6 Things You Should Never Put in Your Washing Machine
At Hamlet Laundry Ltd (London), we see the same preventable laundry mistakes again and again—often after a favourite garment (or a home washer) has already paid the price. This guide is designed to help you avoid the most common “never wash” items, plus what to do instead.
A quick science note: washing isn’t just “soaking.” Agitation and friction can physically break down fibres. One peer-reviewed study measuring microfiber shedding across consumer textiles found microfiber loss varied dramatically by material and construction—ranging from 9.6 mg to 1,240 mg per kg of textile per wash (over multiple domestic laundry cycles).
Bonus: Two habits that quietly damage washers: overloading and using too much detergent.
1) Read the care label—literally
If it says “Dry Clean Only”, treat that as a hard stop. Multiple laundry experts and publications flag this as one of the most common causes of irreversible shape and finish damage.
2) Ask two practical questions
If the answer is “yes,” your safest move is hand-wash, spot-clean, or professional care.
A typical cycle combines water + detergent + mechanical action + spin force. That’s perfect for durable cotton tees and towels. But for delicate fibres, coatings, adhesives, foams, and heavy items, that same process can:
And beyond fabric care, domestic laundry is also a known source of microfiber emissions. Research continues to quantify this and identify factors (textile type, construction, washing conditions) that influence shedding.
Never wash: “Dry clean only” items; structured blazers; tailored coats; lined pieces.
Why it’s risky
“Dry clean only” often means the garment’s shape and finish depend on materials that don’t tolerate water and agitation—like interlinings, adhesives, special dyes, or delicate surface finishes. Experts specifically warn that machine washing can distort structure and damage the piece.
What to do instead
Hamlet Laundry pro note (London)
The most common “regret wash” we see is a structured jacket that loses its shape after one home cycle. If you’re unsure, bring it to a professional before experimenting—especially with tailored pieces.
Never wash: silk blouses, velvet items, lace garments, many cashmere knits (unless explicitly machine-wash safe).
Why it’s risky
Delicate fibres and weaves are more vulnerable to abrasion, stretching, snagging, and surface wear. Clothing-care experts frequently caution against machine washing high-sensitivity materials.
What to do instead
Hamlet Laundry pro note
If you want one rule that saves wardrobes: separate “delicates” from “durables.” A single zip, hook, or rough textile can permanently snag silk or lace.
Never wash: sequined dresses, beaded tops, garments with glued-on details.
Why it’s risky
Embellishments can:
This category is routinely listed by laundry-pro sources as “do not machine wash.”
What to do instead
Hamlet Laundry pro note
When customers tell us “the washer started making noise,” it’s sometimes not the machine—it’s an item shedding hardware or embellishments inside the system.
Never wash: leather jackets; suede shoes; anything with leather panels or trims.
Why it’s risky
Leather and suede don’t behave like fabric. Water and detergent can strip oils, stiffen the material, and change texture permanently. Laundry-pro guidance consistently flags leather and suede as “never” items for the washing machine.
What to do instead
Hamlet Laundry pro note
Even “small leather accents” on otherwise washable items (like certain trainers) can be the part that fails first—cracking, fading, or deforming.
Never wash: memory foam pillows (and many foam inserts).
Why it’s risky
Laundry professionals commonly warn that washing can damage foam structure—tearing, clumping, or breaking it down—making the pillow less supportive.
What to do instead
Hamlet Laundry pro note
People usually discover this the hard way: the pillow looks okay wet, then dries lumpy or misshapen.
Never wash: wool, jute, silk rugs; heavy bath mats; oversized comforters/duvets that strain the drum.
Why it’s risky
Many rugs and heavy items:
Laundry-pro guidance often recommends only machine washing rugs if they’re explicitly labelled washable, and warns against other fibres like wool, jute, and silk.
What to do instead
If an item becomes “astonishingly heavy” when wet (common with bath mats and thick rugs), it’s often safer to avoid the home washer entirely.
These aren’t “items,” but they’re responsible for a lot of poor results and washer strain.
