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We have a brand new paver stone walkway/patio. To my dismay, I noticed that their were leaf and acorn stains from the oak tree in the front yard. I've learned my lesson and I'm going to try to keep the walkway swept more regularly.

Will these stains go away with enough rain & time? If not, what's the best remedy for removing these stains? What's the best mode of prevention?

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The tannins from oak leaves will leave stains behind. I would suggest not worrying about it. Those stains are just character, part of nature. Choose to appreciate nature.

You could probably bleach them out (using simple chlorine bleach or oxalic acid), but why? Why introduce harmful chemicals into the area that may hurt you or damage your plants? Besides, the bleach may not get everything consistently the same color as it was. So you may just leave yourself with another problem to solve.

Sunlight will cause them to fade over time anyway, and as other stains occur, the pavers will become randomly stained, eventually all to the same color.

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    Call it "patina" and your house value will go up!
    – Jay Bazuzi
    Nov 11, 2010 at 3:20
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    I'm accepting this because I've come to see the leaf stains as kind of pretty. The other answers are great though and this is a purely subjective choice.
    – Doug T.
    Nov 11, 2010 at 20:13
  • The bleaching left by attempted stain removal was worse than the actual stains, so I've learned to leave it alone myself. Nov 3, 2012 at 17:57
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I have the same thing on my driveway. A good power washer can remove the stains. Once cleaned, use a concrete sealer to seal the pavers and that should take care of it.

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I have a huge concrete patio - and oak trees. I just mix bleach and water in my sprayer and spray the stains. Let it sit a few hours, rinse and they disappear. The reason I came to this site is to find out how to prevent the stains in the first place - saw this question and thought I'd at least contribute what I have observed on the cleaning part of the question.

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Try oxalic acid first as this is reasonably mild - look for rust and bore stain remover in your hardware shop. If this doesn't work then try hydrochloric acid (can buy fairly cheaply from a pool shop and is pre-diluted to about 32%). Before applying any acid make sure the paving is saturated with water, this avoids the paver sucking in the acid which will damage the paver. Follow manufacturer instructions for oxalic acid or apply hydrochloric acid and leave for a couple of minutes then wash down with plenty of water. If the stain is still there then you may need o leave the acid a bit longer. Always test an inconspicuous area first and wear safety gogggles and gloves. Not sure, but I have read that chlorine bleach can actually darken the tannin stains - be careful. Once fixed then seal the pavers after allowing to dry out a couple of days.

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You could try an oxygen bleach like StainSolver. Its not harmful to the environment. I don't have any association with it other than being a customer.

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Bleach and water do work very very well, though they are hard on the worms, they come out of the ground where the run off spills over, thus a sparing amount in a sprayer works well and is economical, just dilute somewhat and spray on. I mist the concrete fairly well prior to spraying, I also like using a stiff brush to distribute well and rinse before drying.

I am going to seal the surface of the pavers with Thompsons water seal, I expect this will minimize the tannins from leaves staining the pavers and concrete, though there are pricier sealer options out there.

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Sometimes the easiest answer to a problem is the simplest. What I do to avoid leaf stain's is to simply sweep the deck when it is wet from rain and the leaf stains come right off. It is best to remove the leaves as soon as possible, but if that is not possible than the surface should be wetted and than swept.

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When I had stains on my new pavers from gum leaves, we used napisan: made a paste and then put on the stains. The stains were gone without the scrubbing.

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Go to store buy cheap bleach pour onto drive way and the stain go away wash down with water😂

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    Welcome to Home Improvement. The intention is that each answer post provide a solution that is substantively different from what has already been contributed. This post really just duplicates what has already been suggested by many other answers.
    – fixer1234
    Sep 24, 2018 at 0:18

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