Wearing Shoes In The House Is Just Plain Gross. The Verdict From Scientists Who Study Indoor Contaminants

You probably clean your shoes if you step in something muddy or disgusting (please pick up after your dog!). But when you get home, do you always de-shoe at the door?

Plenty of Australians don’t. For many, what you drag in on the bottom of your shoes is the last thing on the mind as one gets home.



We are environmental chemists who have spent a decade examining the indoor environment and the contaminants people are exposed to in their own homes. Although our examination of the indoor environment, via our DustSafe program, is far from complete, on the question of whether to shoe or de-shoe in the home, the science leans toward the latter.

It is best to leave your filth outside the door.

Screen Shot 2022-09-26 at 11.27.50.png
It is best to leave your filth outside the door. Shutterstock

What contaminants are in your home, and how did they get there?​

People spend up to 90% of their time indoors, so the question of whether or not to wear shoes in the house is not a trivial one.

The policy focus is typically on the outdoor environment for soil, air quality and environmental public health risks. However, there is growing regulatory interest in the question of indoor air quality.

The matter building up inside your home includes not just dust and dirt from people and pets shedding hair and skin.

About a third of it is from outside, either blown in or tramped in on those offensive shoe bottoms.



Screen Shot 2022-09-26 at 11.28.35.png
Please don’t do this. Shutterstock

A roll-call of indoor nasties​

Our work has involved the measurement and assessment of exposure to a range of harmful substances found inside homes including:


A strong focus of our work has involved assessing levels of potentially toxic metals (such as arsenic, cadmium and lead) inside homes across 35 nations (including Australia).

These contaminants – and most importantly the dangerous neurotoxin lead – are odourless and colourless. So there is no way of knowing whether the dangers of lead exposure are only in your soils or your water pipes, or if they are also on your living room floor.

The science suggests a very strong connection between the lead inside your home and that in your yard soil.

The most likely reason for this connection is dirt blown in from your yard or trodden in on your shoes, and on the furry paws of your adorable pets.



This connection speaks to the priority of making sure matter from your outdoor environment stays exactly there (we have tips here).

A recent Wall Street Journal article argued shoes in the home aren’t so bad. The author made the point that E. coli – dangerous bacteria that develop in the intestines of many mammals, including humans – is so widely distributed that it’s pretty much everywhere. So it should be no surprise it can be swabbed on shoe bottoms (96% of shoe bottoms, as the article pointed out).

But let’s be clear. Although it’s nice to be scientific and stick with the term E. coli, this stuff is, put more simply, the bacteria associated with poo.

Whether it is ours or Fido’s, it has the potential to make us very sick if we are exposed at high levels. And let’s face it – it is just plain gross.

Why walk it around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door?

Screen Shot 2022-09-26 at 11.29.38.png
Why walk muck around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door? Shutterstock

On balance, shoeless wins​

So are there disadvantages to having a shoe-free household?

Beyond the occasional stubbed toe, from an environmental health standpoint there aren’t many downsides to having a shoe-free house. Leaving your shoes at the entry mat also leaves potentially harmful pathogens there as well.

We all know prevention is far better than treatment and taking shoes off at the door is a basic and easy prevention activity for many of us.

Need shoes for foot support? Easy – just have some “indoor shoes” that never get worn outside.

There remains the issue of the “sterile house syndrome,” which refers to increased rates of allergies among children. Some argue it’s related to overly sterile households.




Indeed, some dirt is probably beneficial as studies have indicated it helps develop your immune system and reduce allergy risk.

But there are better and less gross ways to do that than walking around inside with your filthy shoes on. Get outside, go for a bushwalk, enjoy the great outdoors.

Just don’t bring the muckier parts of it inside to build up and contaminate our homes.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Mark Patrick Taylor Chief Environmental Scientist, EPA Victoria; Honorary Professor from Macquarie University, Gabriel Filippelli Chancellor's Professor of Earth Sciences and Executive Director, Indiana University Environmental Resilience Institute from IUPUI
 

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My hubby is the shoe police and my kids I should be saying young adult children and adult children would rather leave their shoes at the door than wear them inside.

We have been implementing this for about 5 years now and a huge difference we see is on our stairs leading upstairs.

When you think about where you have been walking and not knowing what animal has done what where and that also means humans.

We don't expect visitors to remove shoes but most do when they see shoes at the back door.

We also have a sign on our front door saying to use side entrance with an arrow directing which side, this way for visitors who keep shoes on they are not walking through my house
 
Good idea to remove shoes. I'm guilty of not doing it if I'm carrying bags of groceries when I get home. I can't be bothered to bend down & take them off, but I should do it first off. :sneaky:
Our home gets vacuumed most days.
 
Last edited:
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You probably clean your shoes if you step in something muddy or disgusting (please pick up after your dog!). But when you get home, do you always de-shoe at the door?

Plenty of Australians don’t. For many, what you drag in on the bottom of your shoes is the last thing on the mind as one gets home.



We are environmental chemists who have spent a decade examining the indoor environment and the contaminants people are exposed to in their own homes. Although our examination of the indoor environment, via our DustSafe program, is far from complete, on the question of whether to shoe or de-shoe in the home, the science leans toward the latter.

It is best to leave your filth outside the door.

View attachment 6483
It is best to leave your filth outside the door. Shutterstock

What contaminants are in your home, and how did they get there?​

People spend up to 90% of their time indoors, so the question of whether or not to wear shoes in the house is not a trivial one.

The policy focus is typically on the outdoor environment for soil, air quality and environmental public health risks. However, there is growing regulatory interest in the question of indoor air quality.

The matter building up inside your home includes not just dust and dirt from people and pets shedding hair and skin.

About a third of it is from outside, either blown in or tramped in on those offensive shoe bottoms.



View attachment 6484
Please don’t do this. Shutterstock

A roll-call of indoor nasties​

Our work has involved the measurement and assessment of exposure to a range of harmful substances found inside homes including:


A strong focus of our work has involved assessing levels of potentially toxic metals (such as arsenic, cadmium and lead) inside homes across 35 nations (including Australia).

These contaminants – and most importantly the dangerous neurotoxin lead – are odourless and colourless. So there is no way of knowing whether the dangers of lead exposure are only in your soils or your water pipes, or if they are also on your living room floor.

The science suggests a very strong connection between the lead inside your home and that in your yard soil.

The most likely reason for this connection is dirt blown in from your yard or trodden in on your shoes, and on the furry paws of your adorable pets.



This connection speaks to the priority of making sure matter from your outdoor environment stays exactly there (we have tips here).

A recent Wall Street Journal article argued shoes in the home aren’t so bad. The author made the point that E. coli – dangerous bacteria that develop in the intestines of many mammals, including humans – is so widely distributed that it’s pretty much everywhere. So it should be no surprise it can be swabbed on shoe bottoms (96% of shoe bottoms, as the article pointed out).

But let’s be clear. Although it’s nice to be scientific and stick with the term E. coli, this stuff is, put more simply, the bacteria associated with poo.

Whether it is ours or Fido’s, it has the potential to make us very sick if we are exposed at high levels. And let’s face it – it is just plain gross.

Why walk it around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door?

View attachment 6485
Why walk muck around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door? Shutterstock

On balance, shoeless wins​

So are there disadvantages to having a shoe-free household?

Beyond the occasional stubbed toe, from an environmental health standpoint there aren’t many downsides to having a shoe-free house. Leaving your shoes at the entry mat also leaves potentially harmful pathogens there as well.

We all know prevention is far better than treatment and taking shoes off at the door is a basic and easy prevention activity for many of us.

Need shoes for foot support? Easy – just have some “indoor shoes” that never get worn outside.

There remains the issue of the “sterile house syndrome,” which refers to increased rates of allergies among children. Some argue it’s related to overly sterile households.




Indeed, some dirt is probably beneficial as studies have indicated it helps develop your immune system and reduce allergy risk.

But there are better and less gross ways to do that than walking around inside with your filthy shoes on. Get outside, go for a bushwalk, enjoy the great outdoors.

Just don’t bring the muckier parts of it inside to build up and contaminate our homes.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Mark Patrick Taylor Chief Environmental Scientist, EPA Victoria; Honorary Professor from Macquarie University, Gabriel Filippelli Chancellor's Professor of Earth Sciences and Executive Director, Indiana University Environmental Resilience Institute from IUPUI
All good and well but a lot of people have disabilities that prevent them from reaching down to replace their shoes without special aids, please remember that when you invite people into your home"; I am one
 
You probably clean your shoes if you step in something muddy or disgusting (please pick up after your dog!). But when you get home, do you always de-shoe at the door?

Plenty of Australians don’t. For many, what you drag in on the bottom of your shoes is the last thing on the mind as one gets home.



We are environmental chemists who have spent a decade examining the indoor environment and the contaminants people are exposed to in their own homes. Although our examination of the indoor environment, via our DustSafe program, is far from complete, on the question of whether to shoe or de-shoe in the home, the science leans toward the latter.

It is best to leave your filth outside the door.

View attachment 6483
It is best to leave your filth outside the door. Shutterstock

What contaminants are in your home, and how did they get there?​

People spend up to 90% of their time indoors, so the question of whether or not to wear shoes in the house is not a trivial one.

The policy focus is typically on the outdoor environment for soil, air quality and environmental public health risks. However, there is growing regulatory interest in the question of indoor air quality.

The matter building up inside your home includes not just dust and dirt from people and pets shedding hair and skin.

About a third of it is from outside, either blown in or tramped in on those offensive shoe bottoms.



View attachment 6484
Please don’t do this. Shutterstock

A roll-call of indoor nasties​

Our work has involved the measurement and assessment of exposure to a range of harmful substances found inside homes including:


A strong focus of our work has involved assessing levels of potentially toxic metals (such as arsenic, cadmium and lead) inside homes across 35 nations (including Australia).

These contaminants – and most importantly the dangerous neurotoxin lead – are odourless and colourless. So there is no way of knowing whether the dangers of lead exposure are only in your soils or your water pipes, or if they are also on your living room floor.

The science suggests a very strong connection between the lead inside your home and that in your yard soil.

The most likely reason for this connection is dirt blown in from your yard or trodden in on your shoes, and on the furry paws of your adorable pets.



This connection speaks to the priority of making sure matter from your outdoor environment stays exactly there (we have tips here).

A recent Wall Street Journal article argued shoes in the home aren’t so bad. The author made the point that E. coli – dangerous bacteria that develop in the intestines of many mammals, including humans – is so widely distributed that it’s pretty much everywhere. So it should be no surprise it can be swabbed on shoe bottoms (96% of shoe bottoms, as the article pointed out).

But let’s be clear. Although it’s nice to be scientific and stick with the term E. coli, this stuff is, put more simply, the bacteria associated with poo.

Whether it is ours or Fido’s, it has the potential to make us very sick if we are exposed at high levels. And let’s face it – it is just plain gross.

Why walk it around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door?

View attachment 6485
Why walk muck around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door? Shutterstock

On balance, shoeless wins​

So are there disadvantages to having a shoe-free household?

Beyond the occasional stubbed toe, from an environmental health standpoint there aren’t many downsides to having a shoe-free house. Leaving your shoes at the entry mat also leaves potentially harmful pathogens there as well.

We all know prevention is far better than treatment and taking shoes off at the door is a basic and easy prevention activity for many of us.

Need shoes for foot support? Easy – just have some “indoor shoes” that never get worn outside.

There remains the issue of the “sterile house syndrome,” which refers to increased rates of allergies among children. Some argue it’s related to overly sterile households.




Indeed, some dirt is probably beneficial as studies have indicated it helps develop your immune system and reduce allergy risk.

