Why Do Clothes Get Lint & Pilling? Fabrics, Washing & Prevention

By Saran Reddy · Founder, InstaCuppa | Last updated: April 28, 2026

What Is Pilling and Why Does It Happen?

Pilling happens when short or broken fabric fibres tangle together on the surface of clothes. Friction from washing, wearing, and rubbing against furniture pulls fibres loose. These loose fibres twist into small balls called pills. All fabrics can pill, but synthetic blends and short-staple fibres pill the most.

You have seen those tiny fuzz balls on your sweater after a few washes. That is pilling. It looks worse than it is — the fabric itself is usually still strong underneath.

Here is what actually happens. Every fabric is made of thousands of tiny fibres twisted into yarn. When you wear or wash a garment, friction breaks some fibres loose. The loose ends stick up from the surface. More friction rolls them into tiny balls. That is a pill.

Friction is the root cause. Every source of friction makes it worse — the washing machine drum, your bag strap rubbing your shirt, your arms against your sweater sides, even sitting on a textured sofa.

Key fact: Pilling does not mean your clothes are cheap or low quality. Even Rs 5,000 cashmere sweaters pill. The difference is in how quickly pills form and how easy they are to remove.

Which Fabrics Get Pilling the Most?

Acrylic, polyester, cotton-polyester blends, and nylon pill the most. Pure cotton and linen pill less because their fibres break off instead of balling up. Silk and satin rarely pill. Wool pills initially but stops after the loose fibres are removed. Synthetic fabrics pill the most because their fibres are strong enough to hold onto the surface.
Fabric Pilling Level Why
Acrylic Very High Short fibres, strong enough to stay attached and ball up
Polyester High Strong fibres resist falling off — pills stay on the surface
Cotton-polyester blend High Cotton breaks, polyester holds — worst combination for pilling
Wool Medium (then stops) Loose fibres pill first, then the fabric stabilises
Pure cotton Low Broken fibres fall off instead of balling up
Linen Very Low Long, strong fibres — very little breakage
Silk Very Low Smooth, continuous filament — nothing to tangle

The most common pilling culprit in Indian wardrobes is the cotton-polyester blend. Most kurtas, office shirts, and bed sheets use this blend because it is affordable and wrinkle-resistant. But it pills faster than any other combination.

What Washing Mistakes Cause Pilling?

Five common washing mistakes cause pilling: overloading the machine, using hot water, skipping gentle cycle for delicates, washing clothes inside-out, and using harsh detergents. Each mistake increases friction inside the drum, which breaks fibres faster and creates more pills on the fabric surface.

Your washing machine is the biggest pilling factory in your house. Here is what goes wrong:

  1. Overloading the drum — clothes rub against each other more when packed tight. Leave 20-30% of the drum empty.
  2. Hot water on synthetics — heat weakens polyester and acrylic fibres. Use cold or lukewarm water for blends.
  3. Skipping the gentle cycle — normal and heavy cycles create 3-4x more friction. Use gentle for sweaters, delicates, and blends.
  4. Not turning clothes inside out — the outer surface gets the most abrasion. Flip garments inside out before washing.
  5. Harsh detergents — some detergents strip the fibre coating that reduces friction. Use a mild liquid detergent for woollens and delicates.

Stat: The Indian textile industry reports that improper washing reduces garment life by 30-40% — mostly due to pilling and colour fade. — Indian Textile Journal, 2025

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5 Ways to Prevent Lint and Pilling

Prevent pilling by washing clothes inside out, using a mesh laundry bag, choosing the gentle cycle, avoiding fabric softener on synthetics, and air-drying instead of machine drying. These five steps reduce friction during washing and drying, which is the primary cause of pilling on all fabrics.
  1. Wash inside out. The visible surface stays protected from drum friction. Takes 10 seconds per garment.
  2. Use a mesh laundry bag. Put sweaters and delicates in a fine-mesh bag. Reduces fabric-to-fabric rubbing by 60-70%.
  3. Select gentle or hand-wash cycle. Slower drum speed means less friction. Every washing machine has this option.
  4. Skip fabric softener on synthetics. Softener coats fibres and can actually increase static cling on polyester. Use it only on pure cotton.
  5. Air-dry when possible. Machine dryers tumble clothes for 30-60 minutes — that is 30-60 minutes of friction. Hang-dry sweaters flat on a drying rack.

Even with perfect care, some pilling is unavoidable — especially in the first 3-5 washes of a new garment. That is normal. A quick pass with an electric lint remover takes care of it in 2 minutes.

How Do You Remove Lint from Clothes?

Remove lint from clothes using an electric fabric shaver for pilling, a lint roller for loose surface lint, or a fabric brush for coats and velvet. Electric shavers with adjustable speed settings are the most effective. They cut pills off without damaging the fabric. Use low speed for delicate fabrics and high speed for blankets.

Once pilling has already formed, prevention is too late. You need removal. Here are your three options, ranked by effectiveness:

  1. Electric lint remover (best for pilling) — rotating blades shave off pills. The InstaCuppa model has 3 speeds and 6 blades. Low speed for cashmere, high speed for sofa covers. Takes 2-5 minutes per sweater.
  2. Lint roller (best for loose lint and pet hair) — sticky tape picks up anything not attached to the fabric. Does not remove pilling.
  3. Fabric brush (best for coats and velvet) — directional bristles sweep lint away. Gentle on sensitive fabrics.

Honest note: No lint remover can fix deep fabric damage. If the fabric is thinning or has holes, the garment needs replacement. A lint remover handles surface pilling only.

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Related Reading: Lint Remover: Complete Guide for Indian Wardrobes (2026) — our full pillar guide covering types, fabrics, and picking the right one.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do my clothes get lint balls?

Lint balls (pilling) form when friction breaks short fabric fibres loose. The loose fibres tangle together on the surface. Washing, wearing, and rubbing against furniture all cause friction. Synthetic blends pill the most.

How to remove lint from clothes without a roller?

Use an electric lint remover (fabric shaver) for pilling. It cuts pills off the surface with rotating blades. You can also use a pumice stone, a razor, or sticky tape wrapped around your hand. The safest and fastest option is a rechargeable lint remover with adjustable speeds.

Does washing cause pilling?

Yes. The washing machine drum creates friction between clothes. Overloading, hot water, and harsh cycles make it worse. Wash delicates inside out on a gentle cycle to reduce pilling.

Which fabric pills the most?

Acrylic pills the most, followed by polyester and cotton-polyester blends. The fibres are strong enough to stay attached to the surface and form balls. Pure cotton and linen pill less because broken fibres fall off.

Can you prevent pilling completely?

No. Some pilling is unavoidable, especially in the first few washes. You can reduce it by washing inside out, using mesh bags, and choosing gentle cycles. A lint remover handles whatever pilling still occurs.

Does fabric softener cause pilling?

Fabric softener does not directly cause pilling, but it can increase static on synthetic fabrics. This makes fibres stick together and ball up more easily. Avoid fabric softener on polyester and acrylic.

Is pilling a sign of bad quality?

Not always. Even expensive cashmere and merino wool pill. Pilling depends more on fibre length and fabric construction than price. Short-staple fibres and loose weaves pill more regardless of cost.

Saran Reddy

Founder, InstaCuppa | Building kitchen and home tools that give busy Indian families their time back

The kitchen takes your mornings, afternoons, and evenings. Your family gets what's left.

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