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A shelf of plush toys of different types — each needs a different cleaning method, from machine wash to surface clean only
Plush CareWashingMaterialsGuide

How to Wash & Care for Plush Toys (and How Brands Spec Washability)

Safely wash any plush — by type, step by step — plus dust-mite and allergy care, drying without damage, care labels, and how brands design plush to be washable.

Linda Zhao, Materials & R&D Manager · StarDream Toys
Linda Zhao
Materials & R&D Manager · StarDream Toys
10 min read

A plush toy is the one thing a child drools on, sleeps with and drags through the dirt — and the one thing people are most afraid to clean. The fear is fair: a hot wash can melt the fur, a dunked sound box dies, and beads clump forever. So this guide does two things competitors don't: it tells you exactly how to clean each type of plush safely, and — if you make plush — how to design it to be washable and label it correctly.

Before you wash: read the label & check the toy

Thirty seconds of checking saves a ruined toy. Read the sewn-in care label first — it's the final word — then look the toy over for batteries or a sound box, glued-on parts, foam or bead/pellet filling, and loose seams. Each of those changes the method.

Which cleaning method for which plush?

Not all plush wash the same way. Match the method to the build:

Wash method by plush type
Plush typeBest methodNever
Standard polyester plushMachine wash in a mesh bag, gentle, cold/30°CHot wash, high-heat dry
Electronic / battery / soundSurface clean only (remove batteries first)Submerge or rinse
Foam-filledSpot-clean or gentle hand washMachine agitation (foam crumbles)
Bean / pellet-filledSpot-clean or hand washMachine wash (beads clump & shift)
Delicate long-pile / mohair / antiqueHand or surface cleanMachine wash

Step by step: how to safely wash a plush toy

For a standard, machine-safe plush, here's the gentle method that protects fabric, stuffing and shape:

  1. 1
    Check label & toy
    Batteries, glued parts, foam/beads, seams
  2. 2
    Remove non-washable parts
    Batteries, electronic/weighted inserts
  3. 3
    Spot-test & pre-treat
    Hidden area first; blot stains
  4. 4
    Wash gently
    Mesh bag · gentle · cold–30°C · mild detergent
  5. 5
    Air-dry & reshape
    Room temp; reshape damp; brush pile
The gentle plush-wash method — a mesh bag, a cold gentle cycle and air-drying are what keep a toy looking new.

Drying without damage

Heat is the number-one killer of plush. Synthetic pile softens, melts and mats with high heat, the stuffing shrinks, and the shape warps — permanently. Air-dry by default: hang or lay flat at room temperature. Only if the label allows it, use a no-heat or low-heat air-fluff setting. Once dry, brush the pile gently in its natural direction with a soft brush to refluff matted fur.

Soft plush fabrics and fill — the materials that high heat damages in the wash
Why no high heat: plush pile and polyester fill are heat-sensitive — air-drying is what preserves the soft hand and the shape.

Disinfecting & allergy care: dust mites the right way

For an allergy or asthma household, this is the section that matters. The allergen in a stuffed animal isn't really the dust mite — it's the mites' droppings and debris. Two methods:

  • Hot wash — the most effective. The Asthma and Allergy Foundation recommends hot water of at least 130°F, while the American Lung Association says at least 120°F (≈49–54°C) — hot water both kills mites and rinses the allergen away. Only for plush whose label allows a hot wash.
  • Freeze, then wash— when a toy can't take a hot wash, seal it in a bag and freeze it for about 24–48 hours to kill the mites, then wash or tumble it to remove them. The catch most guides miss: freezing kills mites but leaves the allergenic droppings behind, so freezing alone isn't enough — always follow with a wash or dry cycle.

Reading care labels & laundry symbols

The sewn-in label uses standardized laundry symbols (the ISO/GINETEX system): a wash-tub (with a temperature or a hand for hand-wash), a triangle (bleach), a square (drying), an iron, and a circle (dry-clean) — each with a cross through it meaning “do not.” A crossed wash-tub plus a hand means surface clean only. When the label and a how-to guide disagree, follow the label.

For brands: designing washable plush & a compliant care label

If you make plush, washability is a feature you build in — and a safety and hygiene property for kids' toys. How we engineer it:

  • Colorfast, non-toxic dyes — spec OEKO-TEX STANDARD 100 materials with colorfastness to washing and to rubbing and saliva, so colors don't bleed or transfer.
  • Reinforced seams — double-locked stitching that survives repeated wash cycles without splitting and spilling fill.
  • Embroidered features — they survive washing (and remove the small-parts hazard of plastic eyes for baby grades).
  • Removable inserts & sealed electronics — make weighted and electronic units removable, or seal sound boxes, so the shell can be washed.
  • A correct care label — fiber content, the right laundry symbols, and age grading, matching what the toy was actually wash-tested to.

It connects to the wider material and safety picture in our fabric & materials guide and baby-safe plush guide.

Quality bench checking seam strength and colorfastness on plush
Washability is engineered: colorfast dyes, double-locked seams and embroidered features are what let a plush survive years of washes.

Build washable plush

Want plush your customers can actually clean — with a care label that protects your brand from complaints? Tell us the use case and we'll spec colorfast materials, washable construction and a compliant label. Start on our contact page or request a sample.

Frequently asked questions

Can you put a stuffed animal in the washing machine?
Most standard polyester plush can be machine washed if the care label allows — place it in a mesh laundry bag or pillowcase, use a gentle cycle with cold-to-warm water (around 30°C) and mild detergent, and wash it separately. Always skip the machine for toys with batteries or electronics, glued-on parts, foam or bead/pellet filling, or delicate long-pile or antique fur. When in doubt, the sewn-in care label is the final word.
How do you wash a plush toy with batteries?
Don't submerge it. Remove the batteries (and any removable electronic insert) if you can, then surface-clean only: wipe the toy with a barely-damp cloth and a drop of mild soap, spot-treat stains, and avoid soaking the fabric over the electronics. Let it air-dry completely before reinserting batteries, since trapped moisture can cause mold or short the circuit.
How do you kill dust mites in stuffed animals?
The most effective method is washing in hot water — health authorities recommend at least 120–130°F (about 49–54°C) — because hot water both kills mites and rinses away the allergenic mite droppings and debris. If a toy can't be hot-washed, seal it in a plastic bag and freeze it for about 24–48 hours to kill the live mites, then tumble-dry or wash it to remove the dead mites and allergens. Freezing alone kills mites but leaves the allergens behind, so always follow it with a wash or dry cycle.
Can you put a teddy bear in the dryer?
It's best to air-dry — hang or lay the toy flat at room temperature. Most plush manufacturers advise against tumble drying because high heat melts and mats synthetic fur, shrinks the stuffing and warps the toy's shape. If the label specifically allows it, use a no-heat or low-heat air-fluff setting only.
How often should you wash a child's stuffed animal?
A general clean about once a month is fine for most plush, but a favorite toy that's slept with or carried everywhere should be washed weekly, or any time it's visibly dirty or smells. For children with allergies or asthma, allergy authorities recommend a weekly hot wash to keep dust-mite levels down. Between washes, a baking-soda freshen-up and a gentle brush keep it clean and fluffy.

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