Deep-cleaning cloth car upholstery means vacuuming first, then applying a fabric shampoo or baking-soda paste, agitating with a brush, and blotting dry to prevent mold.
Cloth seats trap everything from coffee drips to dog hair, and the wrong cleaning approach leaves them wet, stained, or worse. The right way starts with one simple prep step (vacuuming) and uses products you can buy at any auto-parts or grocery store. Below is the exact sequence that works on fabric upholstery, with methods from Chemical Guys and Arm & Hammer that avoid the common mistakes that ruin seats.
What You Need Before You Start
Gather these tools and cleaners before you touch the seats. Skipping any one of them is the reason many home upholstery jobs fail.
- Vacuum with crevice tool — for seams, under cushions, and between seatbacks
- Fabric cleaner — either a dedicated upholstery shampoo like Chemical Guys Foaming Citrus Fabric Clean or a DIY baking-soda paste
- Soft- to medium-bristle brush — a drill brush like the Chemical Guys Spinner Carpet Drill Brush cuts time on large areas
- Microfiber towels — high-lint-free cloths for blotting, not bath towels
- Fan or wet/dry vacuum — for drying. Wet seats grow mold in 24–48 hours
How To Clean Upholstery in a Car: The Step-by-Step Process
This sequence works for any cloth or fabric car seat. It comes from the official Chemical Guys and Arm & Hammer manufacturer guides, plus field-tested detailing practice.
Step 1: Strip and Vacuum Everything
Remove all floor mats, loose change, wrappers, and cargo. Vacuum every inch of the seats using the crevice tool — press it into the seam where the seat bottom meets the back, along headrest posts, and around the seatbelt buckles. Failing to vacuum first drives dirt deeper into the fabric when you add water.
Step 2: Spot-Test an Inconspicuous Area
Mix a tiny amount of your chosen cleaner with water and dab it on the underside of the seat or behind the headrest. Wait five minutes. If the color bleeds or fades, pick a different cleaner. Leather and suede need their own products; the methods below are for cloth only.
Step 3: Pre-Treat Stubborn Spots
Oil-based stains (grease, sunscreen, food spills) need help before the main wash. Spray Chemical Guys Nonsense Invisible Super Cleaner or a dab of dish soap on the stain, let it sit one to two minutes, then blot with a microfiber towel. Do not rub — rub spreads the stain.
Step 4: Apply the Cleaner and Agitate
Work in small sections (about the size of a dinner plate) so the cleaner doesn’t dry before you scrub.
- With fabric shampoo: Spray the cleaner directly onto the fabric. Use a soft brush in circular motions, pressing firmly enough to work the foam into the fibers. A drill brush on low speed covers large seat bottoms in under a minute.
- With baking soda paste: Mix two parts Arm & Hammer baking soda with one part water. Spread the paste over the stain and let it sit five to 30 minutes (longer for set-in stains). Scrub with a toothbrush or scrub brush in circles, then wipe with a damp towel.
Step 5: Blot, Don’t Rub
Press a clean microfiber towel onto the wet area and lift. Repeat with a fresh section of towel until the towel comes up nearly clean. Rubbing pushes dirt deeper into the foam padding underneath the fabric.
Step 6: Repeat If Needed
Heavy stains may take two or three rounds. Reapply cleaner, scrub, and blot again. If the seat still looks dingy after three passes, the dirt may be embedded in the seat foam — that calls for a steam cleaner or a professional detail.
Step 7: Dry Completely
Open all doors and windows, or park in direct sun with a fan blowing across the seats. A wet/dry vacuum with the hose held above the fabric (not pressed into it) pulls the last moisture out. Do not close the car until the fabric feels completely dry to the touch — trapped moisture causes musty smells and mold in as little as two days.
Best Cleaners and Tools For Fabric Car Seats
The table below lines up the most common products and their best use cases, based on manufacturer specs and real-world detailing results.
| Product / Tool | Best For | Approximate Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical Guys Foaming Citrus Fabric Clean | General deep cleaning of fabric seats and carpets | $10–$18 per bottle |
| Arm & Hammer Baking Soda | Chemical-free stain removal and odor absorption | Under $5 per box |
| Folex Spot Remover | Quick spot treatment (available at Home Depot) | Around $7 per bottle |
| Chemical Guys Nonsense Invisible Super Cleaner | Pre-treating oily or heavy stains | $12–$20 per bottle |
| Chemical Guys Spinner Carpet Drill Brush | Speeding up scrubbing on large seat areas | $20–$30 |
| Microfiber Towels (high-GSM) | Blotting and lifting dirt without lint | $10–$15 per pack |
| Wet/Dry Vacuum | Extracting moisture after cleaning | $40–$80 |
Common Mistakes That Ruin Cloth Upholstery
Most cleaning failures come from the same six errors, all avoidable with the right order and materials.
