How to Vacuum a Moroccan Rug — Without Damaging It
Most modern vacuum cleaners are designed for synthetic broadloom — wall-to-wall carpet with a tight, uniform pile and machine-bound edges. A hand-knotted Moroccan rug is structurally a completely different object: individual knots tied to a foundation warp, with a fringe that is structurally continuous with the rug's skeleton, and a pile depth that can run from 1 cm (flat-weave) to 4 cm (high-pile Beni Ourain). Vacuuming it the same way you vacuum broadloom causes systematic damage over years. The right protocol is gentler, slower, and far more effective at preserving the rug.
The Single Most Important Rule
Disengage the beater bar — the rotating brush — on every pass over the rug. The beater bar is designed to lift dirt out of dense synthetic broadloom by mechanically agitating the fibres. On a hand-knotted wool rug, it does something different: it grabs at individual knot tops and pulls them upward, slowly loosening the knot structure over hundreds of vacuum sessions. After 5–7 years of beater-bar vacuuming, the high-traffic areas of a hand-knotted rug start to show 'pulled' knots and a fuzzy, uneven pile.
Most upright vacuums have a switch — sometimes labelled 'bare floor' or 'on/off brushroll' — that disengages the beater bar. If yours does not, use the hose attachment with a smooth (brushless) floor head. Suction alone is perfectly capable of removing dirt from a wool rug; it just takes a few extra passes.
Direction and Pace
Vacuum in the direction of the pile lay. Run your hand over the rug surface in different directions; the smoother direction is 'with' the pile. Vacuuming with the pile keeps the wool fibres lying naturally; vacuuming against it lifts the knot tops repeatedly and accelerates wear at the tip of each tuft.
Slow down. A vacuum moving at a brisk walking pace gives the suction roughly one second per linear inch of rug — not enough to lift embedded grit. Move at half walking speed. Each section gets two slow passes in the direction of the pile rather than four fast passes back and forth.
Frequency
Weekly is the standard recommendation for residential use. Heavy-traffic locations (entryway, dining-room rug) benefit from twice-weekly vacuuming. Bedroom rugs can go 7–10 days between sessions. The goal is to remove surface grit before it works down into the warp structure, where it cuts wool fibres from below and shortens the rug's life from the inside out.
Vacuum the underside of the rug monthly. Flip the rug, vacuum the back with the beater bar still off, then flip it back. This removes the fine grit that has worked through the warp and is sitting between the rug and the floor (or rug pad). This single habit, done monthly, adds years to the rug's life.
Fringe and Edges
Do not vacuum the fringe directly with the main head. Fringe is structurally part of the rug — it is the continuation of the warp threads that form the rug's skeleton. Catching fringe in a vacuum's intake or beater bar can rip warp threads out of the rug body, which is an expensive repair. Use the hose attachment with low suction to clean fringe; or hand-comb fringe with a wide-tooth comb (the same kind used for long hair) every few months to keep it straight.
Edge selvedges — the side edges of the rug, running along the warp direction — can be vacuumed with the main head if the beater bar is off, but with care. Selvedges that get caught in an aggressive vacuum can fray. Move perpendicular to the selvedge rather than along it.
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Ofte stillede
Spørgsmål
- Can I vacuum a hand-knotted Moroccan rug?
- Yes — weekly, with the beater bar (rotating brush) disengaged. Suction-only is the safe mode.
- Why is the beater bar bad for wool rugs?
- It grabs at individual knot tops and slowly loosens the knot structure over years of repeated vacuuming. Wool rugs vacuumed with beater bars show fuzzy, pulled pile in high-traffic areas after 5–7 years.
- How often should I vacuum a Moroccan rug?
- Once a week for residential use. Twice weekly in high-traffic locations. Monthly vacuum of the underside (flip the rug, vacuum the back) is also important for long-term care.
- Should I vacuum with or against the pile?
- With the pile. Run your hand over the surface in different directions; the smoother direction is 'with.' Vacuuming with the pile keeps fibres lying naturally; against lifts and wears knot tips.
- Can I vacuum the fringe?
- Not with the main vacuum head — the fringe is structurally part of the rug (continuation of the warp). Use the hose attachment with low suction, or hand-comb the fringe with a wide-tooth comb.
- What kind of vacuum is best for wool rugs?
- Any vacuum with a switchable beater bar works. Canister vacuums with a smooth floor head are preferred by rug specialists. Robotic vacuums (Roomba and similar) without beater bars are also safe.
- Will vacuuming cause shedding?
- Some, yes — but the loose fibres were going to come out regardless. Vacuuming just collects them rather than letting them accumulate in your home. Shedding stops naturally within 3–6 months.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. ICCRC Wool Rug Care Standards
- 2. Atlas Co-operative Owner Guide

Personen bag stykket
“Før du køber, sender jeg dig en video af det rigtige tæppe i dagslys — ikke et katalogfoto. Jeg svarer selv på beskederne.”
Jeg hedder Youssef. Jeg startede ARINID, fordi dette marked er fyldt med mellemmænd og maskinfremstillede efterligninger, der sælges som ægte — og jeg voksede op tæt nok på vævene til at kende forskellen.
Hvert stykke, vi fører, kan spores tilbage til det kooperativ, der vævede det. Vil du tale om mål til dit rum, er jeg i den anden ende af beskeden. Et tæppe på dette niveau er en beslutning for tredive år. Du bør kunne se den, der sælger det til dig, i øjnene.
Youssef
Grundlægger, ARINID
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