Can You Wash Leather? The Washing Machine Experiment
Somewhere on the internet, someone is about to throw their leather jacket into a washing machine. They're hoping for the best. They're going to get the worst. Here's what actually happens when leather meets a washing cycle, why it happens, and what you should do instead, before you lose a jacket you actually liked especially one that’s been through a few Canadian winters with you.
Quick Answer
No, you should not wash a leather jacket in a washing machine. Water, agitation, detergent, and heat all damage real leather they strip natural oils, distort the shape, crack the surface, and ruin the lining. Spot-clean small marks at home with a damp cloth and leather conditioner, and take heavier soiling to a leather-specialist dry cleaner. The washing machine is a one-way trip.
What Actually Happens to Leather in a Washing Machine
The result is a smaller, stiffer, misshapen, faded version of the jacket you put in. The leather panels shrink unevenly. The lining twists and bunches. Hardware oxidises. The finish dulls. In most cases, the jacket comes out unwearable and it can't be brought back.
Even on a "delicate" cold cycle, the combination of water, agitation, and detergent is more than real leather can handle.
The Damage, Step by Step
Four things go wrong in roughly this order:
- Water saturation. Real leather absorbs water deep into its fibres. As it dries, those fibres tighten unevenly, causing the panels to shrink and warp.
- Detergent. Standard laundry detergent strips the natural oils that keep leather supple. The result is dry, brittle leather that cracks at flex points.
- Mechanical agitation. The drum's tumbling action stretches and folds soaked leather repeatedly, distorting the shape and damaging the surface.
- Heat (during drying). Hot water or a tumble dryer accelerates everything shrinkage, brittleness, and finish damage. Leather + heat is one of the worst combinations possible.
Add zippers and snaps banging around in the drum, and you've also rolled the dice on hardware damage. There's no good outcome.
The "My Friend Did It" Myth
You'll find people online claiming they washed a leather jacket and it came out fine. A few possibilities are usually behind that:
- It wasn't real leather. Faux/PU leather can survive a cold gentle cycle in a way real leather can't.
- It was bonded leather already on its way out and the wash just sped up an inevitable failure they're now blaming on something else.
- The jacket actually didn't come out fine, and they just decided to live with the damage.
Real full-grain or top-grain leather doesn't survive machine washing intact. The exceptions are rare enough to ignore.
What to Do Instead
Most everyday cleaning is simpler than people expect:
- Light dust or surface dirt: wipe with a soft, dry microfiber cloth.
- Small marks: dampen a cloth slightly with cool water, gently wipe the area, then dry with another cloth. Don't soak.
- Winter salt stains: a Canadian classic wipe road-salt marks promptly with a cloth dampened in cool water so the salt doesn't dry into the leather.
- Stubborn marks: use a small amount of mild, leather-specific cleaner on a cloth. Test on a hidden area first.
- Smell or musty odour: air the jacket out for a day or two in a dry, ventilated space. Avoid direct sunlight.
- Routine care: condition the leather two to three times a year with a quality leather conditioner especially after a dry, heated-indoor Canadian winter.
And whatever you do, no hair dryers, no radiators, no direct sun for drying. Heat warps leather almost as fast as washing does and that includes the baseboard heater it's tempting to drape a wet jacket over in February.
When to Take It to a Pro
Some situations are above what a damp cloth can fix:
- Heavy oil, grease, or wine stains
- Mould or mildew across larger areas
- Smoke or smoke-damage smell
- A jacket that's been caught in heavy rain think Vancouver in November and feels stiff
- A vintage or sentimental jacket where mistakes are expensive
For any of these, find a leather-specialist dry cleaner. A regular dry cleaner usually isn't enough. The cost is far less than replacing the jacket.
Keeping Your Jacket Out of the Repair Bin
The best wash is no wash. Hang on a wide hanger, store away from direct sunlight, condition occasionally, and spot-clean as needed. With basic care, a real leather jacket can last 10 to 20 years plenty of crisp Canadian autumns. Browse men's leather jackets or women's leather jackets if you're due for one that's actually worth taking care of with free shipping across Canada.
Final Thoughts
The washing machine experiment ends the same way every time: a smaller, stiffer, sadder version of what you put in. Real leather wants the opposite of what a washer offers gentle wiping, occasional conditioning, and air. Treat it that way and you'll keep wearing the jacket long after the experiment-tempting moment has passed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a leather jacket survive a cold gentle cycle?
What about faux leather can that be machine washed?
Can I use water on a leather jacket at all?
Will dry cleaning a leather jacket damage it?
How do I clean the lining without washing the whole jacket?
What if my jacket gets caught in the rain?

