Cleaning is only half of leather maintenance. Every time leather is cleaned — or simply exposed to sun, heat, and repeated contact — it loses surface oils that kept it supple and resistant to cracking. A leather surface that is cleaned but never conditioned will age visibly faster than one that receives regular conditioning: the grain stiffens, the surface dulls, and eventually the leather begins to crack along the stress lines where it flexes with every passenger.
What Leather Conditioner Is
Leather Conditioner from Polishing Systems Inc is a dedicated leather conditioning treatment for finished, treated automotive, marine, and RV leather. It replenishes surface oils lost to cleaning, heat, and UV exposure, restores flexibility to the leather grain, and provides a protective surface layer against future drying. It is not a cleaner — always clean leather before applying conditioner so the conditioning agents penetrate the leather rather than binding to surface contamination.
Key Features and Why They Matter
- Restores surface oil content — conditions the leather at the surface level, where cracking and stiffening begin. Addresses the cause of leather deterioration rather than masking symptoms.
- Non-greasy finish — does not leave a slick or tacky residue on seats or steering wheels after application. Safe for daily contact surfaces.
- UV protection — provides a surface barrier that slows UV-related fading and oxidation of the leather dye layer.
- Compatible with treated and finished leather — designed for the coated, finished leather type found in virtually all automotive, marine, and RV seating.
What This Product Is NOT For
Do not use on aniline, nubuck, or suede leather — these open-pored, uncoated leathers require specialized conditioning products. Not designed for vinyl or synthetic leather (leatherette). Always clean leather before conditioning — applying conditioner to dirty leather traps contamination against the leather surface. Do not overapply — excess conditioner that is not absorbed will sit on the surface and attract dust.
Who Uses Leather Conditioner
Detail shops including conditioning as the final step in a complete interior leather service. Mobile detailers maintaining leather on regular maintenance schedules. Fleet operators extending the service life of leather in high-use vehicles. Boat detailers protecting marine leather from the combined effects of UV, salt air, and humidity. Enthusiasts maintaining their own premium leather interiors.
How to Use
- Start with clean leather: Apply only to leather that has been cleaned and is free of contamination.
- Apply to applicator: Dispense a small amount onto a soft microfiber or leather applicator pad.
- Work in sections: Apply in a thin, even layer across each leather section. Use a circular motion, then blend with a back-and-forth pass.
- Allow to penetrate: Let the conditioner sit for 2–5 minutes to allow absorption.
- Buff lightly: Buff with a clean, dry microfiber to remove any excess and achieve an even, matte-to-satin sheen. Do not leave product pooled in seams or stitching.
Why the 32 oz Quart Size
The 32oz quart is the standard restocking size for working detailers — large enough for multiple vehicles per purchase, small enough to store and handle without dispensing equipment. Shops performing leather conditioning on 4–8 vehicles per week will find the quart a practical bi-weekly replenishment. For higher volume, see the Leather Conditioner 1 Gallon. Always pair with Leather Cleaner 32 oz for the complete clean-and-condition workflow.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I condition automotive leather?
In a daily driver, every 4–8 weeks of conditioning maintains leather flexibility and protects the surface. In vehicles with significant sun exposure, dry climates, or high-use seating, monthly conditioning is appropriate. Annual conditioning is the minimum — leather that is never conditioned will visibly age faster and crack along flex lines over time.
Can Leather Conditioner be used on a leather steering wheel?
Yes — apply to a microfiber and wipe across the wheel, then buff completely dry with a clean towel. Verify the wheel surface is non-slick before driving. Our Leather Conditioner is formulated to be non-greasy, but always confirm a dry finish on safety-critical contact surfaces.
Do I need to clean leather before conditioning?
Yes — this is not optional. Applying conditioner to contaminated leather traps body oils, sweat, and debris against the leather surface under the conditioning layer. Always clean first with Leather Cleaner, then condition. The clean-then-condition sequence is the correct professional workflow.
Is Leather Conditioner safe on perforated seats?
Yes, with care. Apply to a microfiber — do not spray directly into perforations. Use a light, thin application and buff promptly so excess conditioner does not pool in the perforations and seep behind the seat cover.
Will Leather Conditioner change the sheen of my leather?
Leather Conditioner leaves a light, natural satin-to-matte sheen consistent with factory-finished automotive leather. It does not leave a high-gloss or greasy appearance when applied correctly and buffed out. If leather appears shinier than expected, too much product was applied — buff more aggressively with a dry microfiber to remove excess.



