# How to Clean Kids' Toys: Plastic, Wood and Fabric

> How to sanitise baby toys without toxic products? Plastic, wood, soft toys: method by material, daycare schedule and anti-mould bath toys.

**Published :** 2026-03-23

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**Résumé :** **In short:** **hard plastic** -- basin of hot water

- dish soap. **Bath toys** -- white vinegar once a week against
  mould. **Wood** -- damp cloth only (never soak).
  **Soft toys and fabric** -- washing machine at 30-40 °C in a mesh
  laundry bag. In daycare, shared toys are cleaned daily. After illness,
  systematically sanitise every toy the child has handled.

## Why regular toy cleaning matters

Young children put everything in their mouths -- it is a normal exploratory reflex until about age 3. A toy handled daily collects bacteria, viruses, food residue, dust and sometimes mould (bath toys). Several paediatric studies show that toys are significant vectors for gastro-intestinal and respiratory virus transmission, especially in group settings.

### What accumulates on a toy

- **Bacteria**: staphylococci, streptococci, faecal coliforms (from hands after toilet visits)
- **Viruses**: gastroenteritis, colds, flu -- some viruses survive several hours on plastic
- **Mould**: mainly inside bath toys with holes (rubber ducks, squirting animals)
- **Allergens**: dust mites on soft toys, pollen and dust on all toys
- **Food residue**: sugar, milk, puree -- the perfect breeding ground for bacteria

## Hard plastic toys

Hard plastic toys (Lego, Duplo, Playmobil, figurines, toy cars, plastic puzzles) are the easiest to clean.

### Basic method: basin of hot water

- 🪣 **Soak** — Basin of hot water (40 °C) with a few drops of dish soap. Submerge the toys for 15-20 minutes. Hot water loosens food residue and finger grease.
- 🪥 **Scrub** — Use an old toothbrush for crevices, joints and small parts. The grooves in Lego bricks and figurine joints collect invisible grime.
- 💧 **Rinse** — Rinse under running water to remove all soap residue. A child who mouths the toy should not ingest detergent.
- ☀️ **Dry** — Spread on a clean towel and air-dry. Never put toys away damp in a closed toy box -- mould is guaranteed.

### Machine method: small pieces

Small hard plastic pieces (Lego, beads, small figurines) wash very well in a washing machine:

1. Place pieces in a **fine-mesh laundry bag** (or a pillowcase tied shut)
2. Add other clothes to the machine to cushion impacts
3. Select a **delicate 30 °C** cycle
4. **No tumble dryer** -- pieces could warp
5. Spread on a towel to dry

This method is ideal for large Lego or Duplo collections: hundreds of pieces cleaned in a single cycle, zero effort.

### Battery-powered or electronic toys

Toys containing batteries or electronics must **never** be submerged. Clean them with a damp cloth (not soaked) plus a few drops of white vinegar. For crevices, use a cotton bud dipped in white vinegar. Remove batteries before cleaning to avoid moisture contact.

## Bath toys: the mould problem

Bath toys -- especially those with a hole (rubber ducks, squirting animals, suction-cup letters) -- are mould's favourite playground.

### Why mould takes hold

The hole at the bottom lets bathwater in. Between baths, stagnant water in a warm, dark environment (bathroom) creates perfect conditions for black mould growth (*Aspergillus*, *Penicillium*). A Swiss study published in *Biofilms and Microbiomes* (2018) found up to **75 million bacteria per cm2** inside rubber bath ducks.

### Weekly cleaning protocol

- **After every bath**: squeeze toys to expel water, shake them and store with the opening facing down in a hanging mesh bag (not in a closed container).
- **Once a week**: soak all bath toys in a solution of white vinegar (1 part) and water (2 parts) for 1 hour. Squeeze toys with holes to push the solution inside.
- **Rinse thoroughly** under running water. Squeeze several times to flush vinegar from inside toys with holes.
- **Dry with the opening facing down** on a clean towel or in a hanging mesh bag.
- **Inspect monthly**: squeeze each toy over a white bowl. If black or green residue comes out, the toy is contaminated inside. Treat with undiluted vinegar or discard.

### The radical prevention: seal the holes

The most effective solution against internal mould is to **seal the hole** with a dab of hot glue (glue gun) before the first use. Water can no longer get in, so mould cannot establish itself. The toy still floats and can be surface-cleaned normally.

> If you squeeze a bath toy and black residue comes out despite vinegar
> treatment, throw it away. Black mould inside a toy with a hole is
> **impossible to eliminate completely** once established. A child
> who mouths the toy or squirts the water ingests mould spores. The cost of a
> new rubber duck (GBP 2-5 / USD 2-5) does not justify the health risk.

## Wooden toys

Wood is a beautiful material for children's toys, but it requires specific care. The golden rule: **never soak**.

### Why wood must not be soaked

Wood is porous -- water penetrates the fibres, causes swelling, creates cracks on drying and encourages internal mould. A wooden toy soaked in water will never be the same: rough surface, splinters, warping.

### Cleaning method

1. **Wipe** with a slightly damp cloth (wrung out thoroughly)
2. **Disinfect** with a cloth dampened with white vinegar (not soaked)
3. **Dry immediately** with a dry cloth
4. **Air** for a few hours before storing

For varnished or painted wooden toys, cleaning is simpler because the varnish protects the wood. A damp cloth with mild soap is enough. For unvarnished (raw) wooden toys, be even more sparing with water.

### Preventive care

Every 3-6 months, apply a thin coat of food-grade linseed oil or coconut oil to unvarnished wooden toys. The oil nourishes the wood, protects it from moisture and makes the surface easier to clean. Use only food-safe oils -- the child will mouth the toy.

