Few things are more annoying than pulling clothes from the dryer only to find everything clinging together in a staticky mess. Thankfully, with a few simple tweaks to your laundry routine, you can reduce static cling, protect your clothes, and make laundry day a little less frustrating.

You know that feeling when you pull a shirt over your head and you hear that crackling static noise, you feel the clothing clinging to your skin, and then you realize your hair is poking out in all directions!?
Not only is static cling annoying, it can also make your clothes look wrinkled, feel uncomfortable (especially for those sensory kids), and even cause uncomfortable shocks.
The good news? Static cling is easy to control with a few simple habits, many of which will also save you some money and are better for your clothes.
Here are my favorite easy static cling fixes.
10 Ways to Reduce Static Cling
1. Use Less Dry Time: When clothing becomes too dry, it builds up electrical charges (which cause static cling), so I use medium-high heat (not hot heat) and usually take the clothes out of the dryer 10 minutes before it says they are dry.
2. Add a Damp Rag: Put a damp rag/cloth in the dryer for the last few minutes of the dryer cycle. It provides just enough humidity to reduce much of the static cling. If you forget to add a damp rag before you hear the buzzer ring, simply add a damp rag to your already-dry clothing and run the dryer on low heat for 10 minutes.
3. Hang Clothes: If you have the time and the space, skipping the dryer altogether is a great option to eliminate static cling and extend the life of your clothing.
4. Dry Synthetic Fabrics Separately: If you can’t hang clothes to dry or catch the dryer before it’s finished drying, try separating synthetic fabrics like polyester, fleece, and athletic wear from cotton and natural fibers before putting them in the dryer. These fabrics tend to create more static, so separating those fabrics will reduce static in the rest of your laundry.
Also, cotton, linen, and natural fibers take much longer to dry than synthetic fabrics, so separating things allows you to use less time for the synthetic fabrics and more time for cotton.
5. Wool Dryer Balls: One of my favorite methods to reduce static cling is wool dryer balls. I started using them many years ago and have been impressed with how well they work. I leave my dryer balls in the dryer all the time and have used the same set for many years (it’s a good investment!)
NOTE: Tennis balls will also usually work for this — so if you have a few extra (clean) tennis balls lying around, give them a try!

6. Dryer Sheet: Duh… I know this one is obvious, but I couldn’t make a list of ways to reduce static cling without including the most obvious option. We don’t use dryer sheets regularly in our dryer, but I do keep a handful in the laundry room in case we’re struggling with static cling as we’re walking out the door. Simply rub a dryer sheet inside your clothing (wherever it’s clinging to you), and your problem is instantly solved!
This is also a great option for on-the-go, as it’s easy to keep a few dryer sheets in a zip-top bag inside your purse, carry-on, diaper bag, glove box, etc. Bonus: your bag/car will smell great too!
7. Hair Spray: Spray a bit of hairspray on the clothing that’s sticking to you, and your problem should be solved. I remember being a bit hesitant to try this because I thought it would make my clothes sticky, but it didn’t.
FUN FACT: If you have an ink stain on your clothing, spray the stained area liberally with hair spray before washing, and it should take the stain out.
8. Safety Pins: I had never heard of this before trying it, but I was surprised how well it worked. I used 4 safety pins total, and everything came out static-free! I have a friend who safety pins every pair of socks together before washing them… so her safety pins reduce static cling and make sorting socks super easy.
9: Vinegar while washing: I used vinegar in my laundry for a long time as it worked to reduce static cling and keep my machine clean. However, you should not use vinegar with OxiClean, and I really like using OxiClean for stains, so I don’t use vinegar for static cling anymore. If you’re wondering, you cannot smell the vinegar on your laundry.
10. Use Less Detergent: One final tip that will save you money (in addition to that static) is to simply use less detergent when washing your clothes. You might need to experiment with this a bit, but whatever the suggested amount of detergent is on your packaging, you can certainly use less. I probably use half the recommended amount with a 1 Tbsp. of OxiClean for almost all my laundry.

BONUS TIP: We’ve had good luck by simply putting lotion on before getting dressed (this is my favorite goat’s milk lotion). Might be worth a try in a pinch!
