Wet bag – what is it and how do you use it?

Wetbag – vad är det och hur använder du den?

The wet bag is one of those small things that feels unimportant until you have one — and then you wonder how you managed without it. Here we go through what a wet bag is, how it works, and all the ways it makes everyday life easier. Not just for diapers.

What is a wet bag?

A wet bag is a fabric pouch with a zipper and a water-resistant layer on the inside — the same kind of material as in a cloth diaper's cover (a thin PUL or TPU laminate). You put something damp or dirty inside, zip it shut, and the rest of your bag stays dry and fresh. The layer keeps moisture from soaking through the fabric and keeps odor in.

A neat detail about the laminate: it lets air through but not moisture. That means the bag breathes instead of becoming completely sealed like a plastic bag — gentler on diapers, clothes and whatever else is inside, and less of a breeding ground for trapped odor.

Good to know: a wet bag is made for the damp, not for free-flowing water — it's not a sealed container you can pour water into, and anything really dripping should be wrung out first. But for used diapers, a damp change of clothes or wrung-out swimwear, it does exactly its job.

For the cloth-diapering parent it's the obvious companion: used diapers go in the wet bag until you're home, without anything leaking or smelling through. But a wet bag is far more than just a diaper pouch — more on that shortly.

How to use a wet bag

It's as simple as it sounds:

  1. Put the damp or dirty item in the pouch — a used diaper, a wet change of clothes, damp swimwear.
  2. Zip it shut. The water-resistant layer keeps moisture and odor in.
  3. Once home, just open the zipper and tip the whole pouch into the machine — the wet bag goes in too and is washed together with the diapers.

No plastic bags or extra containers to haul around — the wet bag is all you need on the go. Hang it on the stroller or on a hook by the changing table so it's always close at hand.

Not just for diapers

This is the wet bag's secret: when the diapering period is over, it's far from done. The water-resistant layer makes it useful for almost anything that's wet, messy or needs to be kept separate:

  • A wet change of clothes. A little accident at daycare or the puddle that couldn't be resisted — the wet clothes fit without soaking your bag.
  • Swimwