The quick answer
White streaks, powdery patches or chalky marks on clothes after a wash are residue — almost always from detergent that didn’t fully dissolve or rinse away, or from hard-water limescale reacting with the detergent. It looks alarming, but it isn’t a stain and it isn’t permanent. Adjust how you dose and load the machine and the marks stop appearing.
Common causes
- Too much detergent: excess powder or liquid can’t rinse out and dries as white residue.
- Undissolved powder: cold-water washes and packed drums stop powder dissolving fully.
- Hard water: minerals bind with detergent and leave a chalky deposit, especially common in many Indian cities.
- Overloading: clothes can’t move, so detergent isn’t distributed or rinsed evenly.
- Clogged detergent drawer: caked powder gets dumped onto clothes in lumps.
- Fabric softener marks: neat softener landing on fabric leaves greasy bluish-white smears.
Step-by-step fix
- Re-wash the affected items. Run them again on a rinse-and-spin with no detergent. Most residue rinses straight out.
- Cut the detergent dose. Use the amount on the pack for your load size and water hardness — usually less than people assume.
- Switch to liquid or wash warmer. If powder won’t dissolve in cold water, use liquid detergent or raise the temperature.
- Don’t overload. Leave a hand’s width of space at the top of the drum.
- Clean the drawer. Remove and scrub the detergent drawer so no caked powder drops onto clothes.
- Add an extra rinse in hard-water areas to flush out mineral-bound residue.
How to prevent it
- Measure detergent rather than pouring by eye.
- In hard-water areas, use a water softener additive or descale regularly.
- Dilute fabric softener and never pour it directly onto clothes.
- Keep the detergent drawer clean and clear.
White residue and sticky build-up have the same root cause — see how to remove detergent build-up and how to clean the detergent drawer.
When to call a technician
This is rarely a fault that needs an engineer. The exception is if water isn’t rinsing properly because of a faulty inlet valve or low water flow into the drum — if marks persist after correcting dosing and loading, ask a technician to check the fill and rinse functions.

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