How to Keep Your Windscreen Clear in Winter

How to Keep Your Windscreen Clear in Winter: Demisting, Streak-Free Glass and Washer Care

CarMoods Team

There's a particular kind of winter-morning frustration: you're already running late, and the windscreen is a wall of fog that re-mists faster than you can wipe it with your sleeve. Poor glass isn't just annoying — most winter visibility problems come down to three fixable things: cabin moisture, dirty inside glass and neglected washers and wipers.

This guide covers

  • Why windscreens fog up in winter
  • The fastest way to demist your glass
  • Cleaning the inside film everyone forgets
  • Washer fluid and streak-free drying
  • Simple wiper care that prevents smearing

Why your windscreen fogs up in winter

Fog forms when warm, moist cabin air meets cold glass. The moisture comes from you — your breath, damp coats, wet umbrellas — and from soaked carpets and floor mats that never quite dry out.

That's why a car that fogs up constantly usually has a moisture problem hiding somewhere. Check under the mats: if the carpet beneath is damp, dry it out and the fogging improves dramatically.

The fastest way to demist

Counterintuitively, the quickest fix uses the air conditioning. Set the fan to the windscreen vents, turn the temperature warm and switch the A/C compressor on — it dehumidifies the air before blowing it at the glass. Fresh-air mode beats recirculation, because outside winter air is drier than the air you're exhaling into the cabin.

Pro tip

If the glass mists up while you're driving, crack a rear window a centimetre or two. The cross-flow of dry outside air clears fog faster than the demister alone — and stops it coming back.

Clean the inside glass — the step everyone skips

Interior plastics slowly release a fine oily film that settles on the inside of the windscreen. You barely notice it in summer, but in winter it gives fog something to cling to and turns oncoming headlights into a hazy glare.

Clean the inside of the glass monthly with a dedicated microfibre cloth — paper towels leave lint, and old rags redeposit oils. Work in straight overlapping strokes rather than circles so you can spot missed patches.

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Microfiber Car Washing Towel – Ultra-Soft, High Absorbent Car Drying & Detailing Cloth

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For the awkward lower corners where the windscreen meets the dash, a small squeegee with a built-in spray makes the job far less of a yoga session.

Glass wiper squeegee with spray for cleaning car windows

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Glass Wiper with Spray – Window Cleaning Squeegee

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Outside: washer fluid matters more than you think

Winter roads throw up a greasy mix of diesel residue and grime that plain water just smears around. Proper washer fluid cuts through it, so your wipers clear the glass instead of polishing the film into an even layer of glare.

Effervescent washer tablets are the easy way to keep fluid topped up — drop one in the reservoir, add water and you're done. No bulky bottles rolling around the boot.

All-season windshield washer effervescent tablets for cars

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All-Season Windshield Washer Effervescent Tablets Shellac-Free 4L

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After a winter wash, dry the glass properly. Water left to air-dry leaves mineral spots that scatter light at night. A high-absorbency drying towel finishes the glass clear rather than spotted.

Ultra-absorbent quick-dry PVA car wash towel for drying glass

Premium Car Wash Towel Ultra-Absorbent Quick-Dry for Auto Detailing

Soaks up huge amounts of water fast, so glass dries spot-free in one pass.

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Look after your wipers

Wipers that judder or leave arcs of haze are usually just dirty. Wipe the rubber edge with a damp microfibre cloth every few weeks — you'll be surprised how much black grime comes off — and lift the arms away from the glass on frosty nights so the rubber doesn't freeze to the screen.

Grit also collects in the cowl vents below the wipers, where it gets dragged onto the glass with every sweep. A burst of compressed air clears leaves and dust out of the cowl, vents and mirror housings in seconds.

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Turbo Jet Mini Air Blower – Handheld Dust Blower with Storage Bag

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Clear glass is the cheapest safety upgrade there is

None of this takes more than a few minutes a month: dry the cabin out, clean the inside film, keep washer fluid topped up and give the wipers an occasional wipe. Do those four things and winter mornings start with a turn of the key, not five minutes of squinting through haze. For everything else in your winter cleaning kit, browse our car care collection.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my windscreen fog up on the inside every morning?

Trapped cabin moisture — usually damp carpets, wet mats or a blocked cabin drain. Dry the interior out, run the A/C on warm to dehumidify, and the morning fog largely disappears.

Should I use the air conditioning to demist in winter?

Yes. The A/C compressor dries the air before it hits the glass, so warm air plus A/C clears fog several times faster than heat alone. Use fresh-air mode, not recirculation.

Can I just use water in my washer reservoir?

Plain water smears winter road film instead of cutting through it, and it can breed bacteria in the reservoir. Washer fluid — or a washer tablet dissolved in water — cleans properly and keeps jets clear.

How often should I clean the inside of my windscreen?

Monthly in winter. Interior plastics constantly off-gas a fine film that builds up on the glass, worsening fog and night-time glare, so a quick monthly wipe with a clean microfibre cloth keeps it under control.

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