The Method I Use Most
I use wool dryer balls as my preferred method to stop static cling. If, for some reason, a specific item of clothing is still staticky, we use a dryer sheet or hairspray in the moment.
What are your best static cling solutions?



Shannon says
Hi Andrea….found your blog via a post by How To Instructions on Facebook. Having a great time reading your posts.
I have been using dryer balls for about 7 years now and the trick to not getting/reducing static cling is to not over dry the clothes. If, when the dry cycle is done, I feel that they need a bit more time I either put a bit of water in my dryer balls (there is a hole in the side….I just squeeze the ball and let it go under running water to fill it a little bit) or I put in a damp face cloth. I also use vinegar in my front loader (when I remember)
Take care!
max says
I used computer hard drive anti-static bag and it worked! Just put in the dryer with my clothes. could not find any safety pins around the house!
ashleydenise says
LOVE this idea! Have a bunch of those!
Linda Draper says
Thanks for the great ideas! I am off to the sewing room now to find the safety pins!
Kathleen K says
Used 1/4 cup white vinegar and 2 binder clips (couldn’t find safety pins!) on a load of 5 fleece blankets – not a snap, crackle or pop outta them when folding them! And yup, no vinegar smell on the blankets either!
Thanks for doing the experiments! I’d been searching for a home remedy this dry winter!
Andrea says
You’re welcome Kathleen — glad you found something that worked!
Bets says
I am trying to reduce chemical expose so decided to try and do laundry without adding fabric softener to the wash load and dry sheets to the dryer. I purchased some wool dryer balls and their website indicated that they do not help with static cling. They are meant to help soften the clothes and reduce drying time. Their site suggested pinning 2 items together with 2 safety pins. I took 2 rags and pinned them together as I did not want to risk damaging the clothes. No luck. I then took and put the pins into the 3 dryer balls (so 6 very large pins in total) and added two balls of crumbled tin foil. No luck. The most success I have had was taking and separating the clothes after they came out of the wash – drying cottons only with cottons, and poly/nylon with poly/nylon. Its winter in Minnesota. I am going to try the vinegar as I have read that elsewhere.
Buffin says
I was told never to put vinegar into my high efficiency washer by the manufacturer. Were they just trying to get me to buy special laundry products?
Andrea says
Honestly, I don’t feel qualified to answer that for you. All I can say is that I’ve ALWAYS used vinegar in my front-loading HE washer and never had any issues.
Teresa says
Thanks for the ideas! I switched to wool dryerballs and vinegar and just recently with the cold started getting static. I will try the pins! Thanks!
Joie says
I was using the vinegar and safety pins and it either great, then it seemed to stop working…..this seems like a silly question, but do I need to swap out pins after a while?
Joie says
I didn’t read the above comments before posting obviously wasn’t a silly question after all. Looks like ill go but a box and see if it helps to switch them.
Leslie A says
Thanks for the idea! I felt the same way about the foil, but tried it anyway…with some success. Vinegar works…sort of. I am looking forward to trying the safety pins! I haven’t heard that one before 🙂
dee says
I usually use vinegar in the
Rinse with
a few drops of essential oils, but more important is the types of clothing materials that are dried together, don’t dry cotton with synthetics -sox and shirts I will be trying the safety pins next!
Linda Phillips says
Do you find you have to switch out your safety pins after a certain number of loads. I had about 10 loads come out static free and now have a load that just came out with a lot of static.
Andrea says
Well, I guess I don’t really know because I have a small dish of safety pins in our laundry room so I’m always just grabbing a couple at random. This would be very interesting to know though!
I know that in our home, it’s much dryer in the winter time and our clothes get more staticy in the winter (especially this time of year) so that could be part of it too?
Monica says
Do you not worry about the safety pins rusting? I would be afraid I’d forget to put them on/or remove them afterwards.
Andrea says
Monica, I actually just pin the safety pins on an old rag and throw the rag in the drier with each load. Also, the safety pins shouldn’t rust because they aren’t wet — they only go in the dryer 🙂
RD says
it also helps to use organic clothes like cotton and not man made ones like polyester.
i’ve been using vinegar in my laundry for years, it works most of the times, like i said, organic materiaal is best any day of the year.
