A fursuit is part costume, part performance gear, and part very expensive plush you happen to sweat inside of. Learning how to clean a fursuit properly is the single biggest thing you can do to protect that investment. A good routine keeps the fur soft, kills the bacteria that cause odor, prevents mildew from setting into the foam, and adds years to the suit's working life.
The catch is that a fursuit is not one object. The head is a foam sculpture you cannot submerge in water, and the bodysuit is a sewn garment that usually tolerates a washing machine just fine. The techniques are different for each, and mixing them up is how foam gets ruined and fur gets matted. This guide walks through both, plus the spot-cleaning habits that mean you almost never have to do a full deep clean in a panic.
Spot-clean every single wear. That means a quick mist with fursuit spray and a few hours of air-out time with a fan running, even if you only had the suit on for a 30-minute photo shoot. This habit is what separates suiters whose costumes smell fine after five years from suiters whose costumes develop the dreaded fursuit funk after one summer con.
Deep cleaning is much less frequent. Plan on a full wash every 5 to 10 wears, or any time you finish a multi-day convention. If you do high-output performances like dance comps, bump that up. A 90-second dance set soaks the headliner and bodysuit in a way a casual meet-and-greet never will, so dancers and parade marchers should clean more aggressively. Our fursuit dance competition guide covers the additional wear-and-tear that comes with performance suiting.
The other deep-clean trigger is your nose. If you can smell anything other than fabric when you put the head on, it is time.
You can build a complete fursuit cleaning kit for under fifty dollars. Most of it is stuff you can find at a grocery store and a pet supply shop.
A head form or styrofoam wig head is worth picking up too. It is not strictly required for cleaning, but it makes drying the head much easier and doubles as your storage stand.
The standard mix is 50/50 unflavored vodka and distilled water, with 3 to 5 drops of an essential oil if you want a light scent. Cheap vodka works exactly as well as expensive vodka here, so buy the bottom-shelf plastic-bottle stuff. If you would rather not buy alcohol, mix 70% isopropyl with distilled water at 1:1 instead. Both versions kill the bacteria responsible for odor and then evaporate clean, leaving no residue behind.
A common question is why not just use Febreze. Febreze is formulated for short-pile upholstery and is heavy on perfume and surfactants. On long synthetic fur it can leave a tacky residue that attracts dust, and the fragrance is strong enough to give other people a headache in a crowded con suite. Vodka spray does the antibacterial work without any of that, which is why nearly every experienced suiter swears by it.
This is the routine that should become muscle memory. Done every wear, it makes deep cleans rare events instead of emergencies.
What not to do: do not pack a misted suit straight into its travel bag, do not skip the fan thinking room air is enough, and do not blast it with a hair dryer to speed things up. Heat is the enemy of fur tips.
This is the section where people get nervous, and rightly so. The head is the most expensive and most fragile part of the suit. Done carefully, hand-cleaning it is straightforward.
Step 1: strip the electronics. Remove any cooling fans, battery packs, follow-me-eye gear, or LED lights. Set them somewhere safe. Water and electronics are an obvious bad combination.
Step 2: clean the inside. Mix a few drops of mild detergent into a cup of warm water. Dampen a microfiber cloth, wring it out hard so it is barely wet, and wipe the foam interior. Work in sections. Rinse the cloth with plain water, wring it again, and wipe the same area to remove the soap. The foam should never be wet enough to drip when you press it. Pay extra attention to the chin, forehead, and the band where your balaclava sits, since those areas absorb the most sweat.
Step 3: clean the eyes and vision area. Wipe plastic or resin eye lenses with a separate clean cloth and a lens-safe cleaner (the kind for eyeglasses works perfectly). Avoid getting cleaner on the fur around the eyes.
Step 4: work the outside fur. Dampen another microfiber with plain distilled water and wipe the outer fur in the direction the fur lies. Never scrub against the grain. For visible stains, dab gently with a tiny amount of diluted detergent on the cloth, then go back over the spot with a plain-water cloth to rinse.
Step 5: brush and dry. While the fur is still slightly damp, brush it gently with a slicker brush, again going with the grain. Set the head on a head form, or stuff it with a towel shaped into a rough head shape so the muzzle does not collapse. Position a fan to blow into the muzzle opening, so air actually moves through the inside of the head. Leave it for 24 hours minimum. Do not put electronics back in until you are certain the interior foam is bone dry.
Good news here: most modern bodysuits, handpaws, and feetpaws are machine washable. The mandatory disclaimer is to confirm with your maker first, because a few specialty suits with airbrushed details or delicate trim do need hand washing.