## Soft toys and fabric toys

Soft toys, comforters, fabric dolls and cloth books can go in the washing machine -- and they regularly need it.

### Recommended washing schedule

| Toy type | Frequency | Temperature | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comforter (bed companion) | 1-2 times a month | 30-40 °C | In contact with the face, saliva and nasal secretions |
| Play soft toys | Once a month | 30-40 °C | More often if the child mouths them |
| Decorative soft toys (shelf) | Every 2-3 months | 30 °C | Collect dust and dust mites even without handling |
| Cloth books | 1-2 times a month | 30 °C | Handled and mouthed frequently |
| Dressing-up costumes | After each extended use | 30 °C | Perspiration + extended skin contact |
| Play blanket / activity mat | Once a week | 40-60 °C | Floor contact + drool + spit-up |

### Machine-wash protocol

- **Check the label** -- most modern soft toys carry a 30 °C machine-wash symbol. Antique or handmade soft toys often need hand-washing.
- **Mesh laundry bag is essential** -- protects eyes, buttons and sewn-on accessories. Alternative: a pillowcase tied shut.
- **Delicate cycle at 30-40 °C** -- spin at 600-800 rpm max. A vigorous spin deforms the stuffing.
- **Hypoallergenic detergent** -- detergent residue stays in the stuffing and sits against the child's skin. Avoid scented detergents.
- **No fabric softener** -- makes stuffing less fluffy and can irritate sensitive skin.
- **Drying** -- tumble-dry on low if the label allows (stuffing dries better). Otherwise, hang to air-dry and gently press to reshape.

### The comforter conundrum: managing separation

Washing a toddler's comforter can trigger a real meltdown. The classic solution: own **two identical comforters** and rotate them. While one is in the wash, the other is on duty. Start the wash during nap time or after bedtime.

If the child has only one comforter and refuses to part with it, a 30-minute quick cycle can be an acceptable compromise for lightly soiled items.

## Daycare and group-setting protocol

In group settings, virus and bacteria transmission through toys is a major hygiene concern. Health-authority recommendations are stricter than for home use.

- 📅 **Daily cleaning** — All toys handled during the day are cleaned in the evening: surfaces wiped with white vinegar or an approved no-rinse disinfectant (EN 14476 standard).
- 🧸 **Weekly soft toys** — Fabric toys belonging to the daycare go into the washing machine once a week at 40 °C minimum. Personal comforters are washed by parents.
- 🤒 **After illness** — When a child is ill (gastroenteritis, flu, hand-foot-mouth disease), every toy they have handled is isolated and sanitised before going back into circulation.
- 🚿 **Bath toys** — In many daycares, bath toys with holes are banned. Only solid hard-plastic toys without cavities are allowed for water play.

## After illness: full sanitisation

When a child is ill (gastroenteritis, flu, bronchiolitis, hand-foot-mouth disease), their toys become potential vectors for siblings or visitors. Here is the sanitisation protocol.

### Plastic toys

Wash in hot water (60 °C if the plastic can handle it, 40 °C otherwise) with dish soap. Rinse and air-dry. For toys that cannot take heat, a spray of white vinegar left for 15 minutes is an alternative.

### Soft toys and fabric

Machine-wash at the highest temperature the label allows (ideally 60 °C). If the label limits to 30 °C, add a textile disinfectant to the cycle. Tumble-dry on high if possible -- the dryer heat finishes off remaining germs.

### Wooden toys

Wipe with a cloth soaked in undiluted white vinegar. Leave for 15 minutes. Wipe with a dry cloth. White vinegar is an effective natural disinfectant against most common viruses.

> For soft toys you cannot machine-wash (too fragile, electronic components),
> place them in an airtight bag and put them in the
> **freezer for 24-48 hours**. The cold kills dust mites (but not
> bacteria). Remove the toy, let it return to room temperature, then vacuum to
> remove the dead mites. This is the recommended method for children with
> dust-mite allergies.

## Summary table by material

| Material | Method | Product | Frequency | Never |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hard plastic | Hot-water basin or machine at 30 °C | Dish soap | Once a week | Dishwasher (warping) |
| Soft plastic (bath) | White vinegar soak | White vinegar 1:2 | Once a week + rinse after every bath | Drying with hole facing up |
| Wood | Damp cloth (wrung out) | White vinegar or mild soap | Once a week | Soaking, submerging |
| Fabric / soft toy | Machine 30-40 °C, mesh bag | Hypoallergenic detergent | 1-2 times a month | Fabric softener, scented detergent |
| Electronic | Damp cloth | White vinegar | Once a week | Any submersion |

## Mistakes to avoid

> **Warning:**
> - **Soaking wooden toys** -- wood swells, cracks and develops mould. Use only a wrung-out cloth.
> - **Ignoring bath toys** -- internal mould is invisible but real. Treat with vinegar weekly or seal the holes with glue.
> - **Using bleach on baby toys** -- residue is ingested when the child mouths the toy. White vinegar is equally effective and safe.
> - **Forgetting to remove batteries** -- before any wet cleaning of a battery-powered toy, remove the batteries. Moisture corrodes contacts and can cause a short circuit.
> - **Storing damp toys** -- in a closed toy box, toys that are still damp develop mould within days. Dry completely before storing.
> - **Neglecting decorative soft toys** -- soft toys on a shelf collect dust and dust mites even if the child does not handle them daily. Wash every 2-3 months.

**Fine-mesh laundry bags (set of 5)**

Protects lingerie, fine knits and small accessories during machine washing.

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## Sources and references

- Hamner et al. -- *Biofilms and Microbiomes* (2018), "Microbial communities in bath toys"
- Paediatric hygiene guidelines for daycare settings
