# How to Remove Grease and Oil Stains from Clothes

> Blot grease, use an absorbent powder, pretreat with detergent or dish soap, wash at the hottest safe setting, and inspect before dryer heat.

**Published :** 2026-06-02 · **Updated :** 2026-06-06

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**Summary:** To remove a grease or oil stain, **blot the excess, use cornstarch, talc or
Fuller's Earth on surface oil, pretreat the dry mark with detergent or
white/clear dish soap, then wash at the hottest safe care-label setting**.
Air-dry and inspect before any dryer heat.

Oils do not behave like water-based stains. Texas A\&M classifies oil, butter and
wax as dry-type stains first, then sends oil-based marks to heavy-duty liquid
detergent or a prewash product before the hottest fabric-safe wash. That is why
the cold-water reflex from wine or
blood is the wrong default here.

A grease stain breaks the rule most people learn first: that cold water saves
stains. Oils and fats resist plain water, so the practical route is not a cold
rinse. Start dry if there is surface oil, use detergent chemistry on the mark,
then wash only as hot as the care label safely allows. Fresh food oil is usually
more forgiving than an old mechanical-grease mark, but the same stop rule applies:
inspect before any dryer or iron.

## What you'll need

You probably have the first two items in the kitchen. The third — an absorbent
powder — is what stops a fresh splash from spreading before you treat it.

- 🧴
- **Heavy-duty liquid detergent, prewash product or white/clear dish soap** — used as a spot pretreat before laundering
- 🧂
- **An absorbent powder** — cornstarch, talc or Fuller's Earth to soak up surface oil
- 💧
- **Warm or hot water only if the label allows it** — Texas A&M says oil marks use the hottest water safe for the fabric
- 🧻
- **A clean white cloth** and a soft brush for blotting and working the soap in

Two more things earn their place once a stain is stubborn: a detergent with
**lipase** enzymes for greasy soils, and a fine absorbent clay called **Fuller's
Earth** for dry absorption on fresh or water-sensitive marks.

## Grease diagnostic table

Start here if you are not sure whether the mark is cooking oil, body oil,
mechanical grease or a dried-in shadow. The safest treatment is the one that
matches the oil and the fibre before you add water.

| Symptom / stain                          | Likely cause                           | First test                       | What to do                                                             | Stop if                                      |
| ---------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------- | -------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------- |
| Fresh translucent spot from food         | Cooking oil or butter                  | Blotting pad picks up clear oil  | Powder first, then detergent or dish-soap pretreat and label-safe wash | The fabric is silk, wool or dry-clean only   |
| Dark, gritty black mark                  | Engine oil, bike grease or machinery   | Residue smears grey or black     | Scrape; use labelled solvent/prewash only if needed, then detergent    | Solvent lifts garment dye or smells remain   |
| Yellow collar or gym-kit shadow          | Body oil plus sweat                    | Stain returns after normal wash  | Lipase/enzyme detergent pretreat, then label-safe wash                 | Several label-safe rounds make no difference |
| Waxy colour mark from lipstick/sunscreen | Oil plus pigment                       | Colour remains after detergent   | Treat as oil plus dye; test before any solvent or bleach               | Colour transfers in a hidden-seam test       |
| Already tumble-dried oil spot            | Aged oily soil or heat-exposed residue | Spot looks dull after air-drying | Repeat detergent/prewash rounds; expect partial recovery               | The fibre thins or the stain stops fading    |

## Why grease behaves differently from other stains

Most stain advice tells you to flush with cold water, and for protein and
tannin stains that is often right. Grease is different. Texas A\&M classifies
oil, butter and wax as **dry-type stains**, then moves oil-based marks to
full-strength heavy-duty liquid detergent or a prewash product before laundering.
UGA's product guide also treats dishwashing detergent as a white or clear,
near-neutral detergent, which is why it can be useful as a spot pretreat. The
wash still belongs under the care label: use the hottest water safe for that
fabric, not a fixed hot-water rule for every garment.

A second tool works from a different direction. Some heavy-duty detergents carry
**lipase**, an enzyme class used for greasy soils. That supports an enzyme
detergent or prewash route on oily laundry, but it does not guarantee one-wash
recovery on aged, dryer-exposed or delicate fabrics.

Age and fibre both matter. A Journal of Surfactants and Detergents study on aged
oily soils found yellowing and residual-oil behaviour differed across cotton,
nylon and polyester after laundering. Treat that as a reason to inspect by
fabric, not as a promise that one fibre always clears and another never does.

## Step by step: a fresh grease stain

Speed helps, but the order matters more than the clock.

