Tazza Wipe Dispenser Floor Stand (Stainless) Review
Affiliate disclosure: WC Safety earns a commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no extra cost to you.
The station our wet-wipe rolls were waiting for: a stainless floor stand that feeds jumbo rolls from the top and swallows used wipes in its built-in bin — dispensing and disposal in one fixture, which is the difference between a wipe program and a roll on a shelf.
Editorial rating: 4.5/5. The fixture that completes the Everwipe purchase; place it where hands already are.
Tazza Wipe Dispenser Floor Stand (Stainless) — current price and availability on Amazon:
Check Price on Amazon →Key specs
| Material | Stainless steel |
| Function | Jumbo wipe roll + built-in trash |
| Capacity | 1.5-gal bin |
| Placement | Free-standing |
Listed at $129.99 on Amazon when we captured pricing (2026-07-18) — the button shows the live price.
Who it's for
Gyms, studios, schools, and co-working floors running self-serve equipment wiping — one stand per zone.
Skip it if
Wall-space-rich single stations where a mounted dispenser and a nearby can already work.
How it fits the facility safety program
Route tools and system consumables are where programs live or die — the pad float, the stocked station, the right broom on the right surface. Hourly-touched hardware, felt daily. New to the department? Start at the janitorial & facility safety collection overview.
How it compares
vs Everwipe W12 rolls: the refill stream. (Our take: full Everwipe W12 rolls review.)
vs light-duty 5,000: the volume case. (Our take: full light-duty 5,000 review.)
Pros and cons
Pros
- Dispense + dispose in one footprint
- Stainless survives member abuse
- Fits jumbo roll formats incl. our Everwipe cases
Cons
- $130 per station adds up across zones
- Bin needs its own liner-and-empty routine
- Verify roll diameter fit on off-brand rolls
Build out the facility program
These attach-gaps close loops the rest of the department opened: pads for the HYGEN frame, stands for the Everwipe rolls, granules for the norovirus protocol, machines for the flood and mold guides. Decision tools: dispenser compatibility, liner calculator, mil & micron decode. The safety spine: custodial worker safety hub + chemical safety + floor stripping, with nitrile gloves and splash goggles on every crew. Shop: janitorial & facility safety — equipment, chemicals, wipers, signs — case orders via bulk & business orders.
Bottom line: if the Tazza Wipe Dispenser Floor Stand (Stainless) fits your facility program, check the live listing:
Check Price on Amazon →Related janitorial reviews
- Rubbermaid HYGEN 18" Microfiber Wet Pad (Red) review
- Rubbermaid HYGEN Disposable Microfiber Pads (8-Count) review
- Yocada 24" Heavy-Duty Push Broom review
- Ettore ProGrip Window Cleaning Kit (65000) review
- Zep HDPRO9 Pro Spray Bottles (9-Case) review
- SMELLEZE Vomit Cleanup Absorbent Powder (2 lb) review
- New Pig Bodily Fluid Cleanup Kit (10 Responses) review
Janitorial & facility supply FAQ
Are these prices current?
Every price was captured from the live Amazon listing on 2026-07-18 and moves constantly — the yellow buttons open the live listings with current price and stock.
Does WC Safety actually stock these products?
We're a workplace-safety retailer and Amazon Associate: we curate and spec-check; purchases happen on Amazon through our links, which is why every claim traces to the listing or maker data.
Why were these specific products added?
They're attach-gaps our own analytics exposed: consumables for hardware we already stock (HYGEN pads, wipe stands), supplies our published protocols name (absorbent granules, labeled bottles), and the restoration machines our page-1 cleanup guides imply.
How do compliance claims get handled?
Per the listing, strictly — disinfectant, septic-safe, and rating language is reported as published with the regulatory context to verify fit. We add nothing.
What ties this wave to the safety program?
Everything: HazCom (labeled bottles), bloodborne response (fluid kits), mold/flood recovery (the drying-and-filtration machines), and the walking-working-surfaces logic behind barriers and drying. The custodial worker safety hub carries the map.
Can I order at facility scale?
Yes — case and multi-unit orders route through our bulk & business orders page alongside the PPE the same crews need.
Where are the decision tools?
The dispenser compatibility guide, liner size calculator, mil & micron decode, and nine best-of guides — plus the cleanup protocol library in the how-to blog these products supply.
Where's the rest of the department?
Eleven collections under janitorial & facility safety, 148 products deep, from paper systems to restoration machines — every consumable matched to its hardware.
How many HYGEN pads does a flat-mop program need?
Rooms per shift plus laundry float — typically 20-40 per crew. The pad inventory is the system; underbuying it quietly recreates the string mop's cross-contamination.
What's the microfiber laundering rule?
No fabric softener, ever — it coats the fibers dead. Warm wash, low dry, hundreds of cycles; color-code by zone and wash zones separately.
Wipe stands: what maintenance do they need?
Bin liners on the round schedule, roll reloads before empty, and a weekly wipe-down of the stand itself — a grimy hygiene station is its own counterargument.
Push broom vs dust mop assignment?
Surface decides: stiff push bristles for concrete, docks, and debris; dust mop fibers for fine interior dust on finished floors. Wrong tool on either surface just relocates the mess.
What's the professional window method?
Washer wets and scrubs, squeegee clears top-down in overlapping pulls, huck towel details edges and sills. The kit provides the first two; the technique takes an afternoon to own.
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, 1910.1030, and 1910.1200 as referenced; EPA mold guidance and CDC cleanup protocols referenced via our how-to library, not reproduced.
Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety — workplace PPE retailer and Amazon Associate. Pricing captured 2026-07-18; click through for current pricing.
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