✨ Elevate your hygiene game with style!
The simplehuman 8 oz. Touch-Free Sensor Liquid Soap Pump Dispenser combines modern design with advanced technology, featuring a no-drip valve, high-speed dispensing in just 0.2 seconds, and customizable volume control, all wrapped in a sleek brushed nickel finish.
Material Type Free | Cadmium Free |
Material | nickel, vinyl, Silicone |
Item Shape | Round |
Color | Brushed |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 5.7"L x 2.8"W x 6.9"H |
K**M
Best soap dispenser around premium quality. They work great battery last up to a year truly.
These are the best dispensers I’ve ever seen or had. I wanted an automatic soap dispenser and I got one that was nice and it took batteries. It worked decent problem was it needed new batteries ever two weeks witch is ridiculous. So I did research watch a ton of videos remand came across this. It’s so expensive I was hesitant but it said and reviews said the battery life was up to a year so I broke down and got in on a sale and it was the best purchase I’ve ever made.I own both the battery and reachable versions and they are both premium quality the battery last almost if not a year I don’t know exactly because I’ve only had to replace or charge them like three times in the few years I’ve had them. I don’t know how they do it especially the one with the regular batteries. They last forever and work so well.I love the newer rechargeable versions more because it’s smaller profile and no batteries. It never gets clogged and sprays out the side and it gives a nice amount of soap I like the one that I can control but my husband likes the one that if you put your hand lower you get a lot and higher for less. The motion detection is great but as with most you have to find it’s sweet spot but the newer rechargeable is not finicky and works as soon as you put your hand under it. The battery one has to be a bit closer.They also look nice with the color options and stainless steel.One note I wanted to add because I see people saying it won’t charge or the older one won’t work. With the plug in I found it won’t charge if it’s not with the correct plug and I only can charge it directly in my usb wall socket so this may be why some don’t charge.As for the battery model. I had mine stop working I’ve also had it pump soap out until it was empty and I figured out why at least for me. I had washed the outside down as I’m sure many do and that little hole in the top I don’t know if it’s an air holier if it’s for sensors or whatever. But I used a very wet rag because I was essentially washing it and water got in the whole and the sensor is right below that hole so I figured that is why it stopped working because water is on the sensor or something like that. Once it started to dry the next day it started working but then I came back and it was going off and off until it was empty still must have had water in the sensor area so it was reading like it was seeing something. So the point is wipe the top with a wet rag but a rung out dryer rags not dripping wet so that you don’t get water in the home. Eventually it dried out and all went back to working great and is still working to this day.These are the best soap dispensers.
A**R
Historical Review of a Good Product (& a Complaint)
We had the older model of this exact same product, which finally, after perhaps 10 years, stopped pumping, even with fresh batteries. The light would flash, etc., but the motor did not operate. Not a bad run, really. We liked the design and performance of the old one, with some caveats that also apply to the new one, which I'll cover below.Just put into service, the new soap pump is working as expected, so no complaints there. I'll get back to you if it fails before 10 years.Differences in the new one:While shaped similarly and styled essentially identically, it is considerably shorter, so may not hold as much soap (though it is close, if not equal). The old one stood regally behind the sink, perhaps even imposingly. The new one squats submissively. The photo on the Amazon listing kind of looked shorter, so that was not a TOTAL surprise. It's still tall enough, and some might find its less imposing and magnificent height less of a distraction, sink-side.The new one has a QR code under the soap lid to reorder soap; the old one was from the stone age where you had to find and order your own soap.The new one has a small printed branding label near the bottom front, not TOO noticeable, while the old one either didn't, or spilled soap over the years had dissolved it off. I like no label.Like the old one, the battery insertion icons on the bottom are VERY confusing. Do you put them in as shown on the embossed image next to the battery lid, or do the batteries look that way once inserted (which gives opposite polarity results)? The instruction manual had a tiny photo which, once examined closely, made it clear (it was opposite my guess looking at the bottom label). I got battery polarity wrong a time or two with the old one, and it didn't damage the