### 1. Blot, then absorb — before you add water

Lift any pooled oil with a paper towel, pressing rather than wiping. Slide a
piece of card or a folded towel **behind** the stained layer first, so grease does
not transfer through to the back of the garment as you work. Then cover the mark
with a source-backed absorbent: cornstarch, talc or Fuller's Earth. UGA says the
powder should cake or gum up as it soaks up grease/oil; brush it away and repeat
if needed. Keep this step dry, because moisture reduces the absorbent's value.

### 2. Work in detergent or white/clear dish soap

Work full-strength heavy-duty liquid detergent, a prewash product or a few drops
of white/clear dishwashing detergent into the dry stain with a fingertip or soft
brush. Keep dish soap as a spot pretreat; it is not a laundry-machine additive.
If the fabric reacts, stop and rinse.

### 3. Give the surfactant time

Leave the pretreat as the product label directs. If you are using dish soap as a
spot pretreat, give it a short dwell, then rinse or wash rather than letting it
dry into the fabric.

### 4. Emulsify, then wash warm

Add a little label-safe warm water and rub gently if the fabric allows it. Then
machine-wash at the hottest temperature the care label says is safe. On robust
cotton or denim that may be warm or hot; on synthetics, wool, silk or trim-heavy
garments it may be much lower.

**wash-40**

**wash-60**

### 5. Check before any heat

Air-dry and inspect before the dryer or iron goes anywhere near the garment. If
a faint shadow remains, repeat from step two. Do not use heat as a shortcut.

## When to reach for an enzyme detergent or oxygen bleach

Dish soap is useful on a single fresh splash, but body-oil buildup, collars, gym
kit and set-in food grease often need a laundry product. Lipase enzymes support
greasy-soil removal in detergent formulas, so a heavy-duty enzyme detergent or
prewash spray is a sensible escalation when the care label allows normal washing.
Oxygen bleach is a different decision: use it only when the fabric is colourfast,
the care label allows bleach, and the product label fits the garment.

How to use one well: pretreat the dry mark with the liquid or spray according to
the label, then wash at the hottest safe setting for the fabric. For a set-in or
already-washed stain, repeat label-safe rounds instead of increasing heat beyond
the care label. The honest limit: silk, wool and dry-clean-only items do not
belong in this escalation path.

**Recommended product**

For a grab-and-go option you keep by the machine, a pre-wash

enzyme stain-remover spray
pairs surfactants and enzymes in one step and saves measuring — handy for mixed
grease-and-pigment marks like engine oil, lipstick or sauce, though it is no
more powerful than a good detergent soak and costs more per use.

## Match the method to the type of grease

Not all grease is equal. The origin decides how hard you have to work.

| Grease type              | Best treatment                                                  | Soak / dwell     | Wash temperature        |
| ------------------------ | --------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------- | ----------------------- |
| Cooking oil, vinaigrette | Absorbent powder, then detergent or white/clear dish soap       | Product label    | Hottest safe for fabric |
| Butter, cream, cheese    | Detergent/prewash; oxygen bleach only if label-safe             | Product label    | Hottest safe for fabric |
| Engine or chain grease   | Scrape, labelled solvent/prewash only if needed, then detergent | Product label    | Hottest safe for fabric |
| Make-up, sunscreen       | Treat as oil plus dye; test before solvent or bleach            | Product label    | Care-label limit        |
| Old or dried stain       | Repeat detergent/prewash rounds                                 | Repeat as needed | Hottest safe for fabric |

Food grease is the easiest case: a washable food-oil mark may respond to liquid
detergent, white/clear dish soap or a bar of

Marseille soap handles
after the absorbent step. **Mechanical grease** — engine oil, bike-chain lube —
is a different risk because solvent products enter the picture. Scrape off the
surplus first, then use only a labelled prewash, fabric/upholstery cleaner or
dry-cleaning solvent route that the fabric can tolerate. UGA warns those solvent
products can be toxic and flammable, so ventilation, gloves, pretesting and label
directions are not optional. **WD-40** stays in the last-resort bucket: if you
are tempted by the hack, treat it as a solvent-residue problem and do not put the
item in a washer or dryer while it still smells of product. **Cosmetic grease**
is oil plus pigment, so test before any solvent or bleach.

## Fuller's earth: the dry route for fragile fabrics

Dish soap or detergent moves grease into a wash; Fuller's Earth does the opposite
and **absorbs** grease/oil dry. UGA lists it as an absorbent and notes it is
especially useful on dark colours. That makes it a reasonable first support move
when water is risky, but it does not replace a professional cleaner for valuable
leather, suede, silk, wool or upholstery.

