long-term skin sensitivity, where even a light mix makes them break out.
Your eyes take damage too. The wind can pick up out of nowhere, and bleach in the eyes stings like crazy. It causes damage fast if you don’t rinse it out right away.
The best way to avoid all this is to wear the right gear. That means using a soft wash respirator, gloves that keep chemicals out, long sleeves and pants, and solid eye protection. It feels like a hassle, especially in the heat, but it makes life easier than dealing with chemical injuries later.
(We carry soft wash respirators that are built for this exact kind of work and you can check them out below. We strongly recommend them to always stay safe when working with chemicals.)

2. Where You Stand: Heat, Sun, and Fall Hazards

Soft washing takes a toll on your body, especially when you’re out in the sun all the time. The heat builds while you work and after a while it drains your energy. You start feeling off, maybe tired or shaky, but you keep going because the job’s not done. That’s how heat exhaustion creeps in. If you don’t cool off or take a break, it only gets worse.
On top of that, you’re sweating all day, and even if you don’t feel thirsty, your body’s still running low. It doesn’t always hit you like thirst. Sometimes you just feel off, like you’re not all there, and before you know it you’re moving slower and messing up things you normally wouldn’t.
Dehydration makes itself know in many ways including fatigue, dizziness, dry mouth, dark urine, and reduced cognitive function.
You might step wrong on a roof, take a ladder too quick, or forget to check for slick spots on the ground. When your body’s dragging and your head’s not in it, even simple stuff can go sideways. You don’t have to fall far to get hurt. One slip on a wet driveway or a rushed move on a damp roof is all it takes.
Also, the sun is a slow killer, and what you think is just a farmers tan that comes with the job is actually skin damage that will turn your world upside down if left unchecked. You don’t want to get a skin cancer diagnosis in your 40s wishing you had a time machine to go back and put on sunscreen. If you are working in the sun for more than 20 minutes a day, cover up any part of you that could be exposed to the sun with either sunscreen, clothing, or hats that are rated for UV protection. Clothing is the best way to protect from the sun – because, let’s be honest – who has time to reapply sunscreen every 45 minutes on a busy work day.
What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, but you’re better off not testing that on the job. The best thing you can do is slow down, pay attention to what your body is telling you, drink lots and lots and lots of water, and be religious about protection from the sun.
3. What You Store and Mix: Chemical Handling Risks
Before and after the spray work, there’s still risk. How you store and mix your chemicals can mess you up if you’re not paying attention. This part of the job gets overlooked a lot, but it’s one of the main sources of soft washing health risks that build up over time.
Keep your trailer or garage cool and ventilated. When chemicals sit in the heat or get sealed up tight, they can give off strong fumes that build up over time. Breathing that in every day adds up.
Mixing is where things can really go wrong too. If you don’t know what you’re doing or you’re rushing, you can end up with reactions that burn, break your gear, or fill the air with something you don’t want in your lungs.
A few basics you should always follow:
- Store your mix in the right container
- Keep things labeled clearly
- Seal everything properly so it doesn’t leak or spill
- Avoid mixing inside enclosed spaces
- Never guess your ratios
- When combining chemicals always do your research and ensure they are compatible or else you might accidentally make a batch of toxic fumes.
If something spills or splashes, stop what you’re doing. Rinse it off if it hits your skin. Open things up and let the air move. Don’t power through a chemical mistake like it’s nothing.
You’re the Asset, Protect Yourself Like One

At the end of the day, your gear protects more than just your clothes or your skin. It protects your business, your income, and your family. You can replace a hose or a pump but you can’t replace your lungs or your back or your eyes.
Soft washing health risks are real, even if they don’t show up right away. Most of the things that mess guys up in this line of work aren’t big disasters, they’re small habits that get ignored for too long like not wearing a respirator, skipping water breaks, rushing on a roof, or brushing off a splash because it didn’t seem that bad. That’s how it builds up, not all at once but little by little.
Take care of yourself and build the habits now so you’re not paying for it later. Stay sharp, watch your steps, use safety gear, drink the water, take the break. None of that makes you soft, it keeps you working, and more importantly, it keeps you safe.
Treat yourself like someone you are responsible for taking care of, because you’re the asset that keeps everything else running.