A leaking pen in a pocket, a child's drawings in marker on a new T-shirt, a stray ink stain on a white dress at the office — ink stains are some of the trickiest, because different types of ink call for different approaches. What works for a ballpoint pen can be completely wrong for a marker. In this article — methods organised by ink type and how to recognise what you are dealing with.
Types of ink — how to recognise them
The first step in successful removal is recognising what kind of ink left the stain:
| Ink type | Base | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Ballpoint pen | Oil-based | Medium |
| Gel pen | Water-based | Easy |
| Marker (water-based) | Water-based | Easy |
| Permanent marker (Sharpie) | Alcohol-based | Hard |
| Printer ink | Polymer-based | Hard |
| Calligraphy pen | Water-based / pigment-based | Medium |
The type is often clear from context: the child used markers, you wrote with a ballpoint, the office used a pen.
First steps (for all ink types)
- NEVER wipe — the ink will spread
- Blot with paper towel — press, do not rub. Change the paper while there is still ink coming through
- Never pour hot water — it locks in pigments
- Separate the garment from others — the ink can transfer through close contact
- Identify the ink type and choose the method
Ballpoint pen — the classic case
Oil-based ink, resistant to plain water:
Method: Spirit / hand sanitiser
- Place a clean paper towel under the stain (it will soak up ink that goes through)
- Apply a few drops of medicinal spirit (70% or 90%) or hand sanitiser (with a high alcohol concentration) directly on the stain
- Blot with clean paper — you should see the ink "migrating" into the paper
- Repeat the process, changing the paper while ink keeps coming through
- Apply dish soap
- Wash at 30-40 °C with enzyme detergent
Spirit is a great solvent for the oil base of ballpoint ink. Be careful with coloured fabrics — test on an inconspicuous spot first.
Alternative: Hairspray
A classic home trick. Hairspray uses alcohol as its main solvent:
- Place paper under the stain
- Spray hairspray directly on the stain
- Wait 1-2 minutes
- Blot with paper
- Repeat
- Wash as usual
Gel pen and water-based marker
Water-based — the easiest cases:
- Dampen with cold water from the reverse side
- Apply enzyme detergent directly on the stain
- Leave for 30 minutes
- Wash at 30-40 °C
- Check before drying
For most cases one cycle is enough.
Permanent marker (Sharpie and similar)
The toughest case. Alcohol-based, designed precisely to resist removal:
Method: Strong alcohol (96% spirit)
- Place clean paper under the stain (several layers)
- Apply a generous dose of 96% medicinal spirit directly on the stain
- Press from the top with clean paper — the ink will "transfer" into the paper
- Change the paper through several rounds
- Repeat until the paper no longer takes up ink
- Apply dish soap + soda paste
- Wash at 40 °C
Alternative: Soaking in milk
A traditional method. Milk contains casein proteins that absorb some pigments:
- Soak the garment in warm milk for 1-2 hours
- Wash as usual
It does not always work, but in extreme cases it is worth trying — it is cheap and does not damage the fabric.
Printer ink
Tricky — the ink is designed to be durable and to dry quickly:
- React within 1-2 hours, while the ink is still damp
- Blot with paper
- Apply spirit in a generous amount
- Then ammonia (1 tablespoon + 1 cup of water) — carefully!
- Wash at 30 °C
Important caution: never mix ammonia with chlorine bleach — toxic fumes.
Specifics for different fabrics
Cotton and linen
The most resilient. All methods work. Spirit is safe.
Synthetics (polyester)
Ink sometimes ties more deeply into the structure of synthetic fibre. A longer pre-treatment is needed and sometimes a repeat.
Wool and silk
Be careful with spirit — it can damage the fibre and the colours. Better:
- Soaking in milk (a gentler alternative)
- A specialist ink remover (Mr. Clean Magic Eraser and similar, but only on a small area — it can damage)
- For tougher cases — to the dry cleaner
Leather items
Especially delicate. Spirit on leather DAMAGES the colour. Best: specialist leather cleaners (Apple Brand Leather Cleaner and similar). For tougher cases — a leather-care specialist.
Typical situations
A pen leaking in the washing machine
Probably the worst case — the trousers have already been washed with a pen, stains are now everywhere. Strategy:
- DO NOT DRY the garment
- Immediately soak in cold water with 200 ml of spirit for 1 hour
- Wash at 30 °C with a full dose of enzyme detergent
- Check each affected garment separately
- Plus clean the washing machine — see the washing-machine care guide (the pen ink can stay in the drum)
A child's T-shirt with marker drawings
The classic case. Strategy:
- Identify the marker type (water-based or permanent — ask the child or check the package)
- Act accordingly — water-based ink is removed easily, permanent needs a stronger method
An office dress with an ink stain
React immediately:
- Blot with paper (first)
- In the evening or after taking the garment off — spirit pre-treatment
- Wash at home according to the fabric type
Permanent marker on white sneakers
A separate category. Strategy:
- Magic Eraser — the best option for white rubber and mesh
- Spirit with a clean cloth
- For tougher ones — dry cleaning
The stain is still visible after washing
A typical case: most of the ink is gone, but a "shadow" remains:
- Repeat the spirit + paper method
- Then a baking-soda + vinegar paste for 30 min
- A repeat wash
- Sun drying (UV helps reduce pigment residues)
If after 3 rounds the stain is still visible — it is most likely there to stay.
What NOT to do
- Never tumble-dry a garment with a visible ink stain
- Never iron — it sets the ink permanently
- Do not mix chemicals — especially ammonia with chlorine
- Never rub vigorously — it spreads the stain
- Never use acetone on synthetic fabrics — it damages the fibre
Prevention
- Pens with a safe mechanism — for travel or pockets
- Water-based markers for kids instead of permanent
- Protective aprons for writing work and drawing sessions
- Quick reaction — a fresh ink stain is 5-10x easier to remove
Frequently asked questions
Does hairspray really remove ballpoint pen?
Yes, because of its alcohol content. Modern hairsprays contain less alcohol than they used to (for respiratory safety), so the effectiveness is lower. Medicinal spirit is better — more effective and controllable.
My child drew on a T-shirt with a "permanent" marker. Is there a chance?
There is a chance, but it takes work. 96% spirit + the paper-migration method + washing. If the stain is fresh (less than 24 hours) — about 70% chance. If dry (months) — about 30%.
How does a gel pen differ from a ballpoint when it comes to stains?
A gel pen is water-based, so cold water + enzyme detergent is enough. A ballpoint is oil-based, so spirit is needed. They are two completely different cases.
Does acetone-based nail polish remover work?
It works on some inks, but:
- Damages synthetic fabrics
- Can damage colours
- Strong smell
Medicinal spirit is better — safer and more effective.
My printer left ink stains on my shirts. What do I do?
React immediately — printer ink polymerises very quickly. Spirit pre-treatment + washing. After 24 hours the chance of success drops dramatically.
Summary
Ink stains call for a differentiated approach: water-based (gel pen, kids' markers) — easy cases with enzyme detergent; oil-based (ballpoint) — spirit pre-treatment; alcohol-based (permanent marker) — strong spirit and patience. The golden rule: never tumble-dry a garment with a visible ink stain — heat will lock it in forever. More on other stains — in the complete stain guide.



