Fabric-specific stain method
How to Remove Red wine from Carpet
Red wine on carpet cannot be soaked — soaking the padding causes more damage than the stain. Blot and sponge from the surface only: absorb the spill, sponge with cool water or club soda, alternate a mild-detergent solution and diluted white-vinegar solution, rinse with cold water, and air-dry.
Best first move
Blot, then sponge from the surface only; avoid scrubbing or flooding the carpet backing.
What changes here
Never soak — soaking drives stain into the padding and causes structural damage.
Stop if
Stop before laundry/dishwasher detergent, heavy water, or any solution that moves dye in a hidden test.
Before You Treat It
This page exists because the fabric changes the standard red wine method. Do the quick checks first; they prevent a useful stain-removal step from becoming a fabric-damage problem.
- Check the care label before using water, bleach, heat or friction on the carpet or upholstery.
- Test the chosen method on a hidden corner or under-furniture edge; wait until it dries before judging colour or texture change.
- Work from the outside of the stain inward so the mark does not spread into a larger ring.
- Air-dry before applying heat; heat can set a remaining stain and make the next round less effective.
Fabric-Specific Method
- Blot up as much wine as possible with paper towels or a clean white cloth, pressing straight down and working from the edge inward.
- Sponge with cool water or club soda, then blot again — the fizz helps float pigment up before it sets.
- Alternate sponging with a mild-detergent solution (a teaspoon of neutral dye-free detergent in a cup of lukewarm water) and a diluted white-vinegar solution (one part white vinegar to two parts water), blotting between each pass. Source note: Remove Stains From Alcoholic Beverages, Beer, Wine — University of Georgia Extension
- Rinse by sponging with clean cold water, blot dry with a thick towel, and let the spot air-dry away from heat.
Why This Is Different From the Generic Method
A generic stain page can tell you what usually removes red wine. This cell exists only because carpet changes the safer route.
- Never soak — soaking drives stain into the padding and causes structural damage.
- Blot-and-sponge surface work only; no machine wash.
- White-vinegar solution alternated with mild detergent lifts tannin pigment without flooding.
Do Not Do This
- Do not use laundry or dishwasher detergent — optical brighteners and bleaching agents can dye or damage carpet fibres.
- Do not rub — it frays the pile and pushes pigment into the backing.
- Do not over-wet — excess water can carry the fabric finish to the damp edge and dry as a visible ring.
- Pretest every solution on a hidden corner first — some upholstery dyes are not colourfast.
After the First Round
Judge the result only after the area is dry. A damp fabric can hide a remaining stain, and a fragile surface can look safe while wet but dry with a ring, dull patch or texture change.
- A safe round should reduce the visible red wine mark without changing the colour, feel or finish of the carpet or upholstery.
- If the stain lightens and the fabric looks unchanged after drying, repeat only the gentlest compatible step instead of escalating immediately.
- If colour transfers, the surface roughens, the nap flattens, or a water ring appears, stop the home method and use a professional cleaner.
When to Use the Full Guide
Use this page for the fabric exception. Use the full red wine guide when you need the broader method: timing, washable-fabric instructions, set-in stain rules, product choices, repeated rounds and related stain types.