Whit says
Have you ever tried wool dryer balls?? I made mine own for a few dollars and they work great! I use two at a time for a load in my dryer. Not only does the wool absorb the static, it helps your clothes dry faster. I love them!
Tia says
I have an issue with dog hair sticking to our clothes that is the main reason I use dryer sheets they help the clothes come out of the dyer dog hair free do you think one of these tricks will work for that.
Kate says
I know i’m pretty late in joining this article but i since i’ve gone to soapnuts i almost never need to use any sort of fabric softener or static guard. From what i’ve read most of the static on our clothing and elsewhere often results from the man made chemicals we use and synthethic fibers. If i’m doing a large load of synthetics materials i might include a flannel rag that’s been soaked in fabric softener and allowed to dry in with the cloths or i’ll try the vinegar in with the wash but i’ve only had to do this twice since i’ve begun using the soapnuts.
Brian says
It never says on the the Amazon product description that those dryer balls reduce static from what I can see. We have a couple and they do as described. They help reduce the drying time somewhat. Just thought you might want to fix that since that is not the intended use for the product!
Jen says
Andrea, THANK YOU for your safety pin idea! I figured making my own “sheet” full of pins would be even better! I pinned a bunch of safety pins all around a clean square dishcloth, making sure the pins wouldn’t snag on anything. So far, it has worked perfectly and we haven’t needed to use dryer sheets! We also live near Houston, a humid area, but static still happens. I have also read that overdrying causes more static, so we are careful not to overdry and the homemade “dryer sheet” is all we need. I have also noticed less lint to clean from the dryer. I also started making my own detergent, but have been using vinegar in my Downy ball for several years now (the name brand fabric softener dispenser ball that releases on its own in the wash). I am getting used to my clothes just smelling fresh and clean as opposed to perfumey, and I am excited about the money we are saving!
I found an even easier way to make my own laundry detergent. I tried the liquid method, but it was too messy and time consuming, so I switched to making powdered detergent, but hated grating the soap (and part of my hand sometimes). I found a method, which I have deemed the “poof method”, where you MICROWAVE the bar soap and it poofs up and dries, so it doesn’t need to be hand grated! After it cools, it is dry and then you grind it in the food processor and add it to borax and washing soda! It comes out much finer and powdery than just grating soap (I also tried to make the grated soap finer in the food processor, but it just turned it to pellets, so the microwave method works the best!) I used Kirk’s Original Coco Castile Soap. I forgot how much it was, but I got three bars for less than $5 (which was cheaper than the one bar of Dr. Bronner’s lavender bar soap I bought at the same time. I didn’t know about the poof method when I made detergent with Dr. Bronner’s the first time last month, so I don’t know its poofability ;-). The Kirk’s soap is all natural and has a light clean scent. I live in Texas, so I purchased it in the natural products section of H.E.B. (which is only in Texas and a few in Mexico). It can be ordered online and I am sure can be found at other local stores. I microwaved one bar for 90 seconds in a square glass dish and the middle part didn’t poof up, so I scraped out the part that did and zapped the unpoofed part again for another few minutes, and it worked. The second bar I tried poofed up after 4 or 5 minutes straight and didn’t need to be repoofed. After I let the poofed soap cool a bit, I ground it up in my little Cusinart food processor, then added it to the borax and washing soda. I got the microwave method from this blog (I also credited your safety pin method on his blog!): http://www.myearthgarden.com/2010/08/simple-homemade-laundry-detergent-powder/
Sorry this post is so long, but I am so excited about this, I wanted everyone to know how easy and economical it is!
Penny O says
THANK YOU for the powdered soap recipe! I’ve been hesitant to make the liquid due to not having a dedicated big pot, or a funnel, or 2 gallon containers. I’ll be copying your recipe to my pinterest site.
Thanks again!
