Should You Wash Towels and Clothes Together?

Throwing towels in with your regular laundry might feel like a time-saving trick, but it can actually damage both your clothes and towels in the long run. While combining them in one load may seem efficient, it often leads to hygiene problems, fabric wear, and disappointing cleaning results.

Towels are much thicker and more absorbent than most garments, so they require a hotter, longer wash cycle to remove bacteria and dirt effectively. Clothes, on the other hand—especially delicates or synthetic fabrics—need gentler care. Washing the two together forces you to choose between under-cleaning towels or risking damage to clothes.

Lint is another issue. Towels, particularly newer ones, shed large amounts of lint that can cling to dark or synthetic fabrics, leaving behind a fuzzy coating. Often, this means you’ll need to rewash items, which wastes both time and energy. The rough texture of towels can also cause pilling, stretching, or snags in lighter fabrics.

At the same time, zippers and buttons from clothing can scratch or wear down towel fibers. On top of that, towels typically carry more bacteria, sweat, and dead skin, which can transfer onto clothing during a shared wash cycle. Drying presents its own challenge. Towels take much longer to dry, which can leave them damp while clothes become overdried and shrunken. For the cleanest, longest-lasting results, always wash towels separately using hot water, a strong detergent, and a full rinse cycle.

Karla Cortes

Related Posts

Debt, A Bus, A Miracle

The morning Emily stood up, the universe took note. No thunder cracked, no headlines flashed, yet one small girl in a patched yellow raincoat shifted the balance…

Cut More Than His Hair

The phone call didn’t just interrupt the afternoon; it detonated it. By the time I reached the office, my son was already gone—replaced by a quieter, smaller…

Buried Rank, Broken Silence

The general’s salute hit me like shrapnel I’d thought I’d outrun, tearing thirty quiet years wide open in a single, public breath. I’d come as a father…

I Was Visiting My Brother At Camp Lejeune

I was visiting my brother at Camp Lejeune for Family Day – and when his Gunnery Sergeant looked me up and down and said, “So YOU’RE the…

Bloodlines Against the Ledger

He said my name like a sentence being carried out. The courtroom air vanished, every eye pinned to the judge’s hand as he lifted my military ID…

He Uncuffed A Shoplifter Until He Discovered His Father’s Vietnam Secret And Everything Changed

The Pouch I uncuffed an old criminal, and the second I saw his arm, every sound in the courtroom disappeared. His sleeve had ridden up just enough…