Tips to clean your bike gloves as the summer season ends

Sommer Adams, a HavefunBiking contributor

With cooler weather approaching, it’s time to clean and store away your summer bike gloves, especially if you plan to reuse them next year. Even if they look clean, they are not. How often have you wiped the sweat from your brow, or worse, used as a tissue to wipe your nose? Cool mornings and pollen make them disgusting bacteria collectors if not cleaned regularly or before storing. Here are the best ways to clean them, even if they are not machine washable.

A gentle washing with a little bacterial soap and /or white vinegar may clean and sanitize them.

Gentle washing with a bit of bacterial soap and/or white vinegar may clean and sanitize them.

Preparing bike gloves for storage

Thankfully, like shorts, jerseys, and other bicycling articles, most bike gloves are made from materials that can be machine-washed. Many gloves can easily be thrown into a washing machine on a care cycle and then hung up to air dry. So, before packing away your summer bike gloves, follow these steps for healthy and extended use—both cloth and leather.

Supplies you may already have on hand for cleaning your cycling gloves:

  • Antibacterial hand soap
  • Detergent
  • Leather conditioner
  • White vinegar

Cloth Gloves (handwashing)

Step 1 – Close the Velcro or glove fasteners.

Step 2 – Wash the bicycle gloves in a sink with cool water and mild liquid soap. Add 1/8 cup white vinegar to the wash water if they are dirty or smelly.

Step 3 – Rinse the gloves well and inspect them for soap suds. Rinse again if necessary.

Step 4 – Lay the gloves flat or hang them up to dry. It’s even better if you can hang the gloves out in the sun. The sun is a “natural sanitizer” that disinfects your clothes. Plus, if you dry your gloves under the sun, they will smell fresher.

Cloth Gloves (machine wash)

Step 1 – Close the Velcro, snap, or button on your gloves.

Step 2 – Put the gloves in your washing machine, set them on cold water, and add laundry detergent. Do not use bleach. You may wash other items with the gloves. If your gloves are particularly smelly, add 1/4 cup of white vinegar to the fabric softener slot of your washing machine.

Step 3 – Rinse the bike gloves by hand after the wash if any soap suds remain.

Step 4 – Then lay the gloves flat or hang them to dry, or you can hang them out in the sun to dry. The sun’s ultraviolet rays will help kill bacteria on your workout clothes. But they need to be completely dry in the sun to be disinfected.

Leather Gloves (handwash only)

Step 1 – Put on the bicycle gloves and run some cool water over your hands. Then apply mild soap, such as Castile or leather soap, into the dirtiest parts of the glove.

Step 2 – Rinse the gloves well, spending twice as long on the rinsing as you did washing to ensure all the soap is gone. Do not wring moisture in the gloves. Squeeze gently to remove the water.

Step 3 – Remove the gloves from your hand and place them between layers of a bath towel. Then press to remove excess water.

Step 4 – Put the gloves back on and flex your fingers a few times to mold the gloves back into shape. Then, remove and lay the gloves flat to dry without pressing them again.

Step 5 – If desired, massage your cycling gloves with a pea-sized amount of leather conditioner when almost dry – use less conditioner if only part of the glove is leather.

Other Helpful Tips

  • If the gloves become smelly and damp between washes, lightly spray and rub vinegar into them and let them dry as you ride.
  • Leather and cloth gloves may be stiff once dry but soften with little use.
  • Wash leather gloves as infrequently as possible. If you are a dedicated long-distance rider, they may not last more than one season, regardless of how often you clean them.