Everyone seems to have a different opinion regarding how often towels and bed sheets should be washed. While many people might wonder whether days or weeks is best, in one survey from the United Kingdom, almost half of single men reported not washing their sheets for up to four months.
It’s pretty clear that four months is too long to leave it, but what is the ideal frequency?
Bed linen and towels are pretty different and should be washed at different intervals. While every week or two will generally suffice for sheets, towels are best washed every few days.
Anyway, who doesn’t love the feeling of a fresh set of sheets or the smell of a newly laundered towel?
Why you should wash towels more often
When you dry yourself, you deposit thousands of skin cells and millions of microbes onto the towel. And because you use your towel to dry yourself after a shower or bath, your towel is regularly damp.
You also deposit a hefty amount of dead skin, microbes, sweat, and oils onto your sheets every night. But unless you’re a prolific night sweater, your bedding doesn’t get wet after a night’s sleep.
Towels are also made of a thicker material than sheets and tend to stay damp for longer.
So what is it about the dampness that causes a problem? Wet towels are a breeding ground for bacteria and molds. Molds especially love damp environments. Although mold won’t necessarily be visible (you would need significant growth to be able to see it), this can lead to an unpleasant smell.
As well as odors, exposure to these microbes in your towels and sheets can cause asthma, allergic skin irritations, or other skin infections.
So what’s the ideal frequency?
For bedding, it depends on factors such as whether you have a bath or shower just before going to bed, or if you fall into bed after a long, sweaty day and shower in the morning. You will need to wash your sheets more regularly in the latter case. As a rule of thumb, once a week or every two weeks should be fine.
Towels should ideally be washed more regularly – perhaps every few days – while your facecloth should be cleaned after every use. Because it gets completely wet, it will be wet for longer, retaining more skin cells and microbes.
Wash your towels at a high temperature (for example, 65°C), as that will kill many microbes. If you are conscious of saving energy, use a lower temperature and add a cup of vinegar to the wash. The vinegar will kill microbes and prevent bad smells from developing.
Clean your washing machine regularly and dry the fold in the rubber after every wash, as this is another place microbes like to grow.
Smelly towels
What if you regularly wash your towels, but they still smell bad? One of the reasons for this pong could be that you’ve left them in the washing machine too long after the wash. Especially if it was a warm wash cycle, the time they’re warm and damp will allow microbes to grow. Under lab conditions, the number of these bacteria can double every 30 minutes.
It’s essential to hang your towel out to dry after use and not leave towels in the washing machine at the end of the cycle. If possible, hang your towels and bedding out in the sun. That will dry them quickly and thoroughly, fostering that lovely, fresh, clean cotton smell. Using a dryer is a good alternative if the weather is bad, but outdoors in the sun is always better if possible.
Also, even if your towel will be washed, don’t throw a wet towel into the laundry basket, as the damp, dirty towel will be an ideal place for microbes to breed. By the time you do your washing, the towel and the other laundry around it may have acquired a bad smell. And it can be challenging to get your towels smelling fresh again.
What about ‘self-cleaning’ sheets and towels?
Some companies sell “quick-dry” towels or “self-cleaning” towels and bedding. Quick-dry towels are made from synthetic materials woven in a way that allows them to dry quickly. This would help prevent the growth of microbes and the bad smells that develop when towels are damp for long periods.
However, the notion of self-cleaning products is more complicated. Most of these products contain nanosilver or copper, antibacterial metals that kill microorganisms. The antibacterial compounds will stop the growth of bacteria and can be helpful to limit smells and reduce the frequency with which you need to clean your sheets and towels.
However, they won’t remove dirt like oils, skin flakes, and sweat. So as much as I would love the idea of sheets and towels that clean themselves, that’s not exactly what happens.
Also, excessive use of antimicrobials such as nanosilver can make microbes resistant to them.
Rietie Venter, Associate professor, Clinical and Health Sciences, University of South Australia
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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