- Over-saturating: Flooding the seat with water soaks the foam padding, which takes days to dry and grows mold. Spray cleaner onto the fabric, not into it.
- Skipping vacuuming: Loose dirt turns into mud when it meets water, leaving a darker stain than the original spot.
- Not reclining the seat: The gap between the seat back and bottom catches water and debris. Recline the seat fully to reach that crevice.
- Using bleach or hydrogen peroxide: Both chemicals discolor fabric permanently and weaken the fibers.
- Ignoring spot testing: A cleaner that looks safe can strip dye from certain fabrics. Always test on a hidden area first.
- Closing windows before the seat is bone-dry: Even slightly damp fabric under closed windows creates a musty smell within 48 hours.
How To Clean Car Upholstery Without a Specialized Cleaner
If you don’t have a dedicated fabric shampoo, two household options work well on cloth seats. The vinegar-dish-soap solution comes from Nissan’s official owner guide.
- Vinegar and dish soap: Mix one cup white vinegar, one squirt liquid dish soap, and one gallon of hot water. Dab the mixture onto stains with a sponge, scrub with a brush, then rinse with clean water. The vinegar smell fades as it dries.
- Baking soda paste: The two-to-one paste described in step 4 above handles most food and drink stains without chemicals. It also neutralizes odors trapped in the fabric.
Both methods work only on fabric. Never use vinegar or baking soda on leather — it strips the protective coating and causes cracking.
Cleaning Upholstery in a Car: The Finish Checklist
Use this checklist to confirm the job is done right — and that you won’t be cleaning again next week because mold set in.
Check our tested picks for the best cleaner for upholstery in cars if you want a product that’s already proven to work on fabric seats before you buy.
- Vacuumed all seams, under cushions, and between seatbacks
- Spot-tested cleaner on a hidden area
- Pre-treated oily stains and let them sit 1–2 minutes
- Applied cleaner in small sections and scrubbed in circles
- Blotted with a clean microfiber towel until the towel lifts nearly clean
- Repeated scrub-and-blot on stubborn spots (2–3 passes max)
- Dried with windows open and a fan until the fabric is completely dry
FAQs
Can I use a steam cleaner on cloth car seats?
Yes, a steam cleaner works well on fabric upholstery because the heat loosens dirt without using chemicals. Keep the nozzle moving to avoid soaking the foam underneath, and vacuum up the excess moisture immediately with a wet/dry vac or microfiber towel.
What’s the best way to remove old coffee stains from fabric seats?
Blot the stain with a dry towel first, then apply a baking-soda paste (2 parts baking soda to 1 part water) and let it sit for 15 minutes. Scrub gently with a soft brush and wipe clean. For dried stains, repeat the process once the paste softens the residue.
How often should you deep clean car upholstery?
Every three to six months for average use, or every two months if you frequently carry kids, pets, or eat in the car. A quick bi-weekly vacuum between deep cleans keeps dirt from embedding into the fabric.
Can I clean car seats with just dish soap and water?
Mild dish soap mixed with warm water is safe for most cloth seats, but it leaves a soapy residue that attracts more dirt over time. The vinegar-and-dish-soap solution from Nissan’s guide is a better household option because the vinegar cuts the residue.
What makes car seats smell after cleaning?
Trapped moisture in the foam padding is the main cause. If the seat surface feels dry but still smells musty, the foam underneath is still wet. Place a fan directly on the seat for several hours, or use a wet/dry vacuum to pull the remaining water out of the padding.
References & Sources
- Chemical Guys. “How To Shampoo Car Seats.” Official manufacturer guide with step-by-step instructions.
- Arm & Hammer. “How to Get Stains & Odors Out of Car Seat Fabric.” Official cleaning guide with baking soda paste method.
- Nissan USA. “How To Clean Car Seats & Interior.” Official owner guide with vinegar-dish soap solution.
- Car and Driver. “How to Clean Your Car Interior Like a Pro.” General best practices for vacuuming and drying.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.