Recipe

After my mother-in-law passed away, I started helping my father-in-law with laundry and other chores. He asks me to add aspirin to the washing machine every time I do the laundry. When I asked him why, he said that’s how his wife used to do it. Any idea what aspirin does?

This is one of those “home remedy” traditions that gets passed down—but aspirin in laundry doesn’t actually have a meaningful cleaning purpose in modern laundry science.

💊 What people think aspirin does in laundry

Some old household beliefs say it:

  • whitens clothes
  • removes stains
  • brightens fabrics

This idea likely came from the fact that aspirin contains salicylic acid (related to salicylic acid used in skincare and some cleaners).


🧪 What it really does

In practice:

  • It does not reliably whiten clothes
  • It does not work like bleach or detergent
  • It mostly just dissolves into water without strong cleaning action

Any “improvement” people notice is usually from:

  • hot water
  • detergent doing the real work
  • coincidence over time

⚠️ Why it’s not recommended

  • It’s not designed for fabrics or washing machines
  • It can leave residue without improving cleaning
  • It’s less effective (and more expensive) than proper laundry products

🧼 What actually works better for whitening

If the goal is bright clothes:

  • oxygen bleach (safer than chlorine bleach)
  • enzyme detergents
  • sunlight (natural whitening effect)
  • washing soda or baking soda (in some cases)

🧠 About your situation

Your father-in-law is likely continuing a habit tied to your late mother-in-law, not following something medically or scientifically necessary. In many households, these laundry “rituals” become emotional routines more than practical ones.


If you want, I can help you:

  • gently explain to him why it’s not needed without upsetting him, or
  • suggest a modern laundry method that still keeps the “whiter clothes” result he’s used to.

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