Do You Need to Dry-Clean Silk?

A woman holding up a flowing ivory mulberry silk garment and reading its care label thoughtfully in soft daylight

Do you need to dry-clean silk?

For most silk, no — and a silk pillowcase almost never. The myth that all silk must be dry-cleaned comes from silk's delicate reputation, but the truth is that gentle washing suits it well: silk is a natural protein fibre that copes happily with cool water and a mild, pH-neutral detergent. Flat, simple pieces — pillowcases, scarves, scrunchies, eye masks, slip dresses and camisoles — are straightforward to wash at home. Dry-cleaning becomes worth considering only for the more complicated end of the silk wardrobe, or when a stain or a label calls for it. As a default, reach for the basin or the delicate cycle, not the dry-cleaning ticket.

Why home washing is often better than dry-cleaning

It isn't only about saving money, though it does that too. Dry-cleaning isn't actually "dry" — it cleans with chemical solvents, and repeated solvent cleaning can, over time, leave some silk feeling drier and a little less lustrous than gentle hand-washing does. Washing at home in cool water with a gentle detergent removes the oils and sweat a pillowcase collects, keeps the fabric soft, and gives you control over exactly how it's handled. For something that touches your face every night, many people also simply prefer the freshness of a proper wash to a solvent clean. Done gently, home washing preserves silk beautifully — which is rather the point of buying good silk in the first place.

When silk does need dry-cleaning

There are real exceptions, and it's worth knowing them so you don't ruin a good piece. Take silk to a professional cleaner when:

  • The care label says "dry clean only" and the item is tailored, lined or structured — a silk suit, a lined dress or a blazer, where washing could distort the shape or shrink a lining.
  • It's heavily embellished — beading, sequins or delicate trims that water and agitation would damage.
  • There's a stubborn, set-in or oil-based stain a gentle home wash won't shift, where a professional has the right solvents and skill.
  • The piece is antique, precious or irreplaceable, and you'd rather not take any risk at all.

For these, the dry-cleaner is the safe choice — and worth the cost.

What "dry clean only" labels really mean

Here's the honest nuance: manufacturers often label silk "dry clean only" to be cautious and to cover themselves, not because washing is impossible. For simple, unlined, flat silk, plenty of people hand-wash "dry clean only" pieces successfully with cool water and care — but that's at your own risk, and the label is the manufacturer's recommendation, so we won't tell you to ignore it. The safer reading: treat "dry clean only" as a genuine instruction for anything structured, lined or embellished, and as conservative-but-often-skippable for plain flat silk you're confident handling gently. Silk pillowcases, happily, are rarely labelled dry-clean-only in the first place.

How to wash silk at home instead

If you're skipping the dry-cleaner, do it properly: wash in cool water (below 30°C) with a small amount of gentle, pH-neutral detergent, by hand or on a cold delicate cycle in a mesh bag. Don't wring; press the water out in a towel and dry flat away from heat and sun. The full method — and whether to choose hand or machine — is in our silk pillowcase care guide and our note on machine-washing silk.

If you'd like silk that's built for easy, no-dry-clean home care, our LS Silk AU mulberry silk pillowcases are 22-momme, 100% mulberry silk and OEKO-TEX certified — machine-washable in a bag, and made to be looked after at home.

So spare yourself the dry-cleaning bill where you can. For pillowcases and everyday silk, a basin of cool water and a gentle hand do the job beautifully — and the dry-cleaner can stay reserved for the tailored, the beaded and the truly precious.

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