# How to Wash Spandex Without Wrecking the Stretch

> Wash spandex cool, skip the dryer and the hot iron, and never chlorine-bleach it. It's almost always a blend, so the care label governs. Heat is the enemy.

**Published :** 2026-06-08

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**Summary:** To wash spandex without wrecking the stretch, **wash it cool on a gentle
cycle, skip the dryer and the hot iron, and never use chlorine bleach.**
Spandex is almost always a small percentage blended into another fibre, so
the garment's care label is the binding instruction. **Heat is the enemy** —
it permanently kills the stretch.

The single most important fact about spandex is that **heat destroys its
recovery**, and that loss is permanent. Every rule below follows from keeping
the fibre cool — and from reading the one instruction that outranks all
general advice, the garment's own care label.

Spandex is the fibre that makes modern clothes *fit*: the stretch in your
leggings, the snap-back in a swimsuit, the give in a pair of jeans. You rarely
own a garment that is **all** spandex — it's almost always a small percentage
woven into cotton, polyester, wool or nylon to add stretch and shape
retention. That single fact, from the fibre's own maker, is the key to washing
it: the blend partner and the garment's care label do most of the talking, and
the spandex just sets a hard limit on heat.

> Spandex (also called **elastane**, and sold under the brand name **Lycra** —
> all the same fibre) is a **segmented polyurethane**, at least 85% polyurethane
> by weight, built from alternating rigid and flexible segments. Those flexible
> segments are what stretch and snap back, and they are what **heat ruins**. A
> textile scientist at RMIT University explains that heat "makes fibres
> brittle" and "stretches the elastane components" — so hot water, the tumble
> dryer and a hot iron don't just risk a one-off accident, they cause a
> **permanent loss of recovery**: the sagging, bagging, gone-baggy look that no
> home wash can reverse. Keep spandex cool and you keep its stretch.

## Before you wash

- 🏷️
- **Read the care label first.** It already reflects the whole blend. A crossed-out tumble-dry or iron symbol means *do not* — follow it over any general tip.
- ❄️
- **Cool or cold water, gentle cycle.** Heat is what kills the stretch, so default to the coolest wash the garment allows.
- 🧺
- **A mesh wash bag** for leggings, sports bras and swimwear, so they don't snag on zips, hooks or other clothes.
- 🚫
- **No fabric softener and no chlorine bleach.** Both work against spandex — keep them off it.

## What you'll need

Almost nothing specialised. A **mild liquid detergent** (the kind sold for
delicates or activewear is ideal, but a few drops of any gentle detergent
works); a **fine mesh wash
bag** for fitted pieces like leggings and swimsuits, so they don't snag
on zips and hooks; and a **flat surface or a shaded line** to air-dry. You do
**not** need fabric softener — UGA Extension notes it can leave a blue-gray,
greasy residue, which is the last thing a stretch garment wants — and you should
keep chlorine bleach well away from spandex entirely.

## What the care label is telling you

This is the part to get right before any water touches the garment, because the
label is not a suggestion — it is the binding instruction, and on a blend it
already accounts for every fibre in the mix. Four symbols decide how you treat
spandex.

**The wash-tub** tells you whether (and how hot) you may wash. The number
inside it is the **maximum** washing temperature in °C "which must not be
exceeded" (GINETEX) — a ceiling, not a target — so a cooler wash is always safe
when washing is allowed, and a crossed-out tub means don't wash at all.

**wash-delicate**

**wash-hand**

**wash-no**

**The bleach triangle** routes the choice. A **plain triangle** allows any
bleach, a triangle with **two diagonal lines** allows only oxygen
(non-chlorine) bleach, and a **crossed-out triangle** means do not bleach. For
spandex this matters more than usual, because chlorine is one of the things the
fibre is least able to tolerate.

