Your toddler just wiped spaghetti sauce down their school shirt. Again. Or maybe that's red wine on your favourite blouse from last night. Either way, you're standing in the laundry wondering if this one's headed for the bin — and whether you can really afford to keep replacing clothes every time someone spills something.
**Quick Answer:** Most common clothing stains — from red wine to grass — can be removed at home with products you already have. The key is acting quickly, using cold water for protein-based stains (blood, sweat) and warm water for tannin-based stains (tea, juice), and always checking the fabric care label first.
Before You Start: The Golden Rules of Stain Removal
Before tackling any stain, these four rules will save you time, money, and a lot of frustration.
**Act fast.** Fresh stains are always easier to remove than dried ones.
**Blot, don't rub.** Rubbing pushes the stain deeper into the fabric fibres. Blot gently from the outside in.
**Check the care label.** Some fabrics (silk, wool, cashmere) need professional dry cleaning — using the wrong method can cause permanent damage.
**Test first.** Apply any cleaning product to a hidden area and wait 5 minutes before treating the stain.
According to the [University of Georgia Extension Service](https://site.extension.uga.edu/textiles/care/stain-removal/), pretesting a cleaning agent on an inconspicuous area is the single most important step to avoid making things worse.
**⚠️ Safety note:** Never mix bleach with vinegar (produces toxic chlorine gas) or with hydrogen peroxide (fire hazard). Use one product at a time and rinse thoroughly between treatments. — [Washington State Department of Health](https://doh.wa.gov/community-and-environment/contaminants/bleach-mixing-dangers)
Australian Products Worth Keeping in Your Laundry
**Sard Super Power Stain Remover** scored 76% in [CHOICE Australia's independent testing](https://www.choice.com.au/home-and-living/laundry-and-cleaning/laundry-detergents/articles/the-best-and-worst-stain-removers), and **Aldi Di-San Pro** scored 80% on sweat stains. Vanish NapiSan and Morning Fresh dish soap round out a solid stain-fighting kit. You'll find all of these at Coles, Woolworths, or Aldi.
**⚠️ Safety note:** If you have young children, store all stain removal products in locked cupboards at least 1.5 metres high. In 2020, the [Victorian Poisons Information Centre](https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/healthyliving/Chemicals-in-the-home) received over 19,000 calls about chemical exposures involving children under 15. **Australian Poisons Information: 13 11 26.** — [Better Health Victoria](https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/healthyliving/Chemicals-in-the-home)
1. Red Wine Stains
**You might have heard:** Sprinkle salt on a red wine stain to draw it out. **Don't.** Salt is a dye fixative — it can set the stain permanently.
**What actually works:**
Lay the garment flat with paper towels underneath the stain.
Blot with a sponge soaked in cold water to lift as much colour as possible.
Apply an oxygen-based stain remover (Vanish NapiSan or Sard Super Power) directly to the stain.
Wait the recommended time on the product label, then machine wash at the temperature on the care label.
**For delicate fabrics** like silk or wool, take the item to a professional dry cleaner.
2. Fruit Juice Stains
Fruit juice is tannin-based, so warm water works in your favour here — unlike protein stains where heat causes permanent damage.
Rinse the stain under cold water first to lighten it. Don't rub.
Apply an enzyme-based laundry detergent (Cold Power, OMO, or Aldi Di-San) and work it gently into the stain with your fingers.
Wait 20 minutes, then wash on the warmest cycle the fabric care label allows.
**Note:** Always check the care label before running a hot cycle. Delicate fabrics can shrink or warp.
3. Ink (Ballpoint Pen)
**Skip the hairspray.** This tip worked decades ago when hairsprays contained high levels of alcohol. Modern formulations are often alcohol-free, which means they won't dissolve ink and may leave sticky residue that makes the stain harder to treat.
**Use rubbing alcohol instead:**
Place paper towels under the fabric.
Saturate the stain with 70% isopropyl alcohol using a cotton ball.
Blot with a clean white cloth — you should see the ink transferring.
Rinse under cold water and machine wash as normal.
The [New Mexico State University Extension Service](https://pubs.nmsu.edu/_c/C502/index.html) confirms that isopropyl alcohol safely removes ink from many fabrics — but **avoid using it on acetate, rayon, wool, or silk**, as it can dissolve these fibres.
4. Grease Stains
Your best weapon against grease is already in your kitchen. Dish soap — Morning Fresh or Fairy, available at any supermarket — is a concentrated surfactant that breaks oil into tiny particles that rinse away.
Hold the stain under cold running water and gently rinse off excess grease.
Apply liquid dish soap directly to the stain and work it in with a soft toothbrush in gentle circular motions.
Rinse thoroughly.
If the stain remains, treat with an enzyme-based stain remover and wait 15 minutes.
Machine wash on a warm cycle.
**Note:** Don't put dish soap directly into your washing machine — it creates excessive suds. Use it as a pre-treatment only.
5. Sweat and Bodily Fluid Stains
**Don't reach for the bleach** on yellow underarm stains. Chlorine bleach reacts with the proteins and aluminium compounds in sweat and actually makes the stains **darker**.
Dampen the stain and blot with paper towels.
Apply an oxygen-based product (NapiSan) or enzyme-based stain remover — these target the proteins without the chemical reaction that chlorine bleach causes.
Let it sit for 15 minutes, then gently scrub with a soft toothbrush.
Wash on a warm cycle without rinsing off the remover first.
[Consumer Reports testing](https://www.consumerreports.org/appliances/laundry-stain-removers/best-laundry-stain-removers-from-consumer-reports-tests-a1058254182/) confirms that enzyme-based formulas outperform non-enzyme products on protein stains like sweat, because protease enzymes specifically break down the protein bonds causing the discolouration.
6. Blood Stains
**Cold water only.** Hot water denatures blood proteins — causing them to coagulate and permanently bond to fabric, the same way egg white turns solid when cooked.
Soak the garment in cold water, gently rubbing the stain with your fingers. Replace the water if it turns pink.
Rinse the garment and gently squeeze out excess water (don't wring delicate fabrics).
Apply liquid laundry detergent directly to the stain and let it sit for a minute.
Rub the fabric together gently, rinse, and repeat if needed.
Machine wash on a cold cycle.
**For dried blood stains:** Apply 3% hydrogen peroxide directly to the stain. It reacts with the iron in haemoglobin to break down the proteins, according to the [University of Georgia FACS Extension](https://site.extension.uga.edu/textiles/care/stain-removal/).
**⚠️ Safety note:** Hydrogen peroxide can fade coloured fabrics. Always test on a hidden seam first. Avoid using it on wool, silk, or spandex. — [University of Georgia Extension](https://site.extension.uga.edu/textiles/care/stain-removal/)
7. Lipstick Stains
Lipstick is oil-based, so the same grease-fighting approach works here.
Scrape off excess lipstick with a plastic spoon while it's still fresh.
Place the stain face-down on paper towels.
Apply grease-fighting dish soap (Morning Fresh) to the back of the fabric and work it in with a soft toothbrush.
Flip and scrub the front of the stain. Rinse and reapply as needed.
Treat any remaining colour with oxygen-based bleach (NapiSan) and wash on a regular cycle.
**For wool, silk, or cashmere:** take it to a professional dry cleaner.
8. Tea and Coffee Stains
Baking soda is your friend here — but not just because it "absorbs" the stain. Its alkaline nature helps neutralise the tannins in tea and coffee, while its mild abrasive texture lifts discolouration from fibres.
Sprinkle baking soda generously over the wet stain and wait 5 minutes.
Hold the stain face-down and run cold water through the back of the fabric to push the colour out.
Apply liquid dish soap and scrub gently with a soft toothbrush in circular motions.
Rinse and check. If the stain persists, treat with an enzyme-based remover and wash as normal.
If tea or coffee has made its way onto your carpet or couch, the approach is a bit different — our [carpet stain removal guide](/cleaning-101/stains/if-youve-got-a-carpet-stain-weve-got-a-cleaning-solution) and [couch stain guide](/cleaning-101/stains/step-by-step-guides-how-to-remove-common-couch-stains) cover those surfaces.
9. Mud and Grass Stains
This is the one where patience comes first. **Let the mud dry completely** before you do anything — washing wet mud just spreads it deeper into the fabric.
Let the mud dry fully (hang the garment on the clothesline or place under a fan).
Scrape off dried debris with a plastic spoon.
Mix equal parts white vinegar and water, saturate the stain, and leave for 5 minutes. The acidity dissolves chlorophyll and organic compounds in grass without harming fabric.
Apply an enzyme-based stain remover and wash on a regular cycle.
If the stain persists, pretreat with diluted hydrogen peroxide (3%) before rewashing.
**Always test vinegar and hydrogen peroxide on a hidden area first** to check for colourfastness.
10. Collar Stains
Those brownish marks on shirt collars come from sebum — the same natural oil that makes hair greasy. Shampoo formulated for oily hair dissolves these oils because it's designed to cut through exactly that.
Apply oily-hair shampoo directly to the collar stain and rub the fabric together.
Rinse and repeat to really work the shampoo in.
Leave for 15 minutes, then soak the collar in warm water for another 15 minutes.
Machine wash with your regular detergent.
**Stronger option:** An enzyme-based laundry detergent with lipase is even more effective than shampoo, as lipase specifically breaks down the fat molecules in sebum.
Stain Removal Myths That Make Things Worse
Before you follow that tip from social media, here are four common mistakes that can turn a removable stain into a permanent one:
**Salt on red wine** — Salt is a dye fixative. It can set the wine pigment instead of lifting it.
**Hairspray on ink** — Modern hairsprays are often alcohol-free. Without alcohol, they just leave sticky residue.
**Hot water on blood** — Heat denatures proteins and bonds them permanently to fabric.
**Bleach on sweat stains** — Chlorine bleach reacts with sweat proteins and aluminium from deodorant, making yellow stains darker.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can you remove a stain after clothes have been through the dryer?
It's much harder, but not always impossible. Heat from the dryer sets most stains by bonding them to the fibres. Try soaking the item in an enzyme-based stain remover for several hours, then rewash. For stubborn set-in stains, a professional dry cleaner may be your best option.
Q: Should you use hot or cold water for stains?
It depends on the stain type. Use **cold water** for protein-based stains (blood, sweat, dairy) — hot water denatures proteins and sets them permanently. Use **warm or hot water** for tannin-based stains (tea, coffee, fruit juice) and grease, as heat helps dissolve these compounds. When in doubt, start cold — you can always go warmer, but you can't undo heat damage. For more on water temperature and cleaning, see our guide on [what temperature of water cleans better](/cleaning-101/uncategorized/hot-or-cold-what-temperature-of-water-cleans-better).
Q: Does salt really work on red wine stains?
No — and it can make things worse. Salt is a dye fixative, which means it can set the wine pigment into the fabric permanently. Use cold water and an oxygen-based stain remover like NapiSan or Sard instead.
Q: What's the difference between an enzyme cleaner and regular detergent?
Enzyme cleaners contain specific proteins — protease, lipase, and amylase — that break down the molecules causing the stain. Protease tackles blood and sweat, lipase handles grease, and amylase breaks down food starch. Regular detergent relies on surfactants alone, which are less targeted for stubborn stains.
Q: Is hydrogen peroxide safe on coloured clothes?
It can fade some dyes, especially on dark or brightly coloured fabrics. Always test on a hidden seam or inside hem first. Stick to 3% concentration (the standard pharmacy strength) and avoid using it on wool, silk, or spandex.
Related Reading
[If You've Got a Carpet Stain, We've Got a Cleaning Method](/cleaning-101/stains/if-youve-got-a-carpet-stain-weve-got-a-cleaning-solution)
[Step-by-Step Guides: How to Remove Common Couch Stains](/cleaning-101/stains/step-by-step-guides-how-to-remove-common-couch-stains)
[How to Clean a Mattress and Get Rid of Stains](/cleaning-101/bedroom-living/how-to-clean-a-mattress-and-get-rid-of-stains)
[Step-by-Step Guide: How to Clean Canvas Sneakers](/cleaning-101/laundry/step-by-step-guide-how-to-clean-canvas-sneakers)
[Hot or Cold? What Temperature of Water Cleans Better](/cleaning-101/uncategorized/hot-or-cold-what-temperature-of-water-cleans-better)
Sources & References
**University of Georgia FACS Extension** — [Stain Removal Guide](https://site.extension.uga.edu/textiles/care/stain-removal/). Referenced for general stain removal methodology, hydrogen peroxide effectiveness on blood stains, and care label guidance.
**Washington State Department of Health** — [Bleach Mixing Dangers](https://doh.wa.gov/community-and-environment/contaminants/bleach-mixing-dangers). Referenced for chemical mixing safety warnings (chlorine gas, peracetic acid risks).
**New Mexico State University Extension** — [Removing Clothing Stains](https://pubs.nmsu.edu/_c/C502/index.html). Cited for isopropyl alcohol effectiveness on ink stains and fabric-specific safety warnings (acetate, rayon, wool, silk).
**CHOICE Australia** — [Best and Worst Stain Removers](https://www.choice.com.au/home-and-living/laundry-and-cleaning/laundry-detergents/articles/the-best-and-worst-stain-removers). Referenced for independent Australian product testing results (Sard Super Power, Aldi Di-San Pro, supermarket brands).
**Consumer Reports** — [Best Laundry Stain Removers](https://www.consumerreports.org/appliances/laundry-stain-removers/best-laundry-stain-removers-from-consumer-reports-tests-a1058254182/). Cited for enzyme-based cleaner effectiveness on protein and organic stains.
**Better Health Victoria** — [Chemicals in the Home](https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/healthyliving/Chemicals-in-the-home). Referenced for child safety statistics and poisoning prevention guidance.
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