
You've just watched something spill directly onto your rug. Maybe it was coffee. Maybe it was the dog. Maybe it was both, somehow, at the same time. And now you're standing there wondering: can you wash a rug in the washing machine?
For most rugs, the honest answer is no. They're too big, too heavy, or made from materials that simply weren't designed to survive a spin cycle. But the longer answer is more interesting — because a new generation of washable rugs has changed what's actually possible, and knowing the difference could save you a lot of money, stress, and trips to a professional cleaner.
This guide breaks down which rugs can be machine washed, which ones can't and why, what size washer you actually need, and how to wash and dry a rug properly so it comes out looking as good as it went in.
Why Most Rugs Can't Go in the Washing Machine
It's not just about size, although that's a big part of it. Most traditional area rugs are ruled out for machine washing for a few reasons:
Weight and bulk. A traditional 5'x7' area rug can weigh anywhere from 10 to 25 pounds dry — and significantly more when wet. That kind of weight puts real strain on a home washing machine's drum and motor, and an unbalanced load can damage both the rug and the machine. Rugs engineered specifically for washing are a different story — built lighter and with machine-ready construction, they're designed to handle the cycle without the bulk becoming a problem.
Material. Wool, silk, and many hand-knotted rugs are too delicate for machine washing. Water can cause fibers to felt, shrink, or lose their structure entirely. And certain dyes — particularly in older or hand-dyed rugs — aren't colorfast enough to survive a wash cycle without bleeding or fading. Jute is a notable exception — when engineered correctly, it can be machine washable, which is why Ruggable's Re-Jute rugs are designed to be laundered at home without losing their texture or structure.
Construction. Rugs with latex or rubber backings can crack and deteriorate in the wash. Traditionally, tufted rugs have been a problem too — if the backing isn't designed to get wet, the pile can loosen over time. And rugs with fringe or embellishments can snag and tangle in ways that cause permanent damage.
The short version: most rugs are made to be lived on, not laundered — unless they're built differently from the start. Which is why when something spills on a conventional rug, the standard advice has always been to spot clean, blot carefully, and hope for the best. That is, unless the rug was built for something better.
What Rugs Can Be Washed in the Washing Machine

The rugs that hold up to machine washing tend to share a few characteristics: they're made from synthetic, colorfast fibers; they have backings designed to get wet; and — crucially — they're either small enough to fit comfortably in a standard home washer, or they're built with washing in mind from the start.
Small cotton or synthetic rugs — think bathroom mats, small kitchen rugs, and accent rugs under 3'x5' — are generally safe to machine wash on a gentle cycle. Check the care label first, and if it says dry clean only or spot clean only, believe it.
Flatwoven rugs made from polypropylene or other synthetic fibers are generally more machine-wash friendly than traditional woven styles, as long as the size is manageable.
Washable rugs designed for machine cleaning are in a category of their own. These are rugs built specifically to be laundered — with synthetic fibers, colorfast construction, and backings that can handle repeated wash cycles without degrading. These machine washable rugs have become increasingly common as households with kids, pets, and high-traffic spaces look for rugs that can actually keep up with real life.
The key word is designed. A rug that's washable because someone decided to try it is very different from a rug that was engineered to be washed.
What Size Washing Machine Do You Need for a Rug
Even if a rug is technically machine washable, your washer still needs to be big enough to handle it. A rug crammed into a drum that's too small won't get a thorough clean — and the uneven load can cause the machine to shake, stop mid-cycle, or put unnecessary wear on the motor.
Here's a practical guide to washer capacity by rug size:
Small washers (2.4–3.4 cu. ft.) — suitable for small rugs and runners only
Standard washers (3.5–4.4 cu. ft.) — handle small and medium rugs up to around 5'x7'
Large-capacity washers (4.5+ cu. ft.) — needed for larger rugs up to 8'x10'
Commercial or laundromat washers — required for very large rugs, 9'x12' and above
Not sure what size your washer is? Check the label inside the door or lid, or search your model number online. Most standard front-load and top-load washers in the US fall between 3.5 and 5.0 cu. ft.
One more thing worth knowing: if your washer has a central agitator — the post that sits in the middle of a top-load drum — it can be hard on rug fibers and backing. A front-load washer or an agitator-free top-load is a gentler option when you have the choice.
How to Wash a Rug in the Washing Machine

