How Do You Clean Tuckpointing?

by | Aug 27, 2025 | masonry

Cleaning tuckpointing requires a delicate balance between removing surface stains and preserving the integrity of the mortar joints. Here’s how North Shore Brickwork recommends cleaning it effectively:

  1. Wait for Mortar to Cure: If the tuckpointing is new, let the mortar cure fully—typically for at least 7 to 14 days—before any cleaning. Cleaning too early can weaken or wash out the joints.
  2. Dry Brushing: For light dirt, dust, or mortar residue, use a stiff-bristled brush (not metal) to gently scrub the surface. This is the safest and most non-invasive method.
  3. Water and Mild Detergent: Mix warm water with a mild detergent (like dish soap) and apply it with a sponge or soft brush. Rinse thoroughly with clean water to avoid residue buildup.
  4. Vinegar Solution (for minor stains): A diluted mix of 1 part white vinegar to 5 parts water can be used on older stains. Apply with a sponge or sprayer, let sit for 5–10 minutes, and scrub lightly. Rinse well.
  5. Avoid Harsh Chemicals: Do not use bleach, muriatic acid, or power washers, especially on old or fragile mortar, as these can damage the tuckpointing work and brick.
  6. Commercial Cleaners (if needed): Choose masonry-safe cleaners labeled specifically for brick or mortar. Always test on a small inconspicuous area first.

Routine cleaning helps maintain the fresh look of tuckpointed joints and prolongs their life. North Shore Brickwork advises always cleaning gently to avoid erosion or discoloration of the mortar lines.

Need tuckpointing services in Milwaukee? Contact North Shore Brickwork today for a professional assessment.

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About Les O'Hara

Les O’Hara founded North Shore Masonry in April 1978 and has run it since then. The company started with one crew working brick repair in the Chicago suburbs. Today it operates across four markets: Chicago IL, Milwaukee WI, Denton TX, and Fort Wayne IN, with crews that average 15 years of tenure on the company.
Les has personally inspected, scoped, or supervised tens of thousands of masonry projects since 1978. The work spans Chicago greystones and two-flats from the late 1800s, Milwaukee duplexes built with Cream City brick and lime mortar, Denton brick veneer construction sitting on Vertisol clay soil, and Fort Wayne historic district homes and institutional buildings. Each market has its own building stock, its own failure patterns, and its own repair protocols. Les knows them all because he’s spent decades on jobsites in all four.
The work has always been the same: do the job right, build it to last, match the original materials, and back it with a real warranty. That commitment is why the company holds Mason Contractor Association of America (MCAA) certification, why every project carries a 2-year labor and material warranty, and why the company’s average customer rating sits at 4.9 stars across more than 480 verified reviews.
When Les writes on this blog, it’s not marketing copy. It’s 47 years of seeing what fails, why it fails, and what actually fixes it.
Credentials and affiliations:

Founder, North Shore Masonry (since April 1978)
MCAA Certified Member (Mason Contractor Association of America)
47+ years of hands-on masonry restoration experience
Specializes in: tuckpointing, brick repair, chimney restoration, lintel replacement, building facade restoration