Cleaning thrifted clothes properly increases value and buyer confidence. Do it wrong, and you destroy inventory. The key: understand your fabrics and use the least aggressive method that works.

This guide covers fabric-specific cleaning methods, when to wash versus when to skip, and how to handle the common issues resellers face—stains, odors, and general thrift store grime.

The Golden Rule: Start Gentle

Always begin with the least invasive method and escalate only if necessary. A standard wash cycle can destroy vintage rayon in seconds. A gentle spot clean might be all you need.

Before any cleaning: check the care label, test on an inconspicuous area, and when in doubt, do less rather than more.

Fabric-by-Fabric Guide

Cotton & Cotton Blends

Safety level: High — most forgiving fabric

Method: Machine wash cold or warm, tumble dry low. Pre-treat stains with OxiClean or dish soap. Inspect pits for yellowing before washing—set stains need pre-treatment.

Watch for: Shrinkage on pre-washed vintage. High heat can shrink older cotton significantly.

Wool & Cashmere

Safety level: Medium — can shrink or felt if mishandled

Method: Hand wash in cold water with wool-specific detergent (Eucalan, Woolite). Gently press—never wring. Lay flat to dry on a towel.

Watch for: Agitation causes felting. Never use regular wash cycle. Check for moth holes before investing cleaning time.

Silk

Safety level: Low — water can spot, colors can bleed

Method: Dry clean recommended. If hand washing: cold water, silk-specific detergent, no rubbing, no wringing. Roll in towel to remove water, hang to dry away from sunlight.

Watch for: Water spots, color bleeding, loss of sheen. Test in hidden area first.

Vintage Rayon & Viscose

Safety level: Very Low — water weakens fibers dramatically

Method: Dry clean only for vintage pieces. Modern rayon may tolerate gentle hand wash, but vintage rayon can literally fall apart when wet.

Watch for: Shrinkage, fiber damage, loss of drape. When in doubt, dry clean or sell as-is with condition notes.

Polyester & Synthetics

Safety level: High — very durable

Method: Machine wash cold, tumble dry low. Polyester holds odors—may need extra rinse or odor treatment.

Watch for: Heat damage (melting, pilling). Keep away from high heat.

Denim

Safety level: High for standard, medium for raw/selvedge

Method: Machine wash cold, inside out, hang to dry. For raw denim: spot clean only or gentle cold soak—washing changes the fade pattern.

Watch for: Indigo transfer to other items. Wash denim separately.

Leather & Suede: Never machine wash. See our dedicated leather care guide and sneaker cleaning guide for proper methods.

When NOT to Wash

Some items shouldn't be washed at all—or should go straight to professional cleaning:

Structured garments: Blazers, suit jackets, and tailored pieces have internal construction (canvas, padding) that washing destroys. Spot clean or dry clean only.

Beaded or embellished items: Beads can crack, sequins can melt, embroidery can shrink. Spot clean around embellishments.

Vintage pieces over 50 years old: Fabric integrity may be compromised. Professional cleaning or careful hand cleaning only.

Anything you can't identify: Unknown fabric? Don't risk it. Sell as-is with honest condition notes, or test a hidden area first.

Pro Tip
For items you can't wash, steam is your friend. A garment steamer kills bacteria, relaxes wrinkles, and freshens fabric without water damage. See our pressing and presentation guide.

The Reseller Cleaning Workflow

Process your thrift hauls efficiently:

Step 1: Sort by fabric type. Group cotton together, wool together, delicates together. This prevents repeated machine loads and reduces handling time.

Step 2: Inspect for issues. Check for stains, odors, damage. Items with issues go into separate piles for targeted treatment.

Step 3: Pre-treat stains. Address stains before washing—heat sets stains permanently.

Step 4: Wash in batches. Machine-washables together, hand-wash items in a basin, dry-clean-only items set aside.

Step 5: Air dry when possible. Hang drying extends garment life and prevents shrinkage. Reserve dryer for items that can handle it.

Step 6: Steam and press. Finish with steaming for a photo-ready appearance. See pressing guide.

Common Cleaning Mistakes

Using Hot Water

Hot water shrinks natural fibers and sets protein-based stains (blood, sweat). Default to cold water unless you have a specific reason for warm.

Over-Drying

High heat damages fibers, causes shrinkage, and sets wrinkles. Use low heat or air dry.

Ignoring Care Labels

Care labels exist for a reason. "Dry Clean Only" on silk means don't experiment unless you're prepared to lose the piece.

Mixing Colors on First Wash

Thrifted items may not be color-fast. Wash darks and brights separately on first wash, or test for color bleeding first.

Cost-Benefit Analysis

Cleaning takes time and supplies cost money. Apply the same decision framework you use for sourcing:

A $5 thrift find that needs dry cleaning ($8-15) only makes sense if the final sale price justifies the total investment. Factor cleaning costs into your sourcing decisions, not after purchase.

For high-value items (designer, vintage collectible), professional cleaning protects your investment. For common items, batch process with home methods to keep costs low.