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Laundry tips
Updated on
By Laveries Speed Queen
12 min read

How to Remove Beet Stains from Clothes (Fresh or Dried)

Beet or beetroot stains: rinse cold from the back, use dish soap or white vinegar, then oxygen bleach for dried marks. Fabric-safe steps.

Beet stain removal steps by fabric type

To remove beet stains from clothes: scrape off any beet, rinse the stain from the back with cold water, then dab with dish soap, white vinegar or lemon juice. For dried beet or beetroot stains, soak white or colourfast fabric in oxygen bleach (sodium percarbonate). Never rub the stain and do not use hot water or a dryer until the mark is gone.

How to remove beet stains from clothes

Quick answer: lift solid pieces with a spoon, rinse from the reverse side under cold water (betalain pigments are water-soluble), dab with dish soap, white vinegar or lemon juice, then machine-wash at 30-40 °C. For dried marks on white or colourfast fabric, soak in oxygen bleach (sodium percarbonate). Never use hot water or the tumble dryer before the stain is gone.

The 5-step protocol that works on most fresh beet stains:

  1. Lift solids with a spoon — remove beet pieces before adding any water.
  2. Cold water from the reverse — betalains dissolve in cold water; hot water sets them.
  3. Dab with dish soap, vinegar or lemon — dish soap if oily; acid (vinegar/lemon) on plain pigment.
  4. Wash at 30-40 °C — check the stain is gone before tumble drying.
  5. For dried marks: soak in oxygen bleach — sodium percarbonate oxidises residual pigment on white or colourfast fabric.

For tablecloths, kitchen aprons or large textiles after a beet-heavy meal, the 10 to 18 kg machines in our laundromats offer more drum space and water flow than a typical 7-8 kg home washer for bulky items.

Why beetroot stains

Beetroot (Beta vulgaris) contains betalains — a family of plant pigments responsible for its intense red-purple colour. The dominant pigment is betanin, a nitrogen compound present at high concentration (300 to 600 mg/kg in cooked beetroot).

Betalains are chemically very different from anthocyanins (red wine, red fruit pigments) and tannins (coffee, tea pigments). Their distinguishing feature: they are extremely water-soluble. This is why beetroot juice soaks through textiles so easily and colours everything it touches.

This water solubility is paradoxically your best ally for stain removal. A water-soluble pigment dissolves easily… provided you act fast and use cold water. Hot water modifies betalain structure and makes them partially insoluble — that is the classic trap that turns an easy stain into a stubborn one.

Fresh stain: the immediate method (under 10 minutes)

If you act within minutes of contact, the success rate is 95% or higher. Betalains are still in solution in the juice — they have not yet formed stable bonds with the fibres.

Protocol

  1. Blot the excess — dab with a clean cloth, paper towels or a tea towel. Do not rub: rubbing spreads pigment over a larger area and pushes it into the fibres.

  2. Rinse with cold water from the back — run the stain under a stream of cold water with the back of the fabric facing up. Water pushes pigment out of the fibres instead of forcing it through more fabric.

  3. Check the result — in most cases, the stain has disappeared or significantly faded. If a pinkish trace remains, move to acid treatment.

  4. White vinegar or lemon — soak the area with a little pure white vinegar or fresh lemon juice. The acid breaks down residual betalains. Leave for 15-20 minutes, then rinse.

  5. Machine wash — wash at 30-40 °C with your usual detergent. Check the result before any tumble drying.

Dried stain: white vinegar + percarbonate

When the stain has had time to dry, betalains have adsorbed onto the fibres. They are no longer simply “in solution” but bonded to the textile. Treatment must be more aggressive.

Protocol

  1. Pure white vinegar — apply directly to the dried stain. Vinegar rehydrates and begins breaking down betalains. Leave for 30 minutes.

  2. Rub gently — with your fingertips or a soft sponge, rub the area to help vinegar penetrate. Rinse with cold water.

  3. Sodium percarbonate — if a trace remains (common on stains dried for more than 24 hours), prepare a sodium percarbonate solution: 2 tablespoons per 2 litres of warm water (40-50 °C). Submerge the textile and soak for 2 to 4 hours.

