How to Remove Lipstick Stains From Clothing

Use stain removers, laundry detergent, or household items to wipe out stains

Project Overview
  • Working Time: 2 - 5 mins
  • Total Time: 1 - 17 hrs
  • Skill Level: Beginner
  • Estimated Cost: $0

Colored lipstick stains usually contain two components—an oily or waxy substance and a colored dye. These stains are trickier to remove, especially from white clothing, where the stain will be the most noticeable. Lip balms are a bit easier to handle since they have fewer dyes.

How to Remove Lipstick Stains From Clothing

The Spruce / Michela Buttignol

It's possible to remove the stain at home. Resist the urge to rub off a lipstick stain, pushing it deeper into the fabric fibers and making it harder to remove. For best results, pretreat the stain, use heavy-duty laundry detergent, and run it through the wash cycle. If a hint of the mark remains, never put the item in the dryer; the added heat could set in the stain.

Follow these steps for the best way to remove lipstick stains on clothing, including home remedy tips and suggestions for handling dry-clean-only clothing.

Tip

If you've run out of detergent, some standard household supplies can also be supplemented as cleaning agents in a pinch—hand dish soap, rubbing alcohol, hairspray, and white vinegar.

Stain Type Oil-based, dye-based
Detergent Type Heavy-duty laundry detergent, dry cleaning solvent, or carpet cleaning product
Water Temperature As hot as the fabric can tolerate
Cycle Type Varies depending on the fabric

What You'll Need

Equipment / Tools

  • Washing machine or large basin
  • Scraping tool, dull knife, or credit card (Optional)
  • Soft-bristled brush (Optional)

Materials

  • Heavy-duty detergent
  • Oxygen-based bleach (Optional)
  • Chlorine-based bleach (Optional)
  • Stain remover

Instructions

How to Remove Lipstick From Clothes

  1. Remove Solids

    If there are any solids, use the edge of a scaper, dull knife, or credit card to lift away the solids. Since almost all lipsticks contain an oil or wax combination to help them glide onto the lips, the first step is to remove any globs of the oil or wax residue.

    Use dull knife to remove lipstick wax
    ​The Spruce / Ulyana Verbytska 
  2. Pretreat the Stain

    • Begin by pretreating the stain using a solvent-based stain removal product, like Zout or Shout. If you don't have a solvent-based pre-treater handy, apply a bit of heavy-duty liquid detergent (Tide and Persil are considered heavy-duty with enough enzymes to break apart the oil) to the stain and work it in by gently rubbing with your fingers or a soft-bristled brush. 
    • Allow the stain remover to work for at least 15 minutes.
    Use brush and stain removal solution on clothing lipstick stain
    ​The Spruce / Ulyana Verbytska

  3. Wash as Usual

    • Wash the garment in the hottest water appropriate for the fabric, following the guidelines on the care label. After cleaning, inspect the stained area. If you still notice a stain, repeat the treatment.
    • If the stain is gone, you can dry it using the clothes dryer. The dryer's high heat, especially for synthetic fabrics, can make removing the stain very difficult.

    Tip

    If a lipstick, lip balm, or lipgloss stain has gone through the dryer and it's still on the fabric, apply a dot of hand dishwashing detergent to the spot and rub it into the fibers with the hottest water your fabric (and hands) can tolerate. Let it sit an hour and wash it as usual.

    Place clothing in washing machine following care instructions
    ​The Spruce / Ulyana Verbytska
  4. Soak Stubborn Stains in Bleach

    Chlorine bleach can be used on white cotton fabrics, but oxygen bleach is safe for any white, colored, or print materials. Also, you only need to soak items in diluted chlorine bleach for 30 minutes.

    • To remove any remaining dye component, mix a solution of oxygen-based bleach and cool water. Follow the package directions as to how much product per gallon of water.
    • Submerge the stained item and allow it to soak for at least eight hours. Check and wash the clothes as usual if the dye stains are gone.
    • If the stain persists, mix a fresh batch of oxygen bleach solution, soak for another eight hours, and then wash following the care label guidelines.

Additional Tips for Handling Lipstick Stains

Repeat the steps if the stain doesn't come out on the first attempt. Hot water liquifies oils, fats, and waxes, releasing them from the fibers more easily. While you never want to use heat with a stain, since this is a wax or oil-based stain, the hottest water safe for the fabric will help remove it.

Standard household supplies can also remove lipstick stains. Use them as pre-treatment before washing the item as you usually would.

  • Rubbing alcohol or acetone: Moisten a clean white cloth with rubbing alcohol, blot the stain with alcohol to remove the lipstick, and rinse with water. Wash as usual.
  • Hairspray: Before using hairspray on fabric, test it in an inconspicuous spot. Spray the hairspray onto the lipstick stain and allow it to sit for 15 minutes. Dip a clean cloth in warm water to wipe away the hairspray and lipstick. Wash as usual.
  • Vinegar: You can remove lipstick stains on clothes with white distilled vinegar. Apply vinegar to the affected area with a cotton ball and gently dab. Wash as usual.

Gently scrape away any lipstick solids or adhere a piece of tape on top of a new or dried lipstick stain to remove excess lipstick from the spot carefully.

For dry-clean-only clothing, lift lipstick solids away from the surface of your dry-clean-only clothing with a dull knife or scraper edge. Blot the stain with a clean white paper towel. Take the garment to the dry cleaner and point out the stain. If you use a home dry cleaning kit, treat the stain with the provided stain remover pen before putting the garment in the dryer bag.

FAQ
  • Are lipstick stains permanent?

    Lipstick stains take effort, but they do not have to be permanent. With persistence, you can get the stain out.

  • What is the best way to get rid of lipstick stains?

    The one-two punch of stain remover plus a heavy-duty detergent is often strong enough to knock out lipstick stains.

  • What home items can you use to get rid of a lipstick stain?

    If you don't have a stain remover product, consider using rubbing alcohol, acetone, hairspray, or vinegar. Dab it on and blot away the stain. Then, wash as usual.