How We Wash Our Diapers


I think that just about everyone who uses cloth diapers has their own “secret” to clean, fresh diapers, but since we know a few new parents who are getting ready to delve into the world of cloth diapering, I thought I’d share my washing routine in case it might help!

We keep our dirty diapers in a plain trash can with a lid that came from Target for under $10, so everything wet or soiled, including flannel wipes and, when I was still breastfeeding, flannel nursing pads, goes in there. When Meg was only eating breastmilk, the poopy diapers also went in as is. Now that she’s eating solids and the poop wouldn’t break down in the washer, we just dump what can be dumped into the toilet and throw those diapers into an ice cream bucket that’s on the stairs to the basement where the washer and dryer are so we can grab them on the way down with the rest of the diapers.

Generally, we wash diapers and covers every 2-3 days during the evening after Meg is in bed. Our normal routine is that I “Prewash” everything on cold first, then soak everything in warm water with a couple of coffee scoops of baking soda. I used to take out the covers and soak just the diapers in hot water, but decided that was using too much energy for not a lot of difference in cleanliness, so recently switched to a warm water soak. I let the diapers soak for about an hour, then wash on warm with an extra rinse cycle. I just use Tide Free and Clear detergent and a couple of capfuls of vinegar in the fabric softener dispenser of the washer. I’m usually not a name brand snob at all, but since we have well water, I think the Tide really does do a much better job than other brands of baby-friendly detergent, although when Aldi has their brand of dye and perfume free detergent, I use that, but they only have it every once in awhile. By this point in the routine, I go to bed and Andy handles pulling out the diaper covers to air dry and putting the diapers in the dryer on the highest heat setting. By the time we get up in the morning, the diapers in the dryer are finished and the covers are dry enough to either put away or pack in Meg’s day care bag.

We do have a couple of all-in-one diapers that Andy just puts in the dryer and they seem to still be holding up ok, but I’m not sure how they would continue to wash if we only dried them in the dryer and only used those?

I’ve bleached all of our white prefolds maybe twice in the last 7 months, but hung prefolds and handmade fitteds outside on a really sunny day to be sun bleached every once in awhile. I had plans to hang everything out on the clothesline for as long as possible, and while I did hang out clothes all summer, the diapers didn’t make it out that often, especially since I started working, just because the dryer is so much faster and can be done overnight. As always, feel free to ask either of us any questions about cloth diapering, because we think we’re pretty good at it and it’s working out so well for us, we think anyone can handle it!

5 Replies to “How We Wash Our Diapers”

  1. Yay, thanks for sharing your details! Here’s a stupid question: what exactly does it mean to prewash? That’s not a setting on my washer. Does it mean you wash everything one time without soap? And then when you soak, do you just turn on the washer until it fills up and then manually stop it, and restart it an hour later?

  2. Our washer has a prewash setting, but before we had this machine, I turned the knob to the last rinse of the regular wash cycle and ran everything through that on cold before running a full wash cycle. Also, this washer has a soak setting and since it’s Energy Star it fills based on some sort of load size detector, but with our old washer, I just left the lid open to soak the diapers before closing it to run the wash cycle. Make sense?

  3. The Prewash, effectively, just gets rid of the extra stuff without having the diapers soak in warm water for an extended period. I think this is particularly important early on while breastfeeding when some of the “poopy” diapers are in there at the same time. The Prewash gets rid of most of the “poopy” first, and then the “soak in warm water” part occurs without a large amount of “poopy” being in there, too.

    “Poopy.” 🙂

  4. So helpful! Thanks. I know that — just like anything else — we just have to get into the routine. Then we won’t know the difference!

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