For machine washing:
For hand washing (if your maker specifies it, or for delicate trim), fill a clean bathtub with cool water and a small amount of mild detergent, swish the suit through gently, then drain and refill with plain water to rinse. Press water out, never wring or twist.
Always air dry. Always. The tumble dryer is where fursuits go to die: heat warps the foam structure inside paws and feet, melts the tips of synthetic fur into crispy little curls, and shrinks the lining. There is no setting low enough to be safe.
Hang the bodysuit on a sturdy wooden or padded hanger, ideally one with broad shoulders so it does not stretch the seams. Position two box fans, one on each side, blowing across the suit. Expect 12 to 24 hours for full drying depending on humidity. Paws and feet can hang from a drying rack or sit on a clean towel with a fan pointed at them.
About halfway through drying, when the fur is just barely damp to the touch, brush it gently with a slicker brush in the direction of the grain. This is the single best moment to prevent matting. Brushing dry fur is fine but less effective; brushing slightly damp fur is what gives the suit that fresh-from-the-maker look.
How you store a fursuit between cons matters almost as much as how you clean it. The enemies are heat, humidity, sunlight, and moths.
Use a breathable garment bag made of cotton or canvas, never plastic. Plastic traps any leftover moisture and creates a perfect mildew incubator. A cool dry closet on an interior wall is ideal. Avoid attics, which get baking hot in summer, and basements, which tend to be damp. Sunlight fades synthetic fur over time, so keep the suit out of direct light.
Toss a few cedar blocks into the storage bag to deter moths, plus a couple of silica gel packets to absorb residual humidity. Replace the silica once a year. Store the head on a head form, on a styrofoam wig head, or stuffed with a clean balaclava so the muzzle holds its sculpted shape. A head left face-down on a shelf for six months will develop a flat spot you cannot brush out.
If you are storing the suit through a long off-season, pull it out once every couple of months, give it a sniff check, and run a fan through the bag for an hour. That small habit catches any developing musty smell before it becomes a real problem.
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View Full CalendarA well-maintained fursuit does not smell like anything in particular. The cliche of stinky fursuits comes from suiters who skip the spot-clean step, pack a damp suit straight into a bag after a con, and let sweat soak into the foam without ever drying it out. That trapped moisture grows the bacteria responsible for what suiters call "fursuit funk," and once funk sets into the foam of a head it is genuinely hard to get rid of.
Prevention is simple. Wear a moisture-wicking balaclava every single time you suit, mist with fursuit spray after every session, and run a fan on the suit for several hours before storing it. Suiters who do those three things have suits that smell fine for years.
Generally no. Standard dry cleaning solvents like perchloroethylene can melt synthetic fur, dissolve adhesives in the head, and damage airbrushed markings. A few specialty fursuit cleaning services exist (the Fursuit Salon in Pittsburgh is the best known) and use methods designed for synthetic costume fur. If you have a vintage or high-value suit you do not feel comfortable cleaning yourself, those services are worth the cost. Always ask your maker before sending a suit to any cleaner.
Sweat stains on the inner lining of a head or bodysuit usually respond to an enzymatic cleaner (the kind sold for pet urine stains, like Nature's Miracle). Spray it on the stained lining only, let it sit for 10 minutes, then blot with a damp microfiber and air-dry. If the lining is accessible and removable, hand-washing it separately in cool water with mild detergent works even better.
Do a deeper clean of the foam interior. Use diluted mild detergent on a microfiber cloth, wring it out almost dry, and wipe down every part of the foam your skin touches. Follow with a plain-water cloth to rinse. Then dry the head for at least 24 hours with a fan blowing into the muzzle opening so air actually circulates through the inside. Once it is dry and fresh again, commit to wearing a clean balaclava every single time you put the head on. The balaclava is what keeps sweat from reaching the foam in the first place.
No. Mildew can start growing inside a sealed bag within a few hours, and once it does the smell soaks into the foam permanently. If you finish a con on Sunday and your flight is Monday morning, set the suit up with fans in your hotel room overnight to dry it out before packing. If that is not possible, it is genuinely better to extend the trip by a day than to pack a wet suit. Our international travel guide for fursuiters covers more drying-on-the-road tactics for cons abroad.
Specialty fursuit cleaners typically charge between $80 and $200 depending on suit complexity, whether the head needs interior work, and shipping. For most suiters the home routine in this guide is more than enough. Professional cleaning is worth considering for vintage suits, suits from makers who are no longer taking commissions, or any suit where a deep clean at home feels too risky to attempt.
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