Apply a layer to the dry mark, wait until the powder cakes or gums up, then brush
it off and repeat if needed. Keep it on dry material. For suede specifically, see
[grease on suede](/stains/grease/suede/index.md).

## The one rule that ruins more clothes than any other

> Texas A\&M's rule is simple: inspect oil-based stains before drying and repeat
> treatment if traces remain. Dryer or iron heat can make remaining stain harder
> to remove, and aged oily soils can leave yellowing or residual oil that is not
> obvious until the garment is dry. Air-dry and inspect first.

There can also be a safety reason, but keep it scoped. East Sussex Fire & Rescue
warns that drying oils such as linseed oil oxidise with heat release, and that
piles of oil-soaked rags can insulate that heat until ignition. Do not translate
that into panic over a tiny salad-oil spot; do treat heavily oil-soaked items,
work rags and drying-oil contamination as a separate fire-risk case that should
not sit warm in a heap.

If it is already too late and a garment came out of the dryer with the stain
still visible, you have not necessarily lost it. Apply detergent or a prewash
product again, wash at the hottest label-safe setting, air-dry and inspect. It
can take several rounds, and the result is not guaranteed, but slow repetition
beats hard scrubbing, which only wears the fabric.

## Adapt to the fabric

The treatment is similar; the limits change with the fibre. Cotton and linen may
allow warmer water and stronger laundering. Denim can bleed dye, so pretest and
avoid hard rubbing. Synthetics vary by care label; use the detergent pretreat but
do not assume high heat. Silk, wool and other delicates do not belong in a harsh
warm-water grease routine: use dry absorbent support only if appropriate, or take
the item to a professional cleaner.



If the label carries either of these symbols, stop and take it in:

**dryclean**

**wash-no**

When you are unsure how far a fibre can be pushed, our
[laundry temperature guide](/blog/laundry-temperature-guide/index.md) sets out what each
fabric tolerates, and the
[laundry basics starter guide](/blog/getting-started-laundry/index.md) covers sorting
before you wash.

## Grease off carpet, upholstery and mattresses

Do not copy the clothing routine onto a sofa cushion, rug or mattress. These
surfaces cannot be rinsed like a garment, and UGA's solvent guidance is explicit:
greasy hard-to-remove stains may involve products that are toxic, flammable and
fabric-sensitive. Work small, pretest, ventilate and stop early.

1. **Scrape and blot.** Lift any solid or pooled grease with a spoon edge, then
   blot — never rub — with a dry paper towel to take up what sits on top.
   Rubbing only spreads the mark and frays the pile.
2. **Powder first on a fresh, heavy stain.** Sprinkle on cornstarch, talc or
   Fuller's Earth, wait until it cakes or gums up, and vacuum or brush it away.
3. **Use a labelled cleaner or tiny detergent blot only after testing.** If the
   manufacturer allows water-based cleaning, use a barely damp cloth with a small
   amount of white/clear detergent solution, then lift residue with another barely
   damp cloth. For solvent-labelled upholstery, valuable rugs or mattresses, use a
   labelled upholstery/carpet cleaner or a professional.

## Mistakes to avoid

Most grease-stain failures come from heat, the wrong product or too much
aggression. These are the habits to avoid.

> **Warning:**
> - **Starting with plain water** — oil, butter and wax are dry-type stains; use dry absorption or detergent/prewash first.
> - **Tumble-drying or ironing before the stain is gone** — inspect before drying and repeat if traces remain.
> - **Scrubbing hard** — friction frays fibres and spreads the oil without lifting it.
> - **Pouring dish soap into the machine** — it foams far too much; use it only as a spot pre-treatment.
> - **Leaning on white vinegar** — it is not the oil-based stain route and can change some dyes.
> - **Expecting baking soda to be the best powder** — UGA's grease/oil absorbent examples are cornstarch, talc and Fuller's Earth.
> - **Using solvent casually** — dry-cleaning solvents can be toxic and flammable; pretest, ventilate and follow the label.

## The honest bottom line

A fresh grease stain on washable fabric is often recoverable: blot, absorb if
needed, pretreat with detergent, prewash product or white/clear dish soap, wash at
the hottest safe setting, then air-dry and inspect. Set-in and dryer-exposed
stains are harder and may not fully clear, and delicate or non-washable surfaces
belong with a professional sooner. For other common marks, the
[red wine method](/blog/remove-red-wine-stains/index.md), the
[chocolate-stain route](/blog/remove-chocolate-stains/index.md) and the rest of our
[stain-removal guides](/stain-removal/index.md) cover the cases where cold water — not
warm — is the right call.
