How to Remove Pet Hair from Clothes in the Washing Machine
Quick Answer
To remove pet hair from clothes: shake or tumble-dry on air for 10 minutes before washing, use a mesh laundry bag or pet hair catcher in the drum, and wash at 60°C where possible. The most overlooked step is cleaning your washing machine monthly — pet hair and residue build up inside the drum and re-deposit on every subsequent load.
Why Pet Hair Is Hard to Remove in the Wash
Pet hair — particularly dog and cat hair — has microscopic barbs along the shaft that cause it to cling to fabric fibres. Water doesn't dislodge it. In fact, the agitation of a wash cycle can drive individual hairs deeper into the weave.

The secondary problem: pet hair that enters the drum doesn't all flush out with the water. Fine hairs can pass through the drum perforations and collect in the filter, but coarser hairs cling to the drum walls, rubber seal, and drain paths. On the next wash, they deposit onto whatever's in the drum.
If you're living in constant cleanup mode, it helps to think in four stages — pre-wash, in-wash, post-wash, and machine maintenance. Skip one and the hair wins. The RSPCA's grooming guidance is worth a read too: regular brushing at the source is the cheapest hair-reduction tool you own.
Before the Wash: Prep That Makes the Difference
Shake items out first
Remove loose surface hair before it enters the machine. Take items outside and give them a firm shake, or tap them against a hard surface. This takes 30 seconds and noticeably reduces the amount of hair in the drum.
10-minute air tumble
If you have a tumble dryer, run items on the air-dry setting (no heat) for 10 minutes before washing. The tumbling loosens embedded hair, and the lint trap catches it. This works better than any pre-wash product.
Use a lint roller on upholstery fabrics
For velvet, fleece, or heavy cotton items where hair is deeply embedded, a lint roller before washing is more effective than trying to remove the hair once it's wet and flattened against the fabric.
Rubber gloves, damp-wiped
A damp rubber washing-up glove dragged across fabric pulls hair off in clumps — especially useful on jumpers and coats where lint rollers skim the surface without grabbing the embedded stuff.
Which Fabrics Are Worst for Pet Hair
Not all fabrics behave the same. Natural fibres with a visible weave or pile — cotton jersey, wool, fleece, corduroy, velvet — act as hair magnets because the fibres themselves have texture for barbed hairs to catch on. Tightly woven synthetics like polyester, nylon activewear, and smooth technical fabrics shed hair far more easily.
The practical takeaway: if you own a heavy shedder, lean towards smoother fabrics for everyday wear and save the chunky knits for days you won't be cuddling the dog. Black clothing is the obvious offender on light-coated pets, but navy, grey, and charcoal are just as bad — you only notice the hair under direct light.
During the Wash
Use a pet hair catcher
Reusable pet hair catchers (typically a spiky ball or mesh bag) work by creating turbulence in the drum that lifts hair from fabric and traps it. They're particularly effective in front-loading machines where the tumbling action helps.
Add white vinegar to the softener drawer
Half a cup of white vinegar in the fabric softener dispenser helps loosen hair from fibres during the rinse. It also softens the water slightly, which reduces the static that holds hair in place. It won't leave a smell once the cycle finishes.
Pick a longer cycle with an extra rinse
A longer cycle means more water flushing through the drum, and an extra rinse catches the stragglers that the main wash missed. On a quick 30-minute cycle, hair that's been dislodged often just redeposits before it can drain away.
Wash pet items separately
Heavy shedders — dog beds, blankets, towels used for drying pets — should be washed separately from regular laundry. A dedicated load lets the cycle flush hair out without spreading it onto your clothes. Mixing a hairy dog blanket with your work shirts guarantees you'll be picking fur off your collar all day. Run the pet load last, then run an empty rinse cycle before your next normal wash.
Temperature matters
Warmer water (40–60°C) loosens hair from fibres more effectively than cold washes. Check care labels before going above 40°C, but where the fabric allows, a warmer wash makes a measurable difference.
Tools That Actually Help (and Ones That Don't)
Honest assessment, because the market is full of gimmicks. Worth buying: reusable pet hair balls, a decent lint roller, and a silicone pet hair remover for the sofa and car seats. Overrated: dryer sheets marketed as hair-grabbers — they help marginally with static but don't actively remove hair, and they coat your lint filter over time. Skip entirely: "anti-pet-hair" detergents that promise to dissolve fur. Hair is keratin; standard detergent won't break it down, and neither will the branded versions.
The Step Most People Miss: Machine Maintenance
If your machine drum and seals are coated in pet hair residue, every load is contaminated before the cycle begins. Hair, oils, and dander that accumulate on internal surfaces re-deposit onto your clothes with the agitation of each wash. The filter is the worst offender — a blocked filter means hair-laden water sits in the drum at the end of the cycle. Our guide on how to stop pet hair clogging your washing machine filter walks through the clean-out routine in detail, and the complete guide to removing pet hair from your washing machine covers drum, seal, and drain in one go.
Running a monthly drum clean with an enzyme-based tablet removes the residue build-up. Enzymes break down the proteins in pet dander and hair — something standard descalers and bleach-based cleaners can't do.
The missing step: clean your washing machine
Pet hair and odour build up inside your drum and seals with every wash. viblii Pet Formula uses three enzymes to break down what's hiding inside — so your clothes come out actually clean.
After the Wash
Check the drum and rubber seal after each pet-related load. Wipe visible hair from the seal with a damp cloth. Check and clean the filter every 2–3 months — a clogged filter reduces drain performance and keeps hair circulating in the machine.
If items still have hair after washing, a 10-minute tumble-dry cycle after the wash is the most effective finishing step. The lint trap will catch what the wash cycle didn't.
Related Reading
- How to Stop Pet Hair Clogging Your Filter
- How to Remove Pet Hair from Your WM
- Best Laundry Tips for Pet Owners
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my washing machine leave more pet hair on clothes than before I washed them?
This is caused by hair build-up inside the drum and seals. The machine is re-depositing accumulated hair onto each new load. A drum clean cycle with an enzyme cleaner removes the source of the problem.
Do fabric softeners help with pet hair?
Fabric softener slightly reduces static cling, which can help hair fall off during rinsing. The effect is modest — it helps more as a follow-on to other methods than as a standalone solution.
Is pet hair bad for washing machines?
Over time, yes. Hair accumulates in the filter, drum perforations, and pump. A clogged filter reduces drain speed, and pump blockages are a common cause of washing machine breakdowns. Regular cleaning extends machine life.