**bleach-oxygen**

**bleach-no**

**The tumble-dry symbol** (a circle in a square) shows whether tumble drying is
allowed; a crossed-out one means do not tumble dry — and spandex is one of the
fabrics to [keep out of the dryer](/blog/what-fabrics-can-you-tumble-dry/index.md). And
**the iron** caps the
soleplate temperature if ironing is permitted at all. For the full
wash-temperature logic across fabrics, see our
[laundry temperature guide](/blog/laundry-temperature-guide/index.md).

## How to wash spandex, step by step

The routine below keeps the fibre cool at every stage, which is the whole game.
Hand washing is the gentlest option; otherwise use a cool, gentle machine cycle
when the garment's care label allows it.

### 1. Turn inside out, sort, and bag the delicates

Turn the garment **inside out** and separate by colour. Put leggings, sports
bras and swimwear in a **mesh wash bag** so they aren't snagged by zips, hooks
or Velcro, and aren't dragged against the drum — friction is what pills and
snags the stretch face of the fabric.

### 2. Wash cool, on a gentle cycle — or by hand

Use **cold or cool water** on a **delicate cycle**, or hand wash in cool water.
This is the rule that protects the stretch: hot water makes the elastane
brittle and stretches it, and that damage doesn't wash out. If your machine has
an activewear or delicates cycle, that's the one.

### 3. Mild detergent only — skip softener and chlorine bleach

Use a **mild detergent**. **Skip fabric softener** — UGA Extension notes it can
leave a greasy, blue-gray residue, and on a stretch or performance garment that
coating does no favours. And **never reach for chlorine bleach** — spandex is one
of the fabrics you should never chlorine-bleach (see
[what fabrics you can bleach](/blog/what-fabrics-can-you-bleach/index.md)), and there's
more on why in the swimwear and warnings sections below.

### 4. Squeeze gently — never wring

Press and squeeze the water out **gently**, supporting the garment's weight,
rather than **wringing or twisting** it.

### 5. Air-dry flat, or in the shade

Lay the garment **flat** or hang it in a **ventilated, shaded** spot. Skip the
tumble dryer unless the label specifically allows it — the dryer's heat is one
of the surest ways to kill recovery — and if you must use it, choose the
**lowest or no-heat** setting. Direct sun is worth avoiding too, especially for
swimwear, because UV is another thing generic spandex is vulnerable to.

### 6. Iron only if the label allows — lowest dots

If the label shows a **crossed-out iron**, don't iron it. If the label **does**
permit ironing, stay strictly within the iron-dot ceiling and keep to the low
side:

**iron-low**

**iron-no**

GINETEX caps the soleplate at **120 °C for one dot, 160 °C for two, 210 °C for
three**. Because heat is exactly what damages the fibre, the safest choice is
not to iron spandex unless the label calls for it, and to stay on the low side
of whatever the dot allows. For the full fabric-by-dot heat map, see
[how to iron a shirt](/blog/how-to-iron-a-shirt/index.md).

## Washing swimwear and the chlorine problem

Swimwear is where spandex takes the most punishment, because it meets the two
things the fibre least tolerates at once: **chlorine and UV light**. Swimwear
typically contains about **80% polyester or polyamide blended with 20%
elastane**, and the elastane is the most vulnerable component. The scale is
worth knowing: an RMIT University textile scientist found that after about
**300 hours of exposure to chlorine and sunlight** — roughly 35 days of summer
— **the strength of swimwear fabrics may drop by around 65%**. That figure is
specific to chlorine plus sun on swimwear, not a single wash, but it explains
why a favourite swimsuit goes thin and slack by the end of a season.

The defence is simple and free. **Rinse swimwear immediately after the pool**,
in cold or lukewarm water, to flush out chlorine, salt water, sunscreen and
body oils before they sit in the fibres. **Never use hot water**, hand wash
with a **mild detergent**, and **air-dry flat in the shade**, away from direct
sun — never in the machine dryer. The branded, engineered chlorine-and-UV
resistant spandex exists precisely because generic spandex is vulnerable to
chlorine, UV light, heat and the oils in body lotion and sunscreen.