But there are better and less gross ways to do that than walking around inside with your filthy shoes on. Get outside, go for a bushwalk, enjoy the great outdoors.

Just don’t bring the muckier parts of it inside to build up and contaminate our homes.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Mark Patrick Taylor Chief Environmental Scientist, EPA Victoria; Honorary Professor from Macquarie University, Gabriel Filippelli Chancellor's Professor of Earth Sciences and Executive Director, Indiana University Environmental Resilience Institute from IUPUI
I am tired of all this nonsense.
All the experts will have us living in a bubble. We need germs to build out immune systems.
 
You probably clean your shoes if you step in something muddy or disgusting (please pick up after your dog!). But when you get home, do you always de-shoe at the door?

Plenty of Australians don’t. For many, what you drag in on the bottom of your shoes is the last thing on the mind as one gets home.



We are environmental chemists who have spent a decade examining the indoor environment and the contaminants people are exposed to in their own homes. Although our examination of the indoor environment, via our DustSafe program, is far from complete, on the question of whether to shoe or de-shoe in the home, the science leans toward the latter.

It is best to leave your filth outside the door.

View attachment 6483
It is best to leave your filth outside the door. Shutterstock

What contaminants are in your home, and how did they get there?​

People spend up to 90% of their time indoors, so the question of whether or not to wear shoes in the house is not a trivial one.

The policy focus is typically on the outdoor environment for soil, air quality and environmental public health risks. However, there is growing regulatory interest in the question of indoor air quality.

The matter building up inside your home includes not just dust and dirt from people and pets shedding hair and skin.

About a third of it is from outside, either blown in or tramped in on those offensive shoe bottoms.



View attachment 6484
Please don’t do this. Shutterstock

A roll-call of indoor nasties​

Our work has involved the measurement and assessment of exposure to a range of harmful substances found inside homes including:


A strong focus of our work has involved assessing levels of potentially toxic metals (such as arsenic, cadmium and lead) inside homes across 35 nations (including Australia).

These contaminants – and most importantly the dangerous neurotoxin lead – are odourless and colourless. So there is no way of knowing whether the dangers of lead exposure are only in your soils or your water pipes, or if they are also on your living room floor.

The science suggests a very strong connection between the lead inside your home and that in your yard soil.

The most likely reason for this connection is dirt blown in from your yard or trodden in on your shoes, and on the furry paws of your adorable pets.



This connection speaks to the priority of making sure matter from your outdoor environment stays exactly there (we have tips here).

A recent Wall Street Journal article argued shoes in the home aren’t so bad. The author made the point that E. coli – dangerous bacteria that develop in the intestines of many mammals, including humans – is so widely distributed that it’s pretty much everywhere. So it should be no surprise it can be swabbed on shoe bottoms (96% of shoe bottoms, as the article pointed out).

But let’s be clear. Although it’s nice to be scientific and stick with the term E. coli, this stuff is, put more simply, the bacteria associated with poo.

Whether it is ours or Fido’s, it has the potential to make us very sick if we are exposed at high levels. And let’s face it – it is just plain gross.

Why walk it around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door?

View attachment 6485
Why walk muck around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door? Shutterstock

On balance, shoeless wins​

So are there disadvantages to having a shoe-free household?

Beyond the occasional stubbed toe, from an environmental health standpoint there aren’t many downsides to having a shoe-free house. Leaving your shoes at the entry mat also leaves potentially harmful pathogens there as well.

We all know prevention is far better than treatment and taking shoes off at the door is a basic and easy prevention activity for many of us.

Need shoes for foot support? Easy – just have some “indoor shoes” that never get worn outside.

There remains the issue of the “sterile house syndrome,” which refers to increased rates of allergies among children. Some argue it’s related to overly sterile households.




Indeed, some dirt is probably beneficial as studies have indicated it helps develop your immune system and reduce allergy risk.