Sandy says
I’m really interested in the Vinegar in place of dryer sheets… Static cling is still an issue with the dryer sheets-not as bad as without-but still there. And as time goes by, using dryer sheets , the clothes develop a film on them that almost makes them water proof… like the washrags… and towels… has anyone else noticed that… and the residue builds up on the dryer screen too! Several times I’ve taken the screen to the sink with a brush and scrubbed the heck out of it… and it took quite a bit of elbow grease to clean it… and I was still unable to get all the residue off the screen… but that’s a fire hazard-all that residue can catch fire… and- well you know from there… what can happen.I will definitely try the vinegar! Thanks!
Andrea says
Yes Sandy, I’ve noticed that build-up on my towels for sure. They actually don’t dry as well if you use fabric softener! I think you’ll love using vinegar b/c over time, it will actually remove the soapy/waxy build-up on your clothes that has accumulated from left-over fabric softener and detergent.
Sandy Weatherwax says
safety pins? seriously? can it possibly be so simple? There is a product called Static Cling that seems to work fine… but not sure about the chemicals that may exist there… safety pins, huh? hmm! what a surprise… ‘k … I’ll have to try this… just too good to be true! lol!
Melissa says
Just wondering what size safety pins? And for the vinegar. What is someone has very sensitive skim or is allergic to vinegar? And I have made my own laundry soap and it works really good. The only thing it does not work for is my sons blankets and sheets after he has had an accident on them. But other than that I have saved so much on my Laundry soap its crazy.
Andrea says
Melissa, any size safety pink should work — it’s just the metal that is needed.
Also, I don’t have any information about people who are allergic to vinegar… however, vinegar should be fine for anyone with sensitive skin. It doesn’t have hard chemicals like store-bought fabric softener.
Priscilla says
The Safety Pin idea worked, thank you! I purposely did not put vinegar in the wash cycle…and tested the safety pins (put some in an old clean sock) in my dryer with blankets that are always full of static when coming out of the dryer.
Camille says
I’m a little late to the party here, but I thought I would mention soap nuts. When I switched to using soap nuts to do laundry, the static cling disappeared!
Sandy says
what are soap nuts… what are they made of and where do you get them?
dev says
I have been using vinegar for awhile and love it! I have an HE FL machine and I find(so I don’t have to actually measure) I reuse an old plastic coffee creamer bottle and fill it half with water and half vinegar. And then I poor up to the max. line in the fabric softener dispenser. I’ve found if I try to eyeball the right amount I use too much and the clothes still smell like vinegar after being dried. My husband HATES any static or vinegar smell and he can’t tell the difference between loads treated with vinegar or fabric softener. Even the kids polyester fleece blankets are soft and static free!
Dawn says
Thanks for your time in doing this experiment as well as sharing your results.
I think I am going to try the safety pin idea but I am wondering if I could pin two small rags instead of a couple of the wet laundry items to throw into the dryer with each load (reusing the rags without having to remove the safety pins each time) if it would work as well. Or will the rags have to be wet in order to work.
Going to give it a try.
Andrea says
yes Dawn — I’m certain it would work to just pin a rag… and I don’t think the rag would have to be wet. It will naturally get a little damp tumbling around with all the wet clothing.
sarah says
I’ve found that in the height of winter when the inside air is dryer than the desert I need every trick in the book. Vinegar is a great fabric softner and reduces the static cling double bonus. I’m a committed line dryer and use my drying racks over our forced air heat registers (ours are in the floor ) for 2 reasons: drying my families clothes without the added cost of running the dryer and I increase the humidity level in the house without a humidifier (they just don’t seem to last anyway)
Tammy says
I finally tried this today and I’m sold! I used the vinegar and safety pins. So excited to simplify another area of my life.
Andrea says
yay — so glad you like this method too! it really does simplify our laundry routine!
Megan says
I have heard about using vinegar as well, but I’ve always heard that it should be added when you would normally add fabric softener. (I’ve never used fabric softener so I’m not sure at what point in the process this would be.) Do you just add your vinegar at the beginning? I usually throw my laundry in before I go to work and dry it when I get home, so I’m not around to add anything mid-cycle.
Andrea says
I’ve had experience with both top loading and front loading washers and I’ve always just put the vinegar in the “fabric softener dispenser” right at the beginning of the wash cycle {same time I add the detergent and clothing}.
