TL;DR: Different toy materials need different cleaning approaches, and getting it wrong can ruin a beloved toy fast. Here's how to clean plush, plastic, wood, and board game components safely—so the toys kids love most stick around longer.
Most stuffed animals and plush toys hold up surprisingly well in a washing machine—the trick is protection. Place the toy inside a pillowcase or mesh laundry bag, tie it closed, and run a gentle cycle with cold water and mild detergent.
Skip the dryer. Heat breaks down glue that holds eyes, noses, and sewn details in place. Air drying takes longer but keeps everything intact. If a plush toy has a music box or battery pack inside, spot cleaning with a damp cloth and a tiny drop of dish soap is the safer route.
For stuffed animals that get dragged everywhere—and here in Nashville, Indiana, that means through Brown County State Park trails, art festival crowds, and everything in between—a monthly wash keeps them fresh without wearing them out.
Wooden toys are some of the easiest to care for, which is part of why we love carrying them. A damp cloth with a small amount of white vinegar wiped across the surface handles most messes. Dry immediately with a clean towel.
Never soak wooden toys or run them under water. Wood absorbs moisture, and once it swells or warps, there's no fixing it. Same goes for dishwashers—the heat and steam will crack finishes and loosen joints.
For natural or unfinished wood toys, a light coat of food-grade mineral oil once or twice a year keeps the surface from drying out and splitting. Beeswax-based polishes work well too. Apply a thin layer, let it sit for ten minutes, then buff with a soft cloth.
One thing many families don't realize: wooden toys that develop a smooth patina over time aren't dirty. That's actually the wood aging beautifully, and it's part of what makes quality wooden toys feel like heirlooms.
Hard plastic toys—action figures, building bricks, play kitchen accessories—do well with warm soapy water and a good rinse. A basin or bucket works better than the sink because small pieces inevitably try to escape down the drain.
For a deeper clean, mix one tablespoon of white vinegar per cup of warm water. Let toys soak for fifteen minutes, scrub with an old toothbrush around joints and crevices, then rinse and air dry completely before putting them away.
Bath toys deserve special attention because mold loves hiding inside them. Squeeze toys with small holes—rubber ducks, squirting animals—trap water internally where mold grows invisibly. The CDC recommends regular cleaning of items that retain moisture to prevent mold exposure. Squeeze out all water after every bath, and once a month, soak bath toys in a vinegar solution for thirty minutes. If you squeeze a toy and see dark specks come out, it's time to replace it.
Cardboard-based games and puzzles require a completely different approach than toys you can get wet. A slightly damp microfiber cloth can remove surface grime from game boards and puzzle pieces, but the key word is slightly. Too much moisture warps cardboard permanently.
For game cards that have gotten sticky from snack-time fingers, wipe each card individually with a barely damp cloth and lay flat to dry. Card sleeves—the clear plastic protectors used by trading card collectors—work as preventive care for frequently played favorites. They cost a few dollars and keep cards playable for years.
Wooden game pieces (like those in quality chess sets or strategy games) follow the same rules as wooden toys: damp wipe, immediate dry, occasional mineral oil.
Store board games flat, not on their sides. Vertical storage lets components shift and pile against one edge, bending boards and losing small pieces into corners where they get crushed.
With warmer weather settling into Brown County, kids naturally start gravitating toward outdoor play. That transition point—right now, early May—is the perfect window to pull indoor toys out, give them a thorough cleaning, and reorganize.
Sort into three groups: toys that get played with regularly, toys that haven't been touched in months, and toys that need repair. Clean the keepers, donate what's outgrown (we see families pass along beloved toys to younger cousins and neighbors all the time), and set aside anything that needs a fix.
A cleaned and reorganized play space actually changes how kids interact with their toys. Pieces that were buried under a pile suddenly become interesting again. Games forgotten at the bottom of a stack get rediscovered.
We've watched this cycle play out across thousands of families over 55 years. The toys that last longest aren't always the most expensive ones—they're the ones that get taken care of. A well-maintained toy carries something a brand-new replacement never will: the memory of every game played, every adventure imagined, every story told.
Toy Company
The Toy Chest has been a trusted independent toy store for 55 years—with decades of experience helping families find the perfect toys.
Nashville, Indiana
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