unit, it just didn't work. Generally, when replacing batteries, I made careful note of how the old ones were inserted, as it was working that way, rather than lifting it high and peering at the bottom where the battery lid and label are located. (And yes, the batteries tend to run out JUST AFTER you've refilled it with soap, so not only are you not able to turn it over to insert them, but you've got to be careful about tipping it too much.) Battery replacement inconvenience is a minor quibble with both the old and new models. Put the battery port on the bottom, out of sight, and its inconvenient. I'm fine with it how it is - there are trade-offs in life. (OK, MAYBE you can turn it over with soap in it, see below.)Now for my complaint, which is not really a product review, but an Amazon (and Amazon customer) review: It was missing a critical part, right out of the box.I noticed, as I opened the box, which appeared new and undamaged, that the pump was not securely packed in the box. Later careful examination revealed that the bottom box insert was on top of the pump, and that the top packing insert was missing. Clue: this is an unused, but returned unit. Everything else was there, including the instruction book and sample packet of soap.Second BIG clue: Turning it over to insert the batteries (no soap in it yet, so this rare event is still safe, though the top soap lid does have a seal, so IN PRINICIPLE you could turn it over when filled with soap) -NO BATTERY CAP!!!! The cap was not in the box, in the packaging, etc. and it had NOT fallen out a few seconds earlier when I opened the box. This cap fits securely, so it didn't just fall out of its working location. Maybe they left it out in manufacture? Nope. Another clue that this was a returned unit.Time to set up a return with Amazon? Not yet. We have the old one, now headed for the trash. Maybe the battery door (which has a rubber O-ring seal) is the same? Amazingly, it is. (The soap door, on the top, is NOT the same, so if that had been missing we were SOOL.)This happens with Amazon fairly often: someone returns an item, often a perfectly good item, but first, thoughtfully throws away an important small part, accessory, or instructions, etc.. Amazon warehouse, seeing a superficially OK-looking package with SOMETHING like the product in it, just restocks it and ships it out as new to another buyer (rather than inspecting it and selling it discounted as a return, which they sometimes do, if the packaging is damaged or missing.)I'm 100% sure that Amazon would have replaced this soap dispenser if we'd have complained, but they still should avoid this random restocking of returned items. Pretty much every time I've gotten an item that had signs of having been returned, there has been a problem, sometimes one I could solve (like this) and sometimes requiring a return/replace. I've had it happen more than once on the same product, for frequently returned items.Also, Amazon needs to get a better class of customer, who are more careful when returning items. As we've seen with other retailers over the years, after enough abuse of their return policy, it eventually becomes more restrictive. So work with me here people: only return items when you really need to, not on an inspect/try and return basis, and return everything, so it can be inspected and resold.So: good soap dispenser, but dodgy Amazon returned product handling. Amazon will take care of that last problem if it happens to bite you, so buy the dispenser. It is the best looking of those I've seen, and works fine.
E**R
Still working after 7 years. Recommended
So it just occurred to me that I should write a review on this product, after having used the one I purchased for 7 years so far and still running. This is by far one of the best and most useful purchases I’ve made on Amazon. It’s something I use literally every single day, multiple times a day. This thing has never broken and still works just as it did the 1st day I bought it, which is pretty remarkable. I definitely did not expect a product like this to have actual longevity. Amount of soap dispensed is adjustable. Sensor works good. It takes 4 AA batteries. It goes through batteries surprisingly fast, or at least that’s what it feels like to me considering there’s 4 of them in there. But then again maybe that’s just a misconception in my mind, given that I do use it constantly, draining the juice. I would definitely recommend this product based on my experience. I was motivated to write this review because after 7 years of daily use and still being functional this thing definitely deserves a good word for others to consider. It doesn’t necessarily feel super high quality, it’s plastic and you seriously wouldn’t expect it to last. But, other than some normal decay from time and the constant use, it still dispenses soap just fine, every time. Would buy again. (And I hope I didn’t just jinx myself with this review 🤣)
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
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