But there are better and less gross ways to do that than walking around inside with your filthy shoes on. Get outside, go for a bushwalk, enjoy the great outdoors.

Just don’t bring the muckier parts of it inside to build up and contaminate our homes.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Mark Patrick Taylor Chief Environmental Scientist, EPA Victoria; Honorary Professor from Macquarie University, Gabriel Filippelli Chancellor's Professor of Earth Sciences and Executive Director, Indiana University Environmental Resilience Institute from IUPUI
 
I make it a point to always leave a pair of shoes outside my front door. When I leave the house I also have a clean pair of slippers, sandals or sneakers at the entrance to slip them back on inside the house.
However, not too many people have the courtesy of asking me whether or not they should remove their shoes before entering my house. I really feel embarrassed to ask them to do so.
Is a there a discreet way of indicating to such inconsiderate people that their thoughtlessness is not appreciated?
Ss
 
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You probably clean your shoes if you step in something muddy or disgusting (please pick up after your dog!). But when you get home, do you always de-shoe at the door?

Plenty of Australians don’t. For many, what you drag in on the bottom of your shoes is the last thing on the mind as one gets home.



We are environmental chemists who have spent a decade examining the indoor environment and the contaminants people are exposed to in their own homes. Although our examination of the indoor environment, via our DustSafe program, is far from complete, on the question of whether to shoe or de-shoe in the home, the science leans toward the latter.

It is best to leave your filth outside the door.

View attachment 6483
It is best to leave your filth outside the door. Shutterstock

What contaminants are in your home, and how did they get there?​

People spend up to 90% of their time indoors, so the question of whether or not to wear shoes in the house is not a trivial one.

The policy focus is typically on the outdoor environment for soil, air quality and environmental public health risks. However, there is growing regulatory interest in the question of indoor air quality.

The matter building up inside your home includes not just dust and dirt from people and pets shedding hair and skin.

About a third of it is from outside, either blown in or tramped in on those offensive shoe bottoms.



View attachment 6484
Please don’t do this. Shutterstock

A roll-call of indoor nasties​

Our work has involved the measurement and assessment of exposure to a range of harmful substances found inside homes including:


A strong focus of our work has involved assessing levels of potentially toxic metals (such as arsenic, cadmium and lead) inside homes across 35 nations (including Australia).

These contaminants – and most importantly the dangerous neurotoxin lead – are odourless and colourless. So there is no way of knowing whether the dangers of lead exposure are only in your soils or your water pipes, or if they are also on your living room floor.

The science suggests a very strong connection between the lead inside your home and that in your yard soil.

The most likely reason for this connection is dirt blown in from your yard or trodden in on your shoes, and on the furry paws of your adorable pets.



This connection speaks to the priority of making sure matter from your outdoor environment stays exactly there (we have tips here).

A recent Wall Street Journal article argued shoes in the home aren’t so bad. The author made the point that E. coli – dangerous bacteria that develop in the intestines of many mammals, including humans – is so widely distributed that it’s pretty much everywhere. So it should be no surprise it can be swabbed on shoe bottoms (96% of shoe bottoms, as the article pointed out).

But let’s be clear. Although it’s nice to be scientific and stick with the term E. coli, this stuff is, put more simply, the bacteria associated with poo.

Whether it is ours or Fido’s, it has the potential to make us very sick if we are exposed at high levels. And let’s face it – it is just plain gross.

Why walk it around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door?

View attachment 6485
Why walk muck around inside your house if you have a very simple alternative – to take your shoes off at the door? Shutterstock

On balance, shoeless wins​

So are there disadvantages to having a shoe-free household?

Beyond the occasional stubbed toe, from an environmental health standpoint there aren’t many downsides to having a shoe-free house. Leaving your shoes at the entry mat also leaves potentially harmful pathogens there as well.

We all know prevention is far better than treatment and taking shoes off at the door is a basic and easy prevention activity for many of us.

Need shoes for foot support? Easy – just have some “indoor shoes” that never get worn outside.

