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Fabric Care
By Launderwise
12 min read

How to Wash Cashmere Without Ruining It

Hand washing is safest for cashmere: cool water, an enzyme-free wool wash, never wring. Some pieces machine-wash on a cold wool cycle if the label allows.

Updated on Reviewed by the Launderwise editorial team Part of our fabric care guide
Editorial standards
A cashmere sweater being gently hand-washed in a basin of cool water, with a wool detergent and a towel laid out to dry it flat

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Protocol

Method steps

  1. Read the care label firstThe washtub symbol's number is the maximum temperature; a hand symbol means hand wash only; a crossed-out tub means do not wash with water (dry clean only). Decide hand versus machine here, and never exceed the label's temperature.
  2. Turn it inside out and make a cool bathFill a basin with cool-to-lukewarm water — around body temperature — and dissolve a little enzyme-free wool or cashmere wash before the garment goes in. Makers disagree on the exact degree (Johnstons of Elgin suggests about 35 °C, N.Peal says cold), so anchor to lukewarm and to your care label, not a fixed number.
  3. Submerge and gently press — never rubSubmerge the sweater and gently swish or press the suds through it. Soak only briefly — up to about 30 minutes, depending on maker guidance (N.Peal; The Laundress). Never rub, wring or twist, which felts the fibres and pulls the garment out of shape.
  4. Rinse in cool water until it runs clearRinse in water the same temperature as the wash — a sudden change of temperature is part of what felts wool — and keep going until the water runs clear. Don't leave it sitting in detergent.
  5. Press the water out in a towelLift the sweater out supporting its full weight (a wet sweater held by the shoulders stretches), lay it on a clean dry towel, roll the towel up and press. Never wring.
  6. Dry flat and reshapeLay the sweater flat on a fresh dry towel and pat it back to its original measurements, away from sun and radiators. Never hang it wet and never tumble-dry it — both can distort the shape, and the dryer's heat can felt and shrink it.
  7. Machine-wash route (only if the label allows)If the care label permits machine washing, turn the garment inside out, put it in a fine-mesh bag, and run a cold wool, delicate or hand-wash cycle at the lowest spin. Then dry flat as above. Hand washing is still gentler.
  8. De-pill and finishOnce fully dry, lift any pills gently with a cashmere comb or fabric shaver in light strokes, and use steam — not a hot iron pressed flat — to revive the pile.

Hand wash cashmere by default: cool-to-lukewarm water, enzyme-free wool/cashmere wash, press instead of wringing, then dry flat. Machine wash only if the label allows it, on a cold wool cycle in a mesh bag at the lowest spin. Dry-clean structured, lined or no-water pieces.

Cashmere is the fine, soft undercoat of cashmere goats — a delicate protein fibre that needs lower-friction handling than everyday cotton or synthetics. Get it hot, or rub and wring it, and the fibre scales interlock and the garment felts: it shrinks, thickens and stiffens, and Woolmark (external link) describes that felting as irreversible. The good news is that washing cashmere well is genuinely simple — it’s mostly about what not to do.

What you’ll need

Cashmere needs very little, and gentleness over everything. The mistakes that do the most damage are heat, agitation and wringing.

The care label — the washtub number is the max temperature; a hand symbol means hand wash; a crossed-out tub means no water washing

An enzyme-free wool/cashmere wash — avoid ordinary bio detergents

Cool-to-lukewarm water — around body temperature, never above the label maximum

A fine-mesh laundry bag — only if you machine wash

A clean, dry bath towel — to press out water and dry flat

A dedicated wool and cashmere wash should be enzyme-free, which is what this protein-fibre routine is built around.

Hand wash or machine wash?

Hand washing is the safe default; machine washing is a conditional compromise, never an equal. Use this to decide:

If the label or garment says…Best routeWhyStop rule
Plain cashmere knit, water washing allowedHand washLowest friction and easiest temperature controlDo not rub, wring or twist
Machine-wash symbol or explicit machine-wash wordingCold wool cycle in a mesh bagAcceptable compromise for sturdier knitsLowest spin only; dry flat
Hand-in-tub symbolHand wash onlyThe label allows water but not machine agitationNo machine cycle
Crossed-out washtub, tailored coat, lining or heavy structureDry cleanWater can distort construction, lining and trimsDo not test-wash at home
Already shrunk, thickened or feltedDamage limitation onlyFelting locks the fibre scales togetherDo not promise restoration

That last row matters. A sweater that is only a little misshapen can sometimes be re-blocked while damp; a sweater that has become dense, stiff and much smaller has felted. At that point, more soaking, conditioner hacks or stretching usually damage the knit further. Stop, reshape what you can, and treat it as a lesson in prevention rather than a recoverable wash error.

Before the first wash, take a quick photo or measure the chest width and sleeve length. Those reference points make reshaping much less guessy when the sweater is wet and heavy.

