How to Clean a Moroccan Rug — A Practical Guide
Cleaning a hand-knotted Moroccan wool rug at home is straightforward — but most generic 'how to clean a rug' instructions on the internet were written for synthetic broadloom and will damage hand-knotted wool. The key differences: wool absorbs water deeply and dries slowly, natural dyes are sensitive to alkaline cleaners, and hand-knotted structure can loosen under aggressive scrubbing. The right protocol is gentler, more patient, and dramatically more effective than steam-cleaner or rotary-brush approaches.
Routine Care: What to Do Weekly
Vacuum once a week with the beater bar disengaged. The beater bar — the rotating brush on most upright vacuums — tears at knot tops and accelerates wear. Use suction only, or use the hose attachment. Vacuum in the direction of the pile (run your hand over the surface; the smoother direction is 'with' the pile). Vacuum the underside of the rug monthly — dust and grit work through the warp structure and cut wool fibres from below over time.
Rotate the rug 180 degrees every six months to distribute foot traffic and sun exposure evenly. Avoid placing the rug in direct sunlight for more than 3–4 hours daily — natural dyes fade over years of sun exposure, and undyed cream wool yellows.
Spot Cleaning: Spills and Stains
Act within minutes. Wool's natural lanolin makes fresh spills surprisingly easy to address — but the same lanolin holds onto stains that have set. First step for any liquid spill: blot (do not rub) with a clean white cloth, working from the outside of the spill inward to prevent spreading. Use as many dry cloths as needed to absorb the liquid.
For most stains, plain cold water on a cloth is the second step — gently dab the affected area, then blot dry. Repeat as needed. Do not soak. For stubborn stains, add a single drop of wool-safe liquid detergent (Woolite, Eucalan, or any 'wool wash' marked pH-neutral) to a cup of cold water; dab with a cloth dipped in the solution, then rinse with cold water on a clean cloth, then blot dry.
Never use: bleach, ammonia, hot water, baking soda (despite popular advice — it is alkaline and damages wool dyes), enzyme cleaners, oxygen cleaners, steam cleaners, or scrub brushes. These cause permanent damage to natural-dye wool. White vinegar diluted in cold water is acceptable for neutralising alkaline spills (urine, vomit) but should be rinsed thoroughly afterward.
Deep Cleaning: When and How
Most hand-knotted Moroccan wool rugs need a full deep clean every 3–5 years, depending on traffic. Signs it is time: visible darkening in high-traffic areas, a faint stale-wool smell, dull appearance even after vacuuming. The professional process — called 'pit washing' in the rug trade — involves submersing the rug in cold water, using mild wool-safe soap, agitating gently with a soft brush, multiple rinses, and flat drying over 2–4 days. This cannot be reproduced at home for any rug larger than about 4×6.
For larger rugs, professional cleaning runs $4–$8 per square foot in the US and €4–€8 in Europe — so $432–$864 for a 9×12. The cost reflects specialised equipment, drying space, and labour. Avoid services that advertise 'in-home steam cleaning' for wool rugs — steam and synthetic detergents accelerate wear.
At-Home Deep Clean (Small Rugs Only)
For rugs up to 4×6 ft and weighing under 8 kg, an at-home deep clean is feasible. Find a flat outdoor space (a clean patio or driveway) or a large bathtub. Vacuum thoroughly first. Mix wool-safe liquid detergent (1 tablespoon per gallon of cold water) and apply with a soft sponge, working in the direction of the pile. Rinse repeatedly with cold water — incomplete rinsing leaves soap residue that attracts dirt. Squeeze excess water by pressing (not wringing) with towels. Flat-dry with the pile up, on a clean surface, in a ventilated area. Full dry time: 24–48 hours. Never hang a wet wool rug over a railing — the weight distorts the weave structure permanently.
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常見問題
問題
- Can I steam-clean a Moroccan rug?
- No. Heat and moisture from steam cleaners damage natural dyes, can shrink the wool, and weaken hand-knotted structure. Use cold-water methods only.
- What detergent is safe for wool Moroccan rugs?
- pH-neutral wool wash — Woolite, Eucalan, or any specialised 'wool wash' product. Avoid laundry detergents (alkaline), dish soap (degreaser), bleach, and oxygen cleaners.
- How often should I deep-clean a Moroccan rug?
- Every 3–5 years for typical residential use, sometimes longer. High-traffic locations (entryway, dining room) may need cleaning every 2–3 years. Bedroom and low-traffic rugs can go 5–7 years.
- Can I use baking soda on a wool rug?
- No — despite widespread advice online. Baking soda is alkaline (pH ~9) and damages natural plant and insect dyes used in traditional Moroccan rugs. Use plain cold water or pH-neutral wool wash.
- What if my dog/cat urinates on the rug?
- Blot immediately with dry cloths. Then dab with a 1:1 mix of cold water and white vinegar to neutralise the alkaline urine. Rinse with plain cold water, blot dry. If smell persists, professional cleaning is the next step — enzyme cleaners damage wool.
- How long does a wool rug take to dry?
- 24 to 48 hours flat-dried in a ventilated area. Hand-knotted wool absorbs water deeply; rushed drying (fans on high, sunlight) can fade dyes and shrink the rug.
- Should I hire a professional cleaner?
- For anything larger than 4×6, yes — full immersion cleaning cannot be done well at home. Choose a cleaner experienced specifically with hand-knotted wool rugs (ask for references); avoid generic carpet-cleaning franchises.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. International Wool Textile Organisation
- 2. Oriental Rug Importers Association

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