How to Wash Workwear Properly Uniform, Hi-Vis & Heavy-Duty Care (Hamlet Laundry Pro Guide)
Workwear isn’t like weekend laundry. It collects grease, grit, sweat, and sometimes contamination—and the wrong wash routine can leave clothes looking “clean” but still smelling bad, wearing out faster, or (in the case of hi-vis) losing performance.
At Hamlet Laundry Ltd (London), we clean workwear every day—from light-duty uniforms to heavy-duty gear and hi-vis. This guide shares the same logic we use in professional laundering, translated into safe, practical steps you can apply at home or in a workplace laundry setup.
If you only read one section, read this:
Keep reading if you want the “why” and the pro-level stain/hi-vis protocols.
Some workwear should not go into a home washer at all—because cross-contamination is a real risk.
Do not home-wash garments that may be contaminated with:
In healthcare contexts, even official guidance notes that facilities should provide laundering or clear instructions based on exposure risk.
What to do instead
When people say “my work clothes still smell,” it’s usually because one of these levers is off:
A peer-reviewed household laundry study measuring soil removal and bacterial reduction showed that outcomes vary substantially with temperature and detergent concentration—highlighting that “lower temperature” isn’t automatically equivalent unless the rest of the process is adjusted.
Sort into at least two loads:
This matters because heavy soil needs more chemistry/time and can redeposit onto cleaner items.
For workwear, pre-treatment isn’t optional—it’s the difference between “mostly clean” and properly clean.
General rule: apply a stain remover or a small amount of detergent directly to the stain, gently work it in, and wait 10–30 minutes.
Why this works (simple science): enzyme detergents commonly use enzymes like proteases (good on protein-based stains) and lipases (help with fats/oils). A recent study tested protease–lipase combinations and found improved stain removal on cotton and polyester fabrics compared to detergent alone.
Use the hottest temperature the garmentallows that still fits your safety and fabric needs.
Hygiene note (honest and specific): In healthcare uniform research, domestic laundering at 60°C for 10 minutes was found sufficient to decontaminate hospital uniforms in the study setup, achieving very high bacterial reduction, with detergent helping and ironing removing post-wash recontamination.
That doesn’t mean “everyone must wash everything at 60°C,” but it does support a real principle: temperature + detergent + process quality materially affect hygiene outcomes.
A separate peer-reviewed study comparing different household wash scenarios found that bacterial reduction and soil removal can trade off depending on the temperature and detergent concentration used.
Two practical notes we see often:
If your machine has it, an extra rinse helps on heavy loads.
This is the #1 workwear washing problem.
Grease often binds with fine particulates (dust/metal grime), creating a soil mix that plain washing struggles to lift without pre-treatment.
Pro tip: If a garment comes out with a “clean smell” but the stain remains, don’t tumble dry it yet. Re-treat and wash again.
Hi-vis isn’t just clothing—it’s safety gear.
Many hi-vis garments use retroreflective tapes designed to meet performance requirements associated with EN ISO 20471 high-visibility garments. Tape manufacturers publish care instructions because the tape performance depends on correct processing. For example, ORAFOL’s ORALITE garment tape documents describe tape use on EN ISO 20471:2013 garments and discuss industrial wash-cycle qualification on specific background fabrics.
Some ORALITE care documents also note certification/testing for a number of wash cycles under specified methods and emphasize that changing the process changes responsibility—meaning: follow the specified care process if you need performance retention.
When to replace hi-vis
Replace if:
Odor isn’t just “dirt.” It’s often:
Evidence note: household laundry testing shows different wash parameters change bacterial reduction outcomes; temperature and detergent concentration matter.
| Workwear type | Best practice | Avoid |
| Cotton-heavy trousers/hoodies | Pre-treat stains; don’t over-dry | High heat tumble on already-tight garments |
| Polycotton uniforms | Sort by soil; correct detergent dose | Overloading (residue → odor) |
| Stretch workwear | Gentle cycle ifsuggests; lower spin | High heat drying that weakens elastane |
| Waterproof/technical outerwear | Follow label; close all fasteners | Random additives that can affect finishes |
| Hi-vis/reflective | Follow label + tape guidance; protect tape | Fabric softener and excessive heat (unless allowed) |
Use “soil level” and “odor” as your guide—plus job requirements.
