SIMPLI-MAGIC 3-Shelf Janitorial Cart (330 lb) Review
Affiliate disclosure: WC Safety earns a commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no extra cost to you.
The value cart does the cart job: three shelves, a lidded 25-gallon bag, tool holders, 330-pound rating per the listing — the standard route package at $40 under Rubbermaid. For light routes and tight budgets, the ergonomics benefit arrives identically.
Editorial rating: 4.3/5. A legitimate budget cart for light routes; the Rubbermaid earns its premium exactly where the duty gets heavy.
SIMPLI-MAGIC 3-Shelf Janitorial Cart (330 lb) — current price and availability on Amazon:
Check Price on Amazon →Key specs
| Shelves | 3 |
| Capacity | 330 lb per listing |
| Bag | 25-gal with lid |
| Extras | Mop and broom holders |
Listed at $134.99 on Amazon when we captured pricing (2026-07-16) — the button shows the live price.
Who it's for
Small facilities, churches, part-time custodial programs — routes measured in hours per week, not shifts per night.
Skip it if
Heavy nightly duty: value carts are value carts, and caster and shelf wear show up on schedule under real loads.
How it fits the facility safety program
The cart is route ergonomics infrastructure — everything rides, nothing loads spines — and with a locking cabinet it's also HazCom chemical custody on public floors. Stock it like the mobile closet it is. New to the department? Start at the janitorial & facility safety collection overview.
How it compares
vs Rubbermaid Traditional: the duty-cycle upgrade. (Our take: full Rubbermaid Traditional review.)
vs WaveBrake bucket: what rolls alongside either cart. (Our take: full WaveBrake bucket review.)
Pros and cons
Pros
- Full cart function at $135
- Lidded bag is a nice touch at this price
- Light enough for van-based crews
Cons
- Build to the price — casters first
- 330-lb rating is listing-stated
- No custody story at all
Build out the facility program
One product is a purchase; the program is what protects people. The chemistry rules live in the cleaning chemical safety guide and the wet-process discipline in the floor stripping guide; the whole hazard-to-product map is the custodial worker safety hub. Wave 1's decision tools carry the paper and waste programs: the dispenser compatibility guide, the liner size calculator, and the mil & micron decode, plus ranked picks for paper towels, liners, and wet floor signs. Crews need nitrile gloves, chemical-resistant gloves, splash goggles, and slip-resistant footwear; liquid failures belong to spill control. Shop the department: janitorial & facility safety, chemicals & dilution, equipment & floor machines, restroom supplies, shop towels & wipers — case-lot orders via bulk & business orders.
Bottom line: if the SIMPLI-MAGIC 3-Shelf Janitorial Cart (330 lb) fits your facility program, check the live listing:
Check Price on Amazon →Related janitorial reviews
- Rubbermaid Traditional 3-Shelf Janitorial Cart review
- Rubbermaid Executive Janitorial Cart with Locking Cabinet review
- Simple Green Pro HD Concentrate (1 Gal) review
- Simple Green D Pro 3 Plus Disinfectant (1 Gal) review
- Zep Neutral pH Floor Cleaner ZUNEUT128 (1 Gal) review
- Zep Wet-Look Floor Polish ZUWLFF128 (1 Gal) review
- Zep All-in-One Floor Care Kit ZULFKIT (4 x 1 Gal) review
Janitorial & facility supply FAQ
Are these prices current?
Every price in this review was captured from the live Amazon listing on 2026-07-16 and is shown for comparison — commercial chemistry, machines, and supplies reprice constantly, so the yellow buttons pull the live listing where current price and stock are shown.
Does WC Safety actually stock janitorial supplies?
We're a workplace-safety retailer and Amazon Associate: we curate, spec-check, and cross-link the products, and purchases happen on Amazon through our links. That model is why every claim here traces to the listing or the maker's published data rather than a warehouse pitch.
Why does a safety site review janitorial products?
Because custodial work is safety work: floors, chemicals, waste handling, and hand hygiene each map to an OSHA standard (walking-working surfaces, HazCom, bloodborne pathogens, sanitation). The custodial worker safety hub lays out the whole hazard-to-product map.
How are chemical claims handled in these reviews?
Strictly per the listing: where a product is marketed as a disinfectant or antimicrobial we say 'per the listing' and add nothing — EPA label directions govern actual use, and we never invent efficacy, certifications, or test results.
What safety rules apply to powered cleaning equipment?
Machine-specific training, GFCI-protected cords kept out of standing water, eye protection for slurry-throwing rotary work, hearing protection on long runs, and wet floor signs posted through every wet process. The custodial safety hub carries the task-by-task table.
What PPE goes with cleaning chemicals?
Disposable nitrile for routine diluted products; chemical-resistant gloves plus splash goggles for concentrates, strippers, and decanting. Section 8 of each product's SDS states the spec — match the glove to the sheet, not to habit.
Why does dilution control matter so much?
Over-concentration is triple waste: chemical exposure to the crew, slippery residue on floors, and budget poured down a drain. Measured dosing — pumps at minimum — turns label ratios into actual ratios; it's the cheapest compliance upgrade in the closet.
How were these products chosen?
Wave 2 of our janitorial department covers chemistry, dilution control, floor machines, commercial vacuums, carts, and restroom systems — selected from live Amazon data for review strength, real case pricing, and category coverage rather than sponsorship.
Can I order at facility scale?
Yes — everything reviews at case or unit quantities already, and multi-unit or standing orders route through our bulk & business orders page alongside the PPE the same crews need.
Where's the rest of the janitorial department?
Paper systems, can liners, wet floor signs, and mop buckets — Wave 1 — live in their own collections with a dispenser compatibility guide and a liner size calculator. The janitorial & facility safety department page maps all of it.
Why is a cart a safety purchase?
It deletes the carrying: buckets, cases, and bags ride instead of loading spines — the core MSD control of route work. The route also gets faster, which is why the ergonomics argument never has to stand alone.
What belongs on a standard cart?
Liners in both program sizes, signs (two minimum), gloves, labeled chemistry with dosing pumps, wipers, and the day's consumables. The cart is the closet's mobile edition — stock it deliberately.
When is a locking cabinet required?
Whenever the cart parks in public reach while crews work rooms — hospitality and healthcare specs increasingly write it in, and HazCom's spirit always implied it. Keys need an owner, though.
How long do commercial carts last?
Rubbermaid-class molded carts run a decade of nightly duty; value carts are casters-first consumables at heavy loads. Match the build to the route hours, not the catalog photo.
Cart or caddy for small facilities?
Under a few hours of route per day, a well-organized caddy plus the mop bucket's cart handles it. The full cart earns its footprint the day the route spans floors or wings.
How we review
WC Safety reviews are spec-honest: we work from the manufacturer's published data and the live Amazon listing, flag any claim that exists only in listing copy ("per the listing"), and never invent certifications or test results. Ratings are editorial judgments about fit-for-duty at the captured price — not aggregated user scores.
Sources
Manufacturer product pages and the Amazon listing linked above; OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 (walking-working surfaces), 1910.141 (sanitation), 1910.1200 (hazard communication), 1910.1030 (bloodborne pathogens) as referenced; our dispenser-refill pairing documentation in the compatibility guide.
Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety — workplace PPE retailer and Amazon Associate. Pricing captured 2026-07-16; click through for current pricing.
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