Rejuvenate Floor Restorer
Rejuvenate is a floor surface treatment that adds a high gloss shine to those lackluster wood, linoleum and tile floors.
Ease of Use/Performance: 23/25
Convenience/Storage 25/25
Appearance/Design 22/25
How much I enjoy 22/25
Total: 92/100

UPDATE:
Some six months ago I reviewed a sample of Rejuvenate by coating it on a section of my hallway at the top of my stairs. This spot is a high traffic area being right in front of the bathroom and my bedroom as well as being the top of the flight of stairs for the upstairs.
This coating is still going strong without fading, peeling or getting milky, it works great. I can still see where I applied it and it looks much better than the previous coating of floor coating that was on before I applied the Rejuvenate.
I really like Rejuvenate Floor Restorer and highly recommend it for a long lasting alternative to refinishing your floors.
Origianl Review:
Rejuvenate is one of those hard to ignore products on the infomercials and late night TV commercials that coats the floor with a polymer finish that truly shines. You can use rejuvenate on any wood, tile, linoleum, marble and many other surfaces with relative ease.
Like so many of those infomercial products skepticism abounds and yet I found very few negative comments for Rejuvenate in all my search on the internet. Rejuvenate works extremely well for me and should for you too.
Rejuvenate is a floor restorer and finish that coats the floor in a polymer coating that looks much like very weak milk in the bottle. It takes a very short time to dry, much shorter than the 45 minutes they tell you to let the application dry in the instructions. Of course this will vary upon individual conditions for your home or area when you apply it.
The application is simple and very much like putting down a polyurethane coating on a wood floor and looks almost as good. Clean the floor and wash it with a decent cleaner that will not leave a residue behind, I just used a good floor cleaner and then repeated the cleaning with hot clean water a few times. My test floor will be a chunk of my kitchen linoleum, a very small chunk, and my upstairs wood floor landing.
I tested this on a few squares of linoleum in my kitchen to see how well it works on a plastic linoleum surface and wanted to work mainly on my worst floor. The landing on the upstairs in front of the stairs gets the most wear in my house and it shows the polyurethane is gone in large pieces.