A practical baseline:
If you’re in a hygiene-critical environment, follow employer/site policy.
If you regularly wash heavy soil loads:
The core principle: drying prevents odor recurrence and helps reduce microbial persistence in laundry workflows.
If you manage uniforms for a team, the “home method” breaks down because:
That’s where a professional system helps: consistent sorting, stain handling, controlled processes, and reliable schedules.
If you’re based in London and want workwear handled end-to-end, Hamlet Laundry Ltd can help with a practical workflow (pickup/delivery depending on your setup) so your team’s gear stays clean, presentable, and longer-lasting—without you spending evenings fighting grease stains.
Can I wash work clothes with normal clothes?
It’s better not to. Workwear often carries heavier soil (grease, grit, and odors) that can redeposit on normal laundry. If you must mix, only combine lightly soiled workwear with similar fabrics, and avoid mixing heavily soiled items with everyday clothes.
What temperature should I wash workwear?
Use the hottest temperature the careallows that fits the garment’s materials and your use case. Research on healthcare uniforms shows that 60°C in a controlled domestic laundering setup can decontaminate uniforms effectively, but not all workwear is designed for that temperature—always follow the label.
How do you remove grease from work clothes?
Pre-treat the grease before washing: apply a stain remover or detergent directly, wait 10–30 minutes, then wash the garment separately if it’s heavily soiled. Avoid tumble-drying until the stain is gone, because heat can set it.
Can hi-vis clothing go in the tumble dryer?
Sometimes, but it depends on the garment and the reflective tape guidance. Hi-vis garments are designed to meet EN ISO 20471 performance expectations, and tape manufacturers publish care instructions—follow theand tape guidance to protect reflectivity.
What’s the best detergent for work clothes?
For many real-world stains, enzyme (“bio”) detergents can help—because enzymes target specific soils (like proteins and fats). A recent study found protease–lipase combinations improved stain removal on common fabrics. If you prefer non-bio for sensitivity reasons, use correct dosing and strong pre-treatment for heavy stains.
Workwear laundry isn’t about perfection—it’s about repeatable routines that protect hygiene, safety, and garment life. If you follow the 7-step method, add the grease protocol when needed, and treat hi-vis like the safety equipment it is, your workwear will stay cleaner, last longer, and smell better.
And if you’re in London managing uniforms at scale, Hamlet Laundry Ltd can take the load off—literally—so your team shows up ready, every shift.
Washing workwear properly takes time, consistency, and the right process—especially when you’re dealing with grease, heavy soil, uniforms, or hi-vis clothing. That’s exactly where Hamlet Laundry Ltd comes in.
Based in London, we help businesses and professionals keep their workwear clean, hygienic, and ready for every shift, without the hassle of managing it themselves.
โ
Professional workwear & uniform laundry
We understand workwear—heavy-duty garments, uniforms, and hi-vis aren’t treated like everyday clothes.
๐ Convenient pickup & delivery across London
No trips to the laundrette, no wasted staff time. We fit around your schedule.
๐งผ Proper hygiene-focused cleaning
Our processes are designed to remove deep dirt, grease, odors, and residues, not just make clothes “look clean.”
๐ฆบ Hi-vis & specialist garment care
We handle reflective and technical workwear carefully to help maintain performance and appearance.
โฑ๏ธ Consistent turnaround, every time
So your team always has clean, ready-to-wear garments when they need them.
๐ก If workwear laundry is costing you time, energy, or garment lifespan, it’s time to outsource it properly.
๐ Contact Hamlet Laundry Ltd today and let us take care of your workwear—so you can focus on running your business, not running the washing machine.
Clean workwear. Reliable service. One less thing to worry about.
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