Before you wash: decide if it really needs water

Cashmere wears best when you wash it only when it needs it. Before filling the basin, run a quick triage:

  • Smell only, no visible soil — air it flat for a day. Body odour often disperses without washing, especially if the sweater was worn over a base layer.
  • One small food or oil mark — spot-clean the mark instead of soaking the whole garment. Test a hidden seam, use a tiny amount of fibre-safe detergent, and press with a cloth rather than rubbing.
  • Moth-risk storage — wash or dry clean before long storage if there are body oils, food traces or perfume on the garment. Clean, fully dry storage is the safer baseline for knitwear.
  • Dye bleeding in a test — stop. If a damp white cloth picks up colour from a hidden seam, a home basin wash becomes risky; it can create a pale bloom or water mark across the whole garment.
  • Structure, lining, shoulder pads, embroidery or heavy trims — dry clean. The knit may survive the water, but the construction can distort.

This is not caution for its own sake. A cashmere sweater is easy to refresh but hard to repair: once the shape stretches, pills are shaved too aggressively, or the fibre felts, the fix is limited. The best cashmere care is often restraint: air, brush, spot-clean, then wash only when the whole garment actually needs it.

Cashmere pieces you should not home-wash

The word “cashmere” is not enough to decide the method. Construction matters as much as fibre:

  • Tailored cashmere coats and blazers rely on canvas, padding, lining and pressed seams. Water can ripple the internal structure even if the outer fibre survives.
  • Cashmere with leather, suede, beads, embroidery or glued trims should be treated as a mixed-material garment. The most delicate trim sets the limit, not the knit panel.
  • Very loose, open or heavy knits stretch under their own wet weight. If you cannot support the whole garment flat while lifting and drying it, do not soak it in a basin.
  • Vintage, heirloom or expensive pieces with uncertain labels deserve a professional first clean. The risk is not just shrinkage; old dyes, weak seams and repairs can fail in water.

For these pieces, the best home care is airing, brushing, careful spot-cleaning and clean storage. If the care label forbids water washing, treat that as the decision, not a suggestion to outsmart.

How to hand wash cashmere, step by step

1. Read the care label first

The washtub symbol’s number is the maximum temperature; a hand in the tub means hand wash only; a crossed-out tub means don’t wash it with water at all (dry clean only). Decide hand versus machine here, and never exceed the label’s temperature.

2. Turn it inside out and make a cool bath

Fill a basin with cool-to-lukewarm water — around body temperature — and dissolve a little wool or cashmere wash before the garment goes in. Makers disagree on the exact degree (Johnstons of Elgin (external link) suggests about 35 °C; N.Peal (external link) says cold), which is why the safe rule is “lukewarm, and never hotter than the label allows,” not a fixed number.

3. Submerge and gently press — never rub

Submerge the sweater and gently swish or press the suds through it. Soak only briefly — up to about 30 minutes, depending on maker guidance (N.Peal; The Laundress). Never rub, wring or twist: that friction is exactly what felts the fibres and pulls the garment out of shape.

4. Rinse in cool water until it runs clear

Rinse in water the same temperature as the wash — a sudden change of temperature is part of what felts wool — and keep going until the water runs clear. Don’t leave it sitting in detergent.

5. Press the water out in a towel

Lift the sweater out supporting its full weight (a wet sweater held up by the shoulders stretches), lay it on a clean dry towel, roll the towel up and press. Never wring.

6. Dry flat and reshape

Lay the sweater flat on a fresh dry towel and pat it back to its original measurements, away from sun and radiators. Never hang it wet — the weight of the water stretches it — and never tumble-dry it, whose heat felts and shrinks it.

7. The machine-wash route — only if the label allows

If the care label permits machine washing, turn the garment inside out, put it in a fine-mesh bag, and run a cold wool, delicate or hand-wash cycle at the lowest spin (The Laundress (external link)). Then dry flat as above. It’s an acceptable compromise where the label allows it — but hand washing is still gentler, and N.Peal calls the machine “possible but not the best method.”

A fine-mesh wash bag is essential for the machine route — it’s the barrier that keeps the agitation off the knit.

8. De-pill and finish

Cashmere pills naturally because its fibres are short and fine — it isn’t a sign of poor quality. Once the sweater is fully dry, lift the pills gently with a cashmere comb or fabric shaver in light strokes (the full technique is in how to remove pilling from clothes), and use steam — not a hot iron pressed flat — to revive the pile.

Does cashmere shrink — and can you rescue it?

Yes: heat, agitation and friction make the fibre scales lock together, and the garment felts and shrinks. Because that felting is irreversible, a badly shrunk piece usually can’t be saved.

Rescuing a lightly shrunk sweater

With a very mildly felted sweater you can sometimes recover a little shape by gently reshaping and re-blocking it flat to its original measurements while it is still damp, then letting it dry that way. Treat this as damage-limitation only — it won’t restore a heavily felted or badly shrunk garment. The real fix is prevention: keep cashmere cool and still.

Washing cashmere: the honest details

Cashmere disagrees with itself on degrees

Don’t trust a single magic temperature — even the makers differ (Johnstons says about 35 °C, N.Peal says cold). Anchor to lukewarm, around body temperature, and to your garment’s care-label maximum. When in doubt, cooler is safer.

Use an enzyme-free wash

The Laundress recommends an enzyme-free wash for wool and cashmere. Avoid ordinary “bio” or enzyme-containing detergents, which are made for sturdier fabrics, not fine protein fibres. Skip fabric softener too — it coats the fibres rather than conditioning them.

Store cashmere clean and dry

Clean and fully dry cashmere before long storage, and fold it (never hang). Johnstons of Elgin recommends cedar for storage; treat it as one helpful layer, not a guarantee. A breathable cotton bag in a cool, dry drawer is a practical storage setup.

For a few light stains between washes, spot-treat rather than washing the whole garment — match the stain type and treat gently: grease and oil, sweat and deodorant marks, or red wine. Always test on a hidden seam first, and keep protein stains in cool water.

  • Felting is irreversible. The combination of heat, moisture and agitation makes cashmere's fibre scales lock together (Woolmark) — once a garment has badly felted or shrunk it cannot be restored. Never use hot water, never tumble-dry, and never wring.
  • Never use chlorine bleach on cashmere. And never mix chlorine bleach with vinegar or ammonia (for example in a stain remedy): together, especially with heat, they release toxic chlorine and chloramine gases that injure the lungs (CDC).
  • Don't hang cashmere — wet or dry. A wet sweater stretches under its own weight, and hanging a dry one distorts the shoulders. Fold it to dry and to store.
  • Skip fabric softener and ordinary bio/enzyme-containing detergents; they are made for sturdier fabrics, not fine protein fibres like cashmere.

The honest bottom line

Cashmere isn’t fragile so much as unforgiving of heat and friction. Hand wash it cool, press the water out, and dry it flat and reshaped, and a good cashmere sweater stays soft and in shape for many years. Machine wash it only where the label allows, in a mesh bag on a cold wool cycle — and never, ever put it in the dryer.

For the general wool and knitwear method this builds on, see how to wash a wool sweater without shrinking it; for the wash-temperature framework behind “keep it cool,” the laundry temperature guide; and for dosing a hand-wash basin, how much laundry detergent to use. For another delicate protein fibre, how to wash silk without ruining it.

FAQ

Can you machine wash cashmere?

Sometimes — but only if the care label allows it, and hand washing is always the safer choice. If the label permits machine washing, turn the garment inside out, place it in a fine-mesh laundry bag, and run a cold wool, delicate or hand-wash cycle at the lowest spin speed. The mesh bag and cold, low-agitation cycle limit the friction and heat that felt cashmere. If the label shows a hand symbol or a crossed-out washtub, don't put it in the machine at all.

What temperature should you wash cashmere at?

Cool to lukewarm — around body temperature — and never above the maximum on the care label. Cashmere felts when heat, moisture and agitation act together, and a sudden temperature change makes it worse, so keep the wash and rinse water the same and on the cool side. Makers don't fully agree on a number (Johnstons of Elgin suggests about 35 °C, N.Peal recommends cold water), which is exactly why the safe rule is 'lukewarm, and never hotter than the label allows' rather than a fixed degree.

Does cashmere shrink, and can you unshrink it?

Yes — heat, agitation and friction make cashmere's fibre scales lock together and the garment felts and shrinks, and Woolmark describes that felting as irreversible. With a very mildly felted sweater you can sometimes recover a little shape by gently reshaping and re-blocking it flat while it is damp, but this is damage-limitation at best — a badly felted or heavily shrunk piece cannot be restored, which is why prevention matters so much. Keep cashmere cool and still and you avoid the problem entirely.

Can you use regular detergent on cashmere?

Use a dedicated enzyme-free wool or cashmere wash where you can (The Laundress recommends an enzyme-free wash for wool and cashmere). Avoid ordinary 'bio' or enzyme-containing detergents, which are formulated for sturdier fabrics, not fine protein fibres. Skip fabric softener too — it coats the fibres rather than caring for them — and never use chlorine bleach.

How often should you wash cashmere?

Sparingly. Cashmere rarely needs washing after every light wear — air it out between wears and spot-clean small marks instead. Makers vary on a number, from roughly every few wears to about once a month, so treat it as a range rather than a rule: wash when it actually needs it. Over-washing and over-handling wear cashmere out faster than gentle wear does.

Do you have to dry-clean cashmere?

Not always. Many unstructured cashmere knits can be hand washed if the care label allows it. But follow the label: if it forbids water washing, or the garment is structured (a tailored coat), dry clean it. For an everyday cashmere sweater whose label permits water washing, careful hand washing is usually the gentler option.

Independent editorial note

Launderwise is an independent laundry and fabric-care publication. We compare products and methods by evidence, practical fit and reader value, and we call out the trade-offs before recommending a route.