If you have a top loading washer, there should be a small cup in the center of the machine {when you lift up the lid} — add the vinegar there. If you have a front loading washer, there should be a pull-out compartment towards the top. Pull it out and you should see a spot for “fabric softener”.
Hope this helps!
Megan says
Thanks so much!
Ryan says
We used to have an old machine that didn’t have a fabric softener dispenser, so I used vinegar in a downy ball for a no hassle alternative.
Franny Frugal says
I’ve read one of the biggest contributor to static cling is over-drying. If you adjust the drying time down until the clothes are just barely dry there is NO STATIC CLING! Thankfully my dryer has an “ECO” option that judges when clothes are dry and it seems to be the perfect amount of time. Occasionally I’ll find waist bands or thicker clothing pieces still a little damp, but I hang them up and they dry super quick in the dry desert air we have here in Utah.
Andrea says
Yes, you are totally right. Over-drying clothes can also cause static cling.
I often hang our items in the summer time — but cold Michigan winters definitely require a dryer!
Cathie says
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!!
Static electricity is the bane of my winter existence. I am absolutely going to try the safety pin-thing. (I already use vinegar sometimes, but mostly I considered it a cheaper version of fabric softener. I guess I should ditch the softener, and just use the vinegar, huh?)
Now, how do I keep from getting shocked when I open the file cabinet after getting up out of my synthetically covered seat???
Andrea says
You’re welcome Cathie! I’ve had great luck with my vinegar and safety pins…so yes, you should try it again!
And unfortunately, I don’t have a great solution for your “shocking” file cabinet 🙂 My in-laws had a similar problem and they installed a humidifier on their furnace. That seemed to solve the problem.
oh amanda says
Seriously. That’s genius!
Melissa says
I love projects that have double benefits like that!
Melissa says
Love that you tested all this! I use 5-6 dryer balls and really like them, but they don’t totally eliminate the problem. Crazy that the safety pins work. I’m going to give that a try. And I can attest to the vinegar working for this and many other things. Great list!
Andrea says
Thanks Melissa! I figured this little experiment would be a good excuse to get all caught up on laundry…and it was!
Miko's Girl says
Great advice. Thanks!
J says
Another timely article . I thought it was the dryer sheets we were using. I look forward to trying these tricks.
Keri M. says
I noticed that when we started to line-dry our clothes for environmental and economical reasons, we also eliminated static cling. Bonus! Now, even if I through the clothes in the dryer for 10 minutes to soften them, they are not getting overly hot and static-y. I’m pretty sure our static was from the clothes getting overly hot and bothered.
Andrea says
Thanks for the tip Keri,
One of the first things I want to do once the weather gets warmer is install a clothesline in our back yard — and now I have another good reason to do that!
Keri M. says
Yes, actually hanging an outdoor line is a Spring project of mine too. In the winter, our indoor air is so dry that the clothes dry just fine in the basement.
Sue says
I use static guard.. on my hair.. I cannot stand when it attacks me..LOL
or just run the hair brush under the facuet when running with cool water.
I only use dryer sheets when I am drying fleece.. it is just bad.. but I really do not like to use dryers sheets.
I hang alot of our laundryto dry.. so that cuts down too..
I am a big fan of the humidifier.. when we bought our house 10 years ago the one attached to the heater did not work and I did not want to pay to replace it.. So we got a hand me down whole house one.. it looks like a piece of furniture. You do have to fill it with water about every 3-4 days..BUT It cut down so much of the zapping of each other. It is a simple appliance.. just a fan and the motor that moves the filter. (My dog was very happy about getting this she was getting tired of getting zapped everytime we went to pet her ) .!
We buy one filter a year at sears and the cost is about 10.00 a year and the water.
Sue in NJ
Andrea says
I never thought to use static guard on my hair! Although, I have pretty short hair now so it doesn’t get very staticy.
And thanks for the info about the humidifier! I’ll have to look into that.
Jen says
I grew up with long hair, and my mom taught me to spritz a little Static Guard on my hair brush. It works!