There remains the issue of the “sterile house syndrome,” which refers to increased rates of allergies among children. Some argue it’s related to overly sterile households.




Indeed, some dirt is probably beneficial as studies have indicated it helps develop your immune system and reduce allergy risk.

But there are better and less gross ways to do that than walking around inside with your filthy shoes on. Get outside, go for a bushwalk, enjoy the great outdoors.

Just don’t bring the muckier parts of it inside to build up and contaminate our homes.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Mark Patrick Taylor Chief Environmental Scientist, EPA Victoria; Honorary Professor from Macquarie University, Gabriel Filippelli Chancellor's Professor of Earth Sciences and Executive Director, Indiana University Environmental Resilience Institute from IUPUI
This item does not cover the risks, identical risks, from sweaty bare feet, contaminated fibres and dust when just socks are worn, or the Q 's posed with visitors using your-supplied slippers in your home for other visitors (then left to 'stew' until offered to later visitors).
My view is that LESS gets carried into your home from wearing shoes, than the process of changing to other footwear at doors edge.
The pile of slippers and worn footwear at the entry door and the assosiated 'smells' carried into the home from un-shoed feet is another issue..
The Q of pets is real too: the irony that a homeowner says no shoes to visitors, but allows their dog into the home 'unshoed'!
Many cultures practice shoe removal as a hangover from places where there is dust, no grass or sealed paving, where animals roam free, or just because that is what they were brought up as normal.
So, I discount the value of this articles recommendation except to air the issue for discussion among readers.
 
I am tired of all this nonsense.
All the experts will have us living in a bubble. We need germs to build out immune systems.
Yes. I do like bare feet, but if I'm in my own home I don't take 'germs from outside' into consideration. For goodness sake, I'm 75 and I'm in very good health. It's geting so that people will try to get rid of their own shadow if someone tells them to. Don't agree.
 
I remove my outdoor footwear at the front door.
I have toe - below knee orthotics for both feet to prevent my ankles from moving, so these are transferred to my indoor shoes inside.
I don't expect visitors to remove their shoes, especially if they have bare feet.
Don't want bare feet with viruses on my floors, thank you.
 
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Yes. I do like bare feet, but if I'm in my own home I don't take 'germs from outside' into consideration. For goodness sake, I'm 75 and I'm in very good health. It's geting so that people will try to get rid of their own shadow if someone tells them to. Don't agree.
i never did but mynew daughter in law always does so now my son does too but the floor is always hard to keep clean maybe just a door mat would mean less dirt trapesed in
 
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I’m barefoot more often than not. Although I wear shoes when I actually go somewhere I do go out the front and in the garden barefoot. I guess I should have a foot spa by the door lol
 
People are more than welcome to wear their shoes inside my house. I replaced all of the carpets with laminate because we have five cats, so a bit of dirt from shoes is fine. We sweep the floor every couple of days and mop with a disinfectant weekly.
 
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A few years ago I had to go into hospital for a day procedure. I was given a gown and changed into it then took my shoes off. The nurse was horrified she said never walk round in bare feet there are so many germs and bacteria on the floor (and this was in a hospital that has regular thorough cleaning). So whether you are shoes off or on at the door you should always have something on your feet.
 
My hubby is the shoe police and my kids I should be saying young adult children and adult children would rather leave their shoes at the door than wear them inside.

We have been implementing this for about 5 years now and a huge difference we see is on our stairs leading upstairs.

When you think about where you have been walking and not knowing what animal has done what where and that also means humans.

We don't expect visitors to remove shoes but most do when they see shoes at the back door.

We also have a sign on our front door saying to use side entrance with an arrow directing which side, this way for visitors who keep shoes on they are not walking through my house
We have had that policy for 42 years everybody takes their shoes off you never know what they have stepped on
 
I recall that when there was a real panic about Animal diseases being bought into Aust, Mats containing sanitising fluid was placed for arrivals to walk on/through. Are they available as well as the Liquid ? Costs?
 
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