CarCareTruth Score
Decent.
Opens Amazon in a new tab. No account needed to look.
Saved to your guest loadout. Sign up to also save to your Cabinet (consumables) or Kit (tools you own).
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure
Prices may varyHealth score is for adult use as intended, per the manufacturer's SDS. It does not model child ingestion, accidental spill cleanup, or off-label use. See the safety panel below for full hazard classification, and /disclaimer for the full editorial scope.
GHS hazard codes are quoted from the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet. PPE tiers below translate those codes and the listed ingredient chemistry; they are not CarCareTruth recommendations.
Show details for all categories ▾Hide details ▴
From the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet, Section 8
“H319 (eye irritation Cat 2A) in SDS §2 mixture classification. Pump-spray application at face height inside the vehicle cabin means spray mist is a documented eye-contact pathway.”
— Adam's Polishes
U.S. regulatory standard
29 CFR 1910.133(a)(1)
“The employer shall ensure that each affected employee uses appropriate eye or face protection when exposed to eye or face hazards from… liquid chemicals…”
ANSI Z87.1 (incorporated via §1910.6)
OSHA standards apply to workplaces. Cited here as the U.S. reference threshold for the underlying hazard class.
CarCareTruth publishes the cited sources verbatim and does not advise what action a user should take. Consult the full SDS before use.
From the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet, Section 8
“No H315 (skin irritation) or H317 (skin sensitizer) in SDS §2 mixture classification. Manual agitation with a cloth during seat belt cleaning creates extended dermal contact; a plausible pathway during repeated sessions. pH 6-8 is neutral and not corrosive.”
— Adam's Polishes
CarCareTruth publishes the cited sources verbatim and does not advise what action a user should take. Consult the full SDS before use.
From the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet, Section 8
“No H335 (respiratory irritation) in SDS §2 mixture classification. VOC is 0.3% EPA (estimated <5 g/L at RTU), below any vapor-generation concern. Pump-spray application inside the vehicle cabin is a semi-enclosed space; doors open during application addresses the generic enclosed-space pathway without requiring respiratory PPE.”
— Adam's Polishes
CarCareTruth publishes the cited sources verbatim and does not advise what action a user should take. Consult the full SDS before use.
No PPE specified in published sources for ventilation. Absence does not imply “not needed” — consult the full Safety Data Sheet.
PPE tiers translate the manufacturer’s SDS and U.S. regulatory standards. Not professional safety advice. How we report safety.
This product ranks #2 of 4 in Seat Belt Cleaner.
Last reviewed June 21, 2026
TL;DR Enzyme-based interior cleaner that eliminates bio-based stains and odors (urine, milk, vomit, pet messes) at a neutral pH. At least one owner confirmed seat belt use with good results. The instructions recommend soaking and overnight dwell; the user must manage liquid runoff near the retractor independently since no guidance is provided. GHS H319 means pump-spray at face height inside the cabin is a documented eye-contact pathway.
Adam's Enzymatic Cleaner uses a multi-bacillus spore blend (lipase, protease, amylase, cellulase, urease) to break down bio-based soils. Spray onto the extended belt or a microfiber cloth, allow 10-30 minutes dwell, then blot. The instructions recommend soaking for stubborn cases and overnight dwell: effective for heavy contamination but not retractor-safe by design, since no runoff guidance is included. Community owners report genuine odor elimination on milk, urine, pet, and smoke soils.
Good for anyone with embedded biological odors on belts that surfactant cleaners did not resolve. Skip it if you need a purpose-built belt product with explicit nylon webbing compatibility documentation and built-in retractor guidance: dedicated products like DP-310 cover that. The enzyme chemistry is fine for the fibers; the soak-first protocol requires extra care near the retractor.
WARNING signal word; H319 (eye irritation Cat 2A) is the sole mixture-level classification. Pump-spray at face height in the cabin makes eye contact plausible during agitation. No H315 or H335; pH 6-8 is not corrosive; VOC is 0.3% by weight. SDS Section 12 explicitly confirms the product is not classified as hazardous to the aquatic environment.
The SDS confirms pH 6-8 (neutral range), no bleach, no chlorine compounds, and no strong oxidizers in the formula. The enzyme chemistry (lipase, protease, amylase) is biologically based and not chemically aggressive toward nylon or polyester fibers. No community reports of webbing stiffening or fiber damage appear in the review record. That said, Adam's does not explicitly market this product for seat-belt webbing; it is a general interior enzyme cleaner. The chemistry profile is consistent with safe use on synthetic webbing, but no manufacturer webbing-compatibility claim is on file.
The product instructions recommend spraying or soaking the area and allowing 10-30 minutes dwell time; they do not include retractor-avoidance guidance. A careful spray-and-blot approach, applying to a microfiber cloth and working section by section with the belt fully extended, limits liquid volume reaching the retractor housing. No application method for retractor protection is specifically endorsed by the manufacturer or confirmed in community reporting for this product.
The enzyme blend (lipase, protease, amylase, cellulase, urease) breaks down the biological molecules that cause odors; proteins, fats, and carbohydrates from sources like milk, urine, vomit, and pet messes. Community owners consistently describe permanent odor elimination after one to three applications, not temporary masking. This distinguishes enzyme cleaners from fragrance-based odor neutralizers, which only cover the smell.
Adam's recommends a single application with 10-30 minutes dwell time for most soiling. For severe cases, the instructions specifically call for multiple applications, covering the treated area with a towel to slow evaporation and letting it sit overnight. Community owners dealing with concentrated odors (cigarette smoke, milk, urine) report needing two to three applications spaced over separate sessions.
No. The SDS Section 15 discloses 1,4-dioxane at 0.0000023%; an extremely trace byproduct of the ethoxylation process used to make the surfactant. At that concentration, exposure during normal use falls well below California's safe harbor threshold, which is why no Prop 65 warning label is required or displayed. The Rainforest listing confirms no Prop 65 warning.
Marketing copy from Adam's Polishes, via Amazon. Not editorial.
Weekly pick
One product, one safety verdict, every week. No spam.


























Chemical Guys
Lightning Fast Stain Extractor (16 oz, 3-Pack)

DP Detailing Products
DP-310 Seat Belt Cleaner

Craftsman's Choice
Seat Belt Cleaner
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure
Community
0 postsShare how you use this product
Drop a quick comment or post a full review with photos and a star rating.
Sign in to postNew here? Create a free account.