In short: Laundromat: for everyday laundry, sheets, towels, casual clothes and bulky textiles (duvets, curtains). Cost: 5-15 EUR. Dry cleaner: for textiles that cannot tolerate water (silk, fine wool, leather, structured suits with fused lining). Cost: 10-30 EUR per item. Check the circle symbol on the care label — if it is not crossed out, dry cleaning is recommended.
At a Glance
Sommaire
- At a Glance
- Overall Comparison
- When to Choose the Laundromat
- When to Choose the Dry Cleaner
- The Case of Shirts
- Real Price Comparison
- Dry Cleaning a Duvet: Prices by City in 2026
- The Smart Move: Combine Both
- Mistakes to Avoid
- Mixed Textiles: When Neither Option Is Enough on Its Own
- Annual Budget: Laundromat vs Dry Cleaner
- Environmental Impact: Laundromat vs Dry Cleaner
- Case by Case: Laundromat or Dry Cleaner by Textile
- The True Cost of Dry Cleaning: Why the Bill Adds Up Fast
- Sources and References
Laundromat = water + detergent — for approx. 90% of everyday laundry (cotton, polyester, sheets, towels).
Dry cleaner = solvents (dry cleaning) — for textiles that cannot tolerate water.
The care label decides — circle = dry clean, tub = machine wash. Check the symbols.
The laundromat is 5-10x cheaper — for laundry that can be machine-washed.
Overall Comparison
For everyday laundry, the laundromat handles 9 to 18 kg in approx. 1 hour for 4.90-10 EUR, while the dry cleaner charges 5-20 EUR per item with pickup in 24 to 72 hours.
| Criterion | Self-service laundromat | Dry cleaner |
|---|---|---|
| Method | Water + detergent in a machine | Chemical solvents (dry cleaning) |
| Price | 4.90-10 EUR per machine (9-18 kg) | 5-20 EUR per item |
| Capacity | 9-18 kg per machine | Item by item |
| Duration | Approx. 1 hour (wash + dry) | 24-72 hours (drop-off + pickup) |
| Detergent | Included | Professional solvents |
| Ideal for | Everyday laundry, large loads, bulky items | Delicate items, structured garments, leather |
| Availability | 7 days a week, no appointment needed | Shop hours, sometimes closed on Mondays |
When to Choose the Laundromat
Choose the laundromat whenever the care label allows water washing: you can handle the vast majority of everyday textiles for less than 1 EUR per garment in a fully loaded machine.
Everyday clothes
T-shirts, jeans, trousers, cotton or polyester shirts, underwear, socks, sportswear. Anything with a tub symbol on the label allowing water washing. In other words, the vast majority of your wardrobe.
Household linen
Sheets, towels, tea towels, tablecloths, curtains, blankets. These items are machine-washable according to the label. At a laundromat, 18 kg machines let you wash bulky items (duvets, curtains) that your home machine cannot handle. See our complete guide to washing a duvet.
Large loads
When you have a lot of laundry to wash at once: moving house, returning from holiday, spring cleaning. At a laundromat, you can run 3-4 machines in parallel. A dry cleaner cannot handle large volumes.
Bulky items
Duvets, puffer jackets, rugs, blankets. These items need an 18 kg machine for a proper wash. At a laundromat: 9.80-10 EUR, compared to 30-50 EUR at the dry cleaner for a duvet. See our guide to choosing the right machine.
When to Choose the Dry Cleaner
The dry cleaner is the right option when the care label requires dry cleaning (circle symbol), especially for structured suits, silk and leather.
Structured suits
Suits with shoulder pads, lining and canvas are designed for dry cleaning. Water can distort the structure, cause the fabric to pucker and detach internal reinforcements. For simple unstructured suits, machine washing is possible — see our suit washing guide.
Specific delicate textiles
Thick natural silk, fine cashmere, untreated virgin wool, structured velvet. If the label shows only the circle symbol
Leather and suede
Leather and suede should never go in a machine. They require a specialist leather dry cleaner (not all dry cleaners offer this). Standard dry cleaning solvents can also damage leather — check that the dry cleaner has the right expertise.
The Case of Shirts
A 9 kg machine can wash approx. 10 shirts at a cost of around 0.50 EUR per shirt, versus 3 to 5 EUR per shirt at the dry cleaner.
Laundromat in 90% of cases
Cotton, poly-cotton or linen shirts wash perfectly well in a machine according to the care label. Dry cleaning shirts is a luxury, not a necessity. The only advantage of the dry cleaner: shirts come back pressed. If you dislike ironing, that is a fair argument. Otherwise, the laundromat plus a quick iron or tumble dryer is more than enough. For the full method, also see how to iron a shirt properly.
Real Price Comparison
For bulky items, the gap is at its widest: a duvet typically costs 9.80-10 EUR at a laundromat versus 25-50 EUR at the dry cleaner. Use our laundry weight calculator to estimate the exact cost of your load.
| Item | Dry cleaner price | Speed Queen laundromat price |
|---|---|---|
| Shirt | 3-5 EUR per item | Approx. 0.50 EUR (10 shirts in 1 x 9 kg machine) |
| Suit (jacket + trousers) | 12-20 EUR | 4.90-5.50 EUR (if machine-washable) |
| Coat | 15-30 EUR | 4.90-10 EUR (depending on machine size) |
| Duvet | 25-50 EUR | 9.80-10 EUR (18 kg machine) |
| Curtains (pair) | 15-30 EUR | 4.90-5.50 EUR |
| Puffer jacket | 15-25 EUR | 4.90-10 EUR |
Detergent included at the laundromat
All Speed Queen laundromat prices include detergent and fabric softener, automatically dosed. At the dry cleaner, the listed price is the final price too. But the difference is massive: a duvet at 10 EUR at the laundromat versus 40 EUR at the dry cleaner, for an identical result. To estimate the exact weight of your load, see our laundry weight chart.
Dry Cleaning a Duvet: Prices by City in 2026
The price of dry cleaning varies widely by city. Here are the average ranges for cleaning a double duvet at a standard dry cleaner, compared to the fixed rate at a Speed Queen laundromat.
| City | Dry cleaner (double duvet) | Speed Queen laundromat |
|---|---|---|
| Paris | 35-50 EUR | 16-19 EUR |
| Lyon | 30-40 EUR | 16-19 EUR |
| Marseille | 28-38 EUR | 16-19 EUR |
| Toulouse | 27-35 EUR | 16-19 EUR |
| Bordeaux | 30-42 EUR | 16-19 EUR |
| Lille | 25-35 EUR | 16-19 EUR |
| France average | 25-50 EUR | 16-19 EUR everywhere |
Why such a large difference?
Dry cleaners use dry-cleaning methods (solvents) or wet cleaning that require item-by-item handling, qualified staff and significant overheads (a shop in the city centre). Self-service laundromats rely on a self-service model with high-capacity machines, which cuts costs by two or three times for a result that is often fresher and faster.
These ranges are estimates based on prices displayed by neighbourhood dry cleaners in 2025-2026. Prices vary depending on the dry cleaner, the type of duvet (synthetic vs down) and additional services (delivery, express).
In Toulouse, our rate is fixed and transparent: 9.80 EUR wash in an 18 kg machine + approx. 6 EUR drying = 16 EUR (or 14 EUR with loyalty card). Detergent and fabric softener included, result in 1 hour.
For a detailed guide to washing a duvet at the laundromat, see our complete duvet washing guide.
The Smart Move: Combine Both
The most cost-effective strategy is to handle approx. 80% of your laundry at the laundromat and reserve the dry cleaner for the 20% of items that genuinely cannot be washed in water.
80% laundromat, 20% dry cleaner
The most cost-effective strategy: laundromat for all everyday laundry (clothes, sheets, towels, duvets, curtains), dry cleaner only for items that require it (structured suits, silk, cashmere). You will save hundreds of euros a year while properly caring for every garment.
Mistakes to Avoid
- Sending machine-washable items to the dry cleaner — expensive and unnecessary for cotton and polyester
- Putting dry-clean-only items in the washing machine — risk of destroying silk, leather and structured suits
- Assuming dry cleaning is always better — for cotton and synthetics, water washing is more effective
- Ignoring the care label — the
circle (dry clean) or tub (machine wash) symbol settles the question
Mixed Textiles: When Neither Option Is Enough on Its Own
Some garments combine materials that make the choice more complex. A coat with a wool body and a polyester lining, a jacket with leather panels, or a dress with sewn-on embellishments — these pieces do not fit neatly into one category.
For mixed textiles, the rule is to always follow the most fragile material. A coat with leather panels goes to the dry cleaner, even if the body of the coat is washable polyester. A dress with sewn-on beads requires dry cleaning, even if the base fabric can handle a machine wash.
When in doubt, consult a trusted dry cleaner for professional advice — most offer a free assessment. If the garment has sentimental or financial value, investing in the right professional cleaning is always better than a risky wash that could cause irreversible damage.
As an Amazon Associate, we earn a small commission on purchases made through the affiliate links in this article — at no extra cost to you. This helps us maintain this site and produce free guides.
For 90% of your laundry, the laundromat is the most effective and affordable option. Our laundromats in Blagnac, Croix-Daurade and Montaudran offer machines from 9 à 18 kg, detergent included, starting at 4.90 EUR. Open daily. See our prices.
Annual Budget: Laundromat vs Dry Cleaner
At similar frequency, a typical household goes from approx. 2,900 EUR/year with dry cleaning for everything to approx. 340 EUR/year using the laundromat for everyday laundry.
| Category | Frequency | Laundromat | Dry cleaner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Everyday laundry (clothes, sheets) | Weekly | Approx. 260 EUR/year | Approx. 2,600 EUR/year |
| Suits/tailored wear | Once a month | Approx. 60 EUR/year | Approx. 240 EUR/year |
| Duvets (twice a year) | Twice a year | Approx. 20 EUR/year | Approx. 60 EUR/year |
| Total | Approx. 340 EUR/year | Approx. 2,900 EUR/year |
Most households combine both: laundromat for 90% of laundry, dry cleaner for delicate items. To find out which machine to use, take our machine quiz in 4 questions. This blended approach makes even more sense in Toulouse, where neighbourhood dry cleaners often close on Mondays and Sundays, while Speed Queen laundromats stay open 7 days a week from 7 am to 10 pm, including public holidays. For families with children, the volume of everyday laundry (clothes, sheets, towels) far outweighs the budget for delicate items, and that is precisely the volume the laundromat handles most efficiently.
Environmental Impact: Laundromat vs Dry Cleaner
Dry cleaning uses chemical solvents, mainly perchloroethylene (PERC), classified as a substance of concern by ANSES (the French health and safety agency). Modern dry cleaners increasingly use alternatives (silicone D5, light hydrocarbons, wet cleaning), but PERC remains dominant in traditional operations. The laundromat uses water and automatically dosed detergent — no chemical solvents.
In terms of water consumption, professional Speed Queen machines use 50 to 60 litres per cycle for 9 to 18 kg of laundry. Per kilogram of textile washed, this is comparable to or lower than a recent domestic machine (which uses 35 to 40 litres for only 7 to 8 kg). Tumble drying at the laundromat is also more energy-efficient than indoor drying on a rack, which raises indoor humidity and forces your heating to compensate.
For consumers concerned about the environmental impact of their textile care, the simple rule is: laundromat for everything that can be washed in water (90% of laundry), dry cleaner only when essential (structured suits, silk, leather). This split minimises both cost and chemical footprint.
Case by Case: Laundromat or Dry Cleaner by Textile
The choice between laundromat and dry cleaner depends on the textile, not on habit. Here are the most common real-world scenarios.
Sheets, towels, bed linen
Laundromat, always. 9 kg machine: 4.90-5.50 EUR. At the dry cleaner: 3-5 EUR per sheet, 2-3 EUR per towel. For a full set (2 sheets + 4 towels + fitted sheet), the laundromat costs approx. 8 EUR all-in versus 25-40 EUR at the dry cleaner.
Coats and puffer jackets
Laundromat for puffer jackets, dry cleaner for structured coats. A synthetic puffer jacket fits in an 18 kg machine (9.80-10 EUR + drying). A wool coat with lining and shoulder pads requires dry cleaning (dry cleaner: 15-25 EUR).
Shirts and trousers
Laundromat if you do not need pressing. A batch of cotton shirts and trousers goes in a 9 kg machine at 40 degrees C. The dry cleaner adds professional pressing (3-5 EUR per shirt). If pressing is not critical, the laundromat is enough.
Delicate items (silk, cashmere, fine wool)
Dry cleaner recommended. These fibres cannot withstand standard spin cycles. Dry cleaning (solvent) preserves fragile fibres. Expect 8-15 EUR per item.
In summary: the laundromat covers 80-90% of everyday textile needs. Dry cleaning is essential only for textiles that cannot tolerate water or that require professional pressing. To understand exactly what the term “dry cleaning” means and when a machine alternative remains safe, also read our guide to dry cleaning and its alternatives.
The True Cost of Dry Cleaning: Why the Bill Adds Up Fast
Dry cleaners charge per item. At a laundromat, you pay by machine capacity in kilograms. This difference in pricing model changes everything.
| Textile | Quantity per month | Dry cleaner cost | Laundromat cost | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheets + towels | 4 machines | Approx. 120 EUR (per item) | Approx. 32 EUR (4 x 8 EUR) | 88 EUR |
| Duvet (x1) | 1 x 18 kg machine | Approx. 35 EUR | Approx. 16 EUR | 19 EUR |
| Shirts (x8) | 1 x 9 kg machine | Approx. 32 EUR (4 EUR each) | Approx. 8 EUR | 24 EUR |
| Monthly total | Approx. 187 EUR | Approx. 56 EUR | 131 EUR/month |
Over a year, the difference amounts to approx. 1,500 EUR. Even adding the cost of an iron (30-80 EUR) for shirts, the laundromat remains 3 to 4 times cheaper than the dry cleaner for everyday laundry.