Todayβs Briefing
The commercial restroom is quietly becoming the most scrutinized real estate in the building β and this week's news explains why. A new Waterless Co. survey out of Southern California and Arizona makes the case in dollars: water rates have climbed as much as 50% in parts of Arizona since 2022 and 20-60% across SoCal districts, and building managers are responding by ripping out flush valves altogether. No-flush urinals, once a sustainability novelty, are now a line-item decision driven first by utility bills and second by everything else β lower maintenance, fewer touchpoints, and easier retrofits. The message to anyone selling into commercial restrooms is unmistakable: the buyer has a calculator in one hand and a hygiene checklist in the other, and the calculator is winning.
Zoom out and that calculator is getting more volatile. A fresh KPMG 2026 global trade outlook, summarized this week by CleanLink, warns that supply shocks and tariff turbulence will continue to pressure janitorial and facility supply chains through the year, with producer price index volatility likely to push through to end users. KPMG's recommended playbook β diversify domestic sourcing, lock strategic distributor agreements, and invest in AI-enabled operations β reads like a preview of every jan-san distributor's 2026 board deck. The kicker: even the AI escape hatch isn't fully insulated, because the chips powering predictive maintenance and robotic cleaners are themselves caught in the trade-war crossfire.
On the product side, restroom experience is finally being treated as a business asset rather than a compliance checkbox. Excel Dryer's case study at RiverTrail Beerworks in Saranac Lake, New York landed with a statistic that will live in restroom-sales decks for years: 80% of diners said they wouldn't return to a restaurant with a dirty restroom, and 100% said it reflects poorly on the overall establishment. Integrated touchless sink systems, paper-free hand drying, and LEED/WELL-aligned fixtures are moving from "nice to have" to core hospitality infrastructure. Hotels, brewpubs, and high-volume QSR operators are rebuilding their restrooms with guest retention in mind β not just code compliance.
Distribution, meanwhile, is consolidating fast. Clorox officially closed its acquisition of GOJO Industries this week, rebranding the business as Clorox Purell and installing Carey Jaros as president under CEO Linda Rendle. The combined entity marries Clorox's consumer-brand machinery to GOJO's dominant institutional hygiene channels, and it will hit jan-san distributors with an aggressive cross-sell motion into schools, hospitals, airports, and office towers. Network Distribution used its annual Las Vegas supplier trade show to name GP Pro Supplier of the Year and Spartan Chemical its Corporate Account Supplier of the Year, while honoring Rubbermaid Commercial Products with its Innovation Award β a reminder that the supply-side pecking order in cleaning hardware is getting sharper, not softer.
The technology story running underneath all of this is data. ABM landed on Fast Company's 2026 World's Most Innovative Companies list for ABM Connect, its AI- and IoT-driven facility intelligence platform that turns buildings into, in CEO Scott Salmirs's words, "intelligent, data-driven environments." Predictive maintenance, real-time workforce routing, and a single source of truth for building operations are now table stakes for enterprise FM RFPs. A Quentic survey reinforced the shift: 84% of commercial cleaning operators plan to implement AI as their primary response to compliance complexity and labor shortages, and 79% say they want humans kept firmly in the loop. The industry isn't chasing robots for their own sake β it's chasing fewer injuries, fewer audits, and fewer unscheduled callouts.
Hygiene blind spots are shrinking too. Healthcare cleaning teams are beginning to treat cell phones as the next frontier of infection control after a 2023 meta-analysis found 84.5% of healthcare workers' phones contaminated with harmful bacteria, even as CDC data reminds the field that 1 in 31 U.S. hospital patients still catches a healthcare-associated infection on any given day. Meanwhile, Verified Market Reports pegged the dry ice blasting market at $450 million today and projected it to reach $800 million by 2033 as aerospace, healthcare, and packaging operators chase water-free, chemical-free cleaning β an ROI story the report says is sharpened further when AI schedules the cycles, delivering up to 80% operational savings in pilot runs.
Stitch it all together and a coherent picture emerges for 2026: water is more expensive, labor is more expensive, tariffs are squeezing landed costs, distribution is consolidating, and every facility manager worth their badge is under pressure to show data that proves their restrooms are clean, safe, and cheap to run. The products that win this year are the ones that simultaneously cut a utility bill, reduce a worker injury claim, and generate a dashboard metric. The era of the "invisible" restroom fixture is over. From here on out, every square foot of commercial restroom has to earn its place on the P&L.