Stain Removal Guide

How to Remove Blood Stains

Carpet · Sofa · Rug · Mattress — the safe home method, surface by surface, and an honest word on what will and won't fully lift.

Blood has one golden rule that matters more than any other: cold water only. Blood is protein, and heat cooks it permanently into the fibres. Treated cold and promptly, it usually lifts well.

⏱️ The first 60 seconds
Blot with a cloth dampened in cold water — never warm or hot. Work from the outside in and keep swapping to a clean part of the cloth.
What you'll need
  • Clean white cloths
  • Cold water
  • Washing-up liquid
  • Salt (optional, for fresh blood)
  • Bicarbonate of soda

Step by step (carpet)

  1. Blot with cold water dabbing and lifting — never rub, never warm the water.
  2. Make a cold solution of a teaspoon of washing-up liquid in 250ml of cold water.
  3. Dab and blot gently, lifting the colour away in stages.
  4. For stubborn fresh blood a paste of salt and cold water can help draw it out; leave briefly, then blot.
  5. Rinse with cold water and press dry.

If you have 3% hydrogen peroxide it can help on a pale, colourfast carpet — but it bleaches colour, so test a hidden spot first and use sparingly, or skip it on anything coloured.

By surface

🛋️ Sofas & upholstery

Check the cushion's cleaning code first: W or W/S means the method above is fine used sparingly; S means solvent-clean only, so leave that to a professional. Use less water than on carpet and blot, don't soak.

🧶 Wool & delicate rugs

Use cool water and a gentle touch — wool can ‘brown’ if over-wet and some rug dyes run. Test a hidden corner first, and for an antique, hand-knotted or silk rug, don't gamble — leave it to us.

🛏️ Mattresses

Blood on a mattress is common — use cold water only, never warm. You can't rinse a mattress, so go light: blot, treat sparingly, then use bicarbonate of soda to absorb the rest. Never soak it — trapped moisture leads to mould and smells.

✅ Do

  • Use cold water, always
  • Blot from the outside in
  • Act before it dries
  • Test any peroxide on a hidden patch

🚫 Don't

  • Use warm or hot water — it sets blood
  • Rub the stain
  • Use undiluted peroxide on coloured carpet
  • Over-wet the area
The honest likelihood
FRESH Fresh blood treated cold usually lifts completely.
DRIED Dried blood is tougher but often still improves a lot.
SET WITH HEAT If it has been warmed or washed hot, it may be permanent.

Tried it and the blood mark is still there — or it's a wool rug, a mattress or something you'd hate to ruin? Don't keep scrubbing; that's how a stain turns permanent. We can often draw out what's left with professional hot-water extraction, and we'll tell you honestly what we expect to get up before we start. Watford family business, 25 years, fully insured — the quote's free.

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