## Washing a spandex blend

Because spandex is almost always the *minor* fibre, the blend partner usually
decides the everyday routine — and the **blend's care label already accounts
for the whole mix**, so it is the binding instruction. The spandex's job is
just to veto heat. When you want to understand the *other* fibre's behaviour,
our dedicated guides do the work.



For common synthetic partner fibres, our
[polyester guide](/blog/wash-polyester/index.md) and
[viscose guide](/blog/how-to-wash-viscose/index.md) cover the partner fibre in depth.
And if your activewear holds onto smells, our guide to
[getting the smell out of clothes](/blog/get-smell-out-of-clothes/index.md) covers it —
without baking the odour in with heat.

## What can go wrong (and the sourced reasons)

A few spandex-specific risks are worth naming, each tied to a property of the
fibre rather than to folklore:

- **Permanent bagging from heat.** Hot water, the dryer and a hot iron make the
  elastane brittle and stretch it; the loss of recovery is the sagging you
  can't undo. The defence is the cool-wash, air-dry routine above.
- **Chlorine and UV damage on swimwear.** Generic spandex is vulnerable to
  both, which is why the rinse-and-shade-dry routine matters so much.
- **Set-in deodorant and sweat stains.** UGA's washable-fabric method is to rub
  in undiluted dishwashing liquid then launder; if it persists, an oxygen or
  sodium-perborate bleach or hydrogen peroxide (not chlorine on spandex), with
  a few drops of ammonia on a *new* stain **or** white vinegar on an *old* one
  for colour restoration — never combined. Crucially, **never iron or apply
  heat over a deodorant stain**: it sets it. Our full
  [sweat and yellow-armpit stain guide](/blog/remove-sweat-yellow-armpit-stains/index.md)
  walks through the protocol.

> **Warning:**
> - **Never chlorine-bleach spandex.** The bleach manufacturer Clorox states its disinfecting bleach is not safe for spandex, and chlorine is one of the fibre's worst enemies. If the bleach symbol allows it, use an oxygen or colour-safe (non-chlorine) product only.
> - **Never mix chlorine bleach with vinegar or other acids, or with ammonia.** Bleach plus vinegar or other acids can release chlorine gas; bleach plus ammonia can release chloramine gases (CDC). This matters here because the deodorant-stain method lists vinegar, ammonia and a bleach option as separate alternatives — use one at a time, never together.
> - **Keep heat off it.** Hot water, the tumble dryer and a hot iron permanently destroy the stretch. If the label shows a crossed-out tumble-dry or iron symbol, that instruction is binding and this guide can't override it.

## The bottom line

Two rules carry spandex. **Keep it cool:** cold or cool water, a gentle cycle,
no dryer, no hot iron — because heat is what makes the elastane brittle and
robs it of the snap-back that made the garment fit in the first place, and that
loss doesn't come back. And **let the label rule:** on a blend it already
speaks for every fibre, the wash-tub number is a ceiling not a target, and a
crossed-out dryer or iron means stop. Add the swimwear habit — rinse straight
after the pool and dry in the shade — and skip the fabric softener and chlorine
bleach, and you give the stretch the best chance of lasting.

## Keep reading

- [How to wash gym clothes](/blog/how-to-wash-activewear/index.md) — the full activewear
  routine, where spandex is a common stretch fibre.
- [How to wash polyester](/blog/wash-polyester/index.md) — the most common spandex
  blend partner in activewear.
- [How to wash viscose](/blog/how-to-wash-viscose/index.md) — the partner fibre in
  stretch dresses and a fellow delicate.
- [Get the smell out of clothes](/blog/get-smell-out-of-clothes/index.md) — for
  activewear odour, the right way (no heat).
- [Remove sweat and yellow armpit stains](/blog/remove-sweat-yellow-armpit-stains/index.md)
  — the full protocol for the deodorant stains spandex activewear collects.
- [How to iron a shirt](/blog/how-to-iron-a-shirt/index.md) — the full care-label
  iron-dot heat map referenced in the ironing step.
