Survive Dorm Life. Skip Everyone's Germs.
Small enough for your desk. Fast enough for your schedule. UV-C disinfection for your phone, your desk and the shared spaces that never actually get clean.
Shared spaces mean shared everything - including what you don't want.
College life means trading personal space for community. The upside is obvious. The downside is that every surface you touch has already been touched by a few hundred other people.
Dorm rooms are documented germ hotspots
Multiple people sharing a small space, recycled air, shared surfaces that rarely get a proper disinfect. Studies of college dorms consistently find high bacterial counts on desks, door handles and shared objects.
Shared bathrooms are a different story entirely
Communal bathroom faucet handles and door handles are touched by dozens of people in various states of health, every single day. Wiping them down is someone else's job - which means it usually doesn't happen.
The communal kitchen is nobody's responsibility
Shared appliance handles, counters and communal utensils in a campus kitchen see heavy use and inconsistent cleaning. One person who is sick can leave a trail across surfaces that everyone else touches.
Library desks and shared keyboards add up
You cannot control what the person before you left on that library desk or computer keyboard. During cold and flu season - or finals, when everyone is run-down - those surfaces are a direct exposure risk.
Pick your dorm setup
Start with the device that handles your whole room, or grab the full kit before move-in.
UVCeed Disinfection Device
Clips to your phone, fits in a pocket and disinfects any surface in seconds. Desk, keyboard, phone, door handle, bathroom faucet - one device covers your whole routine.
The Dorm Kit
The device plus the Smart Lid - a complete kit for dorm life. Great gift option for parents sending a student to campus for the first time.
Fast enough for a schedule that never stops
No chemicals. No setup. No waiting. Three steps and you are done.
Clip it on
Snap UVCeed onto your phone. It is ready in seconds - small enough to leave on your desk or drop in a bag without thinking about it.
Aim and disinfect
Point the device at your desk, keyboard, phone, door handle or any shared surface and hold on each area until disinfected. Your phone screen shows a live coverage map so you can see every spot that has been treated. Move through as many surfaces as you need in one session.
Done in seconds
Hospital-grade UV-C kills 99.99%* of bacteria on directly exposed surfaces. No wipes, no spray, no residue - put it down and get back to studying.
Students who stopped getting sick every semester
My roommate got sick in October and I was sharing a bathroom with three other people on the floor. I used this on the faucet handles, my desk and my phone every morning. I stayed healthy through midterms. Worth every cent.
Shared bathroom with five other people. I started running this over the faucet handle and light switch before I used them during cold season. The fact that it shows you where you've covered on your phone is weirdly satisfying.
I sent this with my son when he moved into his first dorm. He actually uses it - which says something, because he's 18 and not known for thinking about germs. It's small, fast and it doesn't require him to remember to buy wipes.
The 5-minute dorm room decontamination routine
You do not need to be paranoid about germs to recognize that a dorm room is a high-exposure environment. Shared air, shared bathrooms, shared study spaces and a rotating cast of visitors means you are in contact with more surfaces - and more people's bacteria - than at almost any other point in adult life. Here is a practical, fast routine you can run with UVCeed that covers the highest-risk spots without turning hygiene into a part-time job.
Your phone - start here
Your phone goes everywhere and touches everything: your face, your desk, the library table, the cafeteria tray. Most people clean it never, or wipe it occasionally with a cloth that is not actually disinfecting anything. A five-second pass with the UVCeed device covers both sides of your phone screen and case. Make this the first thing in your morning routine - while your alarm is going off, scan the phone before you fully put it down.
Your desk and keyboard
You spend hours at your desk every day. Food, drinks and hands all make contact with that surface. If you have a keyboard, it is one of the highest-touch objects you own - every keystroke is a contact point. Aim the UVCeed device at the desk surface and keyboard, holding on each area until it is treated - about 30 seconds total. The live coverage map on your phone screen makes it easy to confirm you have covered the full area.
The door handle - yours and the shared ones
Your own room door handle is touched multiple times a day - by you and by anyone who knocks or lets themselves in. UV-C works well on smooth metal and plastic handles: a few seconds per handle is enough for a thorough surface pass. For the bathroom, focus on the faucet handle (touched before hands are clean) and the light switch.
The shared bathroom
You cannot control who used the faucet before you or how recently the handles were cleaned. A quick UV-C pass over the faucet handle before you start your routine adds a layer of protection that costs you about ten seconds. The same goes for the door handle you push on the way in. UV-C works on the surfaces the light reaches directly - a smooth metal or plastic handle is exactly the kind of surface it handles well.
The mini-fridge handle
If you have a mini-fridge in your room, the handle is touched multiple times a day - often right before you grab food. A quick scan takes two seconds and keeps it from becoming a transfer point during the times of year when everyone around you is sick.
The one rule to remember
UV-C works by line of sight. The light has to reach the surface directly. For flat surfaces like desks and phone screens, this is straightforward - aim the device and hold on each area, and the coverage map on your phone shows you what has been treated. For handles and 3D objects, rotate as you go to cover all sides. That is the whole technique.
Running this routine takes under five minutes on a thorough day and under two on a quick one. During cold and flu season - and especially in the weeks before finals when sleep deprivation makes everyone more vulnerable - those five minutes are some of the most cost-effective health maintenance you can do.
*Based on UV-C efficacy against tested bacteria on directly exposed surfaces. See product details for testing information.
Everything students (and their parents) ask us
Is it safe to use in a shared room?
How fast is it really?
Does it work on a laptop and keyboard?
Is it loud or disruptive to my roommate?
Do I have to buy refills or replacement parts?
Is it worth it on a student budget?
Send them to campus with backup.
The Dorm Kit is the move-in gift that actually gets used - no chemicals to run out of, no wipes to remember to buy. One device for the whole semester.