1) Overloading the washing machine
Overloading can cause imbalance and stress the machine during spin. It also reduces wash performance because water and detergent can’t circulate properly.
2) Using too much detergent
More detergent doesn’t mean cleaner clothes. Excess detergent can leave residue, extend cycles, and contribute to washer issues over time, according to laundry-pro guidance.
| Item / habit | Why it’s risky | Safer alternative |
| Dry-clean-only & structured garments | Shape/finish can distort; interlinings/adhesives may fail | Professional cleaning; follow careexactly |
| Silk / velvet / cashmere / lace | Abrasion, snagging, stretching; surface wear | Hand-wash cold; gentle detergent; dry flat |
| Sequins / beads / embellishments | Snagging + detachment; potential machine issues | Spot-clean; professional care for embellished pieces |
| Leather / suede | Loss of oils, stiffness, permanent texture change | Leather/suede specialist; careful spot-clean |
| Memory foam pillows | Foam can break down, tear, deform | Spot-clean; air dry thoroughly |
| Rugs / bulky heavy items | Water weight + imbalance; fibre damage; washer strain | Professional clean; only machine wash if labelled washable |
| Overloading | Poor wash + imbalance stress | Leave space for movement; follow load guidelines |
| Too much detergent | Residue, longer cycles, washer issues | Measure detergent; match dose to soil level |
Can I wash “dry clean only” if I use cold water?
If the label says dry clean only, don’t assume cold water makes it safe. Experts warn these garments often rely on construction materials and finishes that can fail in a wash cycle.
Can rugs ever go in the washing machine?
Sometimes—but only if the rug is explicitly labelled washable. Many fibres (including wool, jute, and silk) aren’t good candidates for machine washing and may shed, warp, or degrade.
Why are memory foam pillows not machine washable?
Laundry professionals caution that washing can damage the foam’s internal structure, leading to clumping, tearing, or permanent deformation. Spot-cleaning is usually safer unless the label says otherwise.
What happens if I overload my washer?
Overloading can reduce cleaning performance and create imbalance during the spin cycle, which stresses the machine. Laundry pros commonly flag overloading as a cause of both poor results and washer wear.
Is “washing machine damage” really a concern—or just a scare tactic?
It’s real. Many of the “never wash” categories (heavy rugs, items that detach hardware, persistent imbalance from overload) create mechanical stress or clog risks. That’s why consumer-facing guidance repeatedly includes both garment damage and washer damage in the same warning lists.
Most everyday laundry is easy to handle at home. But if you’re dealing with:
professional garment care can be the difference between “cleaned” and “ruined.”
If you’re in London, Hamlet Laundry Ltd can help you choose the right treatment—especially for items where the care label is confusing or the materials are mixed (e.g., wool with leather trim, sequins on silk). We aim to keep this guidance practical: if it’s safe to do at home, we’ll tell you; if it’s risky, we’ll recommend a safer route.
The washer is powerful—so the best laundry habit isn’t “wash everything,” it’s wash the right things the right way. When in doubt:
That approach saves clothes, avoids machine stress, and (quietly) saves money in the long run.
Some garments are simply too valuable, too delicate, or too complicated to risk in a home washing machine. That’s where professional care makes all the difference.
At Hamlet Laundry Ltd, we help Londoners protect their clothes—and their time—by taking the uncertainty out of laundry and garment care.
โ๏ธ Expert garment care for delicates, structured pieces, and special fabrics
โ๏ธ Professional dry cleaning & laundry tailored to each item’s care label
โ๏ธ Convenient pickup & delivery across London (no trips, no queues)
โ๏ธ Wash & fold services for everyday laundry—clean, fresh, ready to wear
โ๏ธ Honest advice: if it’s safe to do at home, we’ll tell you
๐งบ Whether it’s a tailored blazer, a silk blouse, a bulky duvet, or just a busy week of laundry—you don’t have to gamble with your clothes.
๐ Let Hamlet Laundry handle the hard parts, so your clothes last longer, look better, and stay stress-free.
๐ Based in London | Trusted by locals who care about their clothes
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