  4. Rinse and wash — rinse with cold water, then machine wash at 30-40 °C.

Very old stain (several days or tumble-dried)

For stains set by heat (dryer, ironing) or dried for several days, combine treatments:

  1. Pure glycerine on the stain — leave for 1 hour to soften pigments.
  2. White vinegar — 30 minutes.
  3. Percarbonate soak — overnight.

The success rate drops to 40-60% on heat-set stains. This is why the golden rule is always to check for stain disappearance before the dryer.

By textile: adapting the method

🤍

White cotton

The easiest to treat. White vinegar or lemon as first treatment, then percarbonate if needed. A 60 °C wash is possible on white cotton and helps remove residues. For very old stains, you can also whiten the laundry .

🎨

Coloured cotton

White vinegar is fine — it does not discolour. Avoid pure lemon on dark colours (slight lightening risk). Percarbonate is usable on colourfast fabrics, but test on a hem.

🍽️

White cotton tablecloth

Soak the stained area in pure lemon juice for 30 minutes. Rinse, then wash at 60 °C. For large tablecloths with several stains, a full percarbonate soak (2 tbsp per 5 L warm water) is more practical. Guide: tablecloth care .

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Wool

Sensitive fibre: diluted white vinegar only (50/50 water-vinegar). No percarbonate. No aggressive rubbing. Dab gently and rinse. When in doubt, see our delicate textiles guide.

Silk

Silk cannot tolerate concentrated acids or percarbonate. Dab with cold water only. If the stain persists, take the garment to a specialist dry cleaner .

🔷

Synthetic (polyester)

Betalains adhere less to polyester than to cotton — synthetic fibres are non-polar. A quick cold-water rinse is often enough. White vinegar as backup if needed. Wash at 30 °C.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Rubbing a fresh stain — you spread betalains over a larger area and push them into the fibres. Dab instead.
  • Using hot water — heat modifies betalain structure and sets them in the fibres. Always use cold water.
  • Putting bleach on coloured fabric — bleach discolours the fabric around the stain, which is worse than the stain itself.
  • Tumble drying without checking — heat sets betalain residues. Always verify complete disappearance before mechanical drying.
  • Waiting several days — betalains dry and set progressively. The longer you wait, the harder the stain removal.
  • Using salt alone as treatment — salt absorbs liquid but does not break down pigments. It is first aid, not treatment.
  • Mixing vinegar and percarbonate — the acid neutralises the base. Use them at separate stages of treatment.
  • Rubbing dry with a cloth — without water or product, rubbing only spreads and embeds the pigment.

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Our laundromats in Blagnac, Croix-Daurade and Montaudran have professional machines with detergent included. The higher water volume (50-60 litres) helps dilute and extract pigments better than a domestic machine. Payment contactless card or cash. See our prices.

Sources and references

FAQ

Why do beet stains set so quickly?

Beets and beetroot contain betalains — very strong red-purple plant pigments. These pigments are water-soluble, which helps if you rinse immediately with cold water, but they penetrate textile fibres fast and become harder to lift once dry.

Is hot water effective against beetroot stains?

No, it is actually counterproductive. Hot water sets betalains in the fibres by accelerating their penetration and modifying their chemical structure. Always use cold water to rinse a beetroot stain. It is the same logic as for red fruit stains.

How do you remove a dried beet stain from clothes?

Apply white vinegar directly to the dried beet stain and leave for 30 minutes. Rinse cold. If the mark resists, soak for 2-4 hours in an oxygen bleach solution (sodium percarbonate, 2 tbsp per 2 L warm water) before washing.

Does milk remove beetroot stains?

Warm milk is a traditional remedy that works moderately. Milk casein can absorb some betalains through its pigment-binding properties. Soak the fabric in warm milk for 1-2 hours. It is a backup solution, less effective than white vinegar or lemon.

Does bleach remove beetroot stains?

Bleach works on white cotton only. On coloured textiles, it discolours the fabric around the stain, producing a worse result than the stain itself. Prefer sodium percarbonate, a gentler oxygen-based bleaching agent that is safe for colourfast fabrics.

How to remove a beetroot stain from a white tablecloth?

Rinse with cold water, then soak the stained area in pure lemon juice for 30 minutes. Rinse and wash at 60 degrees C if the tablecloth is white cotton. For linen or delicate fabric, stay at 40 degrees C. If the stain persists, extended percarbonate soak (2-4 h).

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