DIY cleaning handles most resale inventory. But some items need professional care—either because home methods risk damage or because the item's value justifies expert handling.

The question isn't "can I clean this myself?" It's "should I?"

Typical Professional Cleaning Costs

Service Typical Cost
Dry cleaning (shirt/blouse) $5-10
Dry cleaning (suit jacket) $12-20
Dry cleaning (dress) $15-25
Dry cleaning (coat/overcoat) $20-35
Leather cleaning $40-80
Leather conditioning/restoration $75-150
Wedding dress cleaning $150-300
Suede cleaning $30-60
Specialty stain removal $15-40 additional

Prices vary by location. Urban areas typically cost more. Build relationships with local cleaners for potential volume discounts.

The ROI Calculation

Apply the same thinking as your repair decisions:

Value cleaned - Value as-is - Cleaning cost = ROI

If ROI is positive and meaningful relative to the item's value, professional cleaning makes sense.

Example: Vintage Wool Coat

Purchased for $15. Value cleaned: $120. Value as-is (minor odor, needs pressing): $70. Dry cleaning cost: $25.

ROI: $120 - $70 - $25 = $25 additional profit. Worth it.

Example: Basic Blazer

Purchased for $8. Value cleaned: $35. Value as-is: $28. Dry cleaning: $15.

ROI: $35 - $28 - $15 = -$8. Not worth it. DIY steam and sell.

When Professional Cleaning Makes Sense

High-Value Items

BOLO brands, designer pieces, and vintage collectibles where the sale price justifies the cost. A $300 vintage Burberry trench deserves $30 professional cleaning.

Delicate Materials You Can't Safely Handle

Silk, vintage rayon, heavily beaded or embellished items, structured garments with internal construction. The risk of DIY damage exceeds cleaning cost.

Severe Odors That Won't DIY

Heavy smoke, persistent mildew, chemical smells that home methods can't eliminate. Professional ozone treatment or specialized cleaning may be the only solution.

Leather Restoration

Beyond basic leather conditioning, significant restoration (color correction, deep cleaning, re-dyeing) requires professional equipment. High-value leather jackets and designer bags often justify the cost.

Wedding Dresses & Formal Gowns

Complex construction, delicate fabrics, and high sale prices make professional cleaning standard for this category.

Pro Tip
Ask your dry cleaner about "press only" service—often $5-8. If the item just needs pressing and light freshening (not full cleaning), this saves money while still getting professional results.

When to Skip Professional Cleaning

Low-Value Items

If cleaning cost exceeds 30-40% of expected sale price, it rarely makes sense. A $12 dry cleaning on a $30 item eats too much margin.

Items You Can Safely DIY

Cotton, polyester, most casual wear—home cleaning works fine. Don't pay professionals for what you can do yourself.

Items That Won't Sell Much Higher Cleaned

Some items sell at similar prices regardless of condition. Research comps—if cleaned and as-is prices are close, save the cleaning cost.

Finding the Right Cleaners

Standard Dry Cleaners

Fine for suits, dresses, wool coats. Ask about their process for delicates. Avoid cleaners that seem rushed or dismissive about fabric concerns.

Specialty Cleaners

For leather, suede, vintage items, and wedding dresses, seek specialists. They have equipment and expertise standard cleaners lack. Worth the premium for high-value pieces.

Building Relationships

Regular customers often get better service and pricing. Explain you're a reseller with ongoing volume. Some cleaners offer business discounts.

Before You Drop Off

Point out issues: Show stains, odors, or damage. Document with photos. Manage expectations about what cleaning can fix.

Ask about guarantees: What happens if they damage the item? Reputable cleaners have policies.

Get timeline: Rush service costs more. Plan ahead for items you need cleaned.

Keep receipts: Track cleaning costs in your profit spreadsheet. They're deductible business expenses.

The Time Factor

Professional cleaning isn't just about capability—it's about time. Even if you could hand-wash that silk blouse, is the 30 minutes worth it when a $10 dry clean gets better results?

Your time has value. Sometimes paying professionals is the most profitable choice, even for items you could technically handle yourself.