If your rug is machine washable and your washer is the right size, the process is straightforward. Here's what to do:
Before You Wash
If there’s a visible stain, treat it first. Blot up as much of the spill as possible — don’t rub, which can spread the stain — then dab gently with a small amount of mild liquid detergent and lukewarm water. Let it sit for a few minutes before loading the rug into the machine.
For best results, use our Ruggable Spot Cleaner to target tough stains quickly and effectively.
Shake out or vacuum the rug before washing, too. Removing loose dirt and debris beforehand ensures the wash cycle is doing real cleaning work — not just moving grit around.
In the Washer
Wash on cold. Hot water is the fastest way to shrink a rug or damage its backing.
Use a mild, liquid, non-bleach detergent. Powder detergents don't always dissolve fully in cold water and can leave residue. Fabric softener can reduce a rug's stain resistance over time, so skip it.
Wash the rug on its own. Heavy items like towels or jeans in the same load create uneven tumbling and can make it harder for the rug to get a thorough clean.
If your rug has a design, load it design-side out to protect the backing.
If Your Rug Is Too Big for Your Home Washer
Take it to a laundromat with commercial machines. The larger drum size handles big rugs properly — and most laundromats have front-load commercial washers well-suited to the task. This is the right move for anything 9'x12' and above.
How to Dry a Rug After Washing
This is the step people most often get wrong — and where the most damage tends to happen.
Tumble dry on low heat. Not medium, not high. High heat is the primary cause of rug shrinkage and can crack or warp certain backings. Low heat is all you need — it just takes a little longer, and that's a good thing for your rug.
Larger rugs hold onto moisture longer than regular laundry, so plan for a couple of cycles and let the dryer do the work:
Small rugs and runners: one cycle (~45–60 minutes)
5'x7': two cycles (~90–120 minutes)
6'x9' and 8'x10': three cycles (~135–180 minutes)
Before putting the rug back on the floor, press your hand into the center and along the edges to confirm it's dry all the way through. A rug that goes back down while still damp can develop odors or affect the floor underneath.
Prefer to air dry? Lay the rug flat on a clean surface or drape it over a railing or drying rack. It's the gentlest option and eliminates any shrinkage risk entirely. Plan for several hours depending on rug size and humidity.
Meet the Washable Rug That's Actually Easy to Wash

Ruggable approached washable rugs differently — and that starts with having two distinct systems designed for how real homes actually live.
The Two-Piece system pairs a rug pad that stays on the floor permanently with a lightweight rug cover that peels off in seconds and goes straight into a standard home washing machine. The cover is the part with the color and pattern. The pad is what keeps everything flat, cushioned, and nonslip.
Prefer a traditional single-piece rug? The All-in-One collection — available in tufted, plush — offers the same machine-washable ease in a one-piece design. The whole rug goes in the wash, no separation required.
Either way, every Ruggable rug is engineered specifically to be laundered repeatedly — lightweight enough for a standard home washer, and built to come out looking exactly as good as it went in. Whichever system fits your home, every Ruggable rug is engineered to be laundered repeatedly — and to come out looking exactly as good as it went in.
For households where spills, pet hair, muddy paw prints, and general lived-in mess are part of daily life, it's a meaningful shift in how a rug can actually function.
Keeping Any Washable Rug in Good Shape Between Washes
However often you wash your rug, a little routine maintenance in between goes a long way toward keeping it looking clean and extending the time between full wash cycles.
Vacuum regularly. Surface dirt and pet hair work their way deeper into rug fibers over time if left alone. A quick vacuum — suction only for most washable rugs, no rotating brush bar — keeps things fresh between washes.
Spot clean immediately. The faster you address a spill, the less likely it is to set. Blot up the liquid, apply a mild soapy solution, rinse with a clean damp cloth, and let it air dry. For rugs with stain-resistant coatings, many everyday spills don't need a full machine wash at all.
Shake out smaller rugs. It takes less than a minute and removes a surprising amount of debris, especially in entryways and high-traffic areas.
As for how often to do a full machine wash — it depends entirely on how your home lives. A rug in a busy household with pets or kids might need washing every one to three months. A lower-traffic room might only need it once or twice a year. The point of a washable rug is that you don't have to wait for a professional cleaning appointment or write off a stain as permanent — when it needs a wash, you can do it today.
Ready for a Rug That Can Keep Up?
Explore Ruggable's full collection of machine washable rugs — designed for every room, every style, and every household that refuses to choose between a beautiful home and a livable one.
Not sure which size works for your space? The Ruggable Rug Size Guide makes it easy.
For complete washing specs, cycle settings, and rug-type care details, visit the Ruggable Washing Guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Most area rugs — particularly those made from wool, silk, or with latex backings — are not safe to machine wash. Small synthetic rugs and rugs specifically designed for machine washing are the main exceptions. Ruggable rugs fall into that second category — every rug in the collection is designed to be machine washed at home, so you never have to guess whether yours can handle it. Always check the care label before washing any rug you're unsure about.
A mild, liquid, non-bleach detergent is the safest choice for most washable rugs. Avoid powder detergents, bleach, and fabric softener. Nothing specialized is required — the gentler, the better.
Most machine-washable rugs can go in the dryer on low heat. High heat is the main cause of shrinkage and backing damage, so low heat is non-negotiable. Larger rugs may need multiple cycles to dry all the way through. Air drying flat is always a safe alternative.
It depends on the household. High-traffic areas and homes with pets or kids may warrant washing every one to three months. Lower-traffic spaces can often go longer between washes. Spot cleaning in between helps extend the time between full washes.
It depends on the material, but the most common outcomes are shrinkage, fiber damage, color bleeding, and backing deterioration. Some rugs can also become waterlogged and take days to dry properly, which can lead to mildew if they're placed back on the floor too soon.
Ruggable rugs are engineered from the ground up to be machine washed at home — no hauling, no professional cleaners, no writing off a stain. The signature two-piece system separates a lightweight rug cover from a floor-hugging pad: peel off the cover, wash it, and reattach it — your furniture never has to move. Prefer a traditional single-piece rug? Ruggable's All-in-One collection offers the same machine-washable convenience in a one-piece design, available in tufted, plush, and performance weave styles. Either way, you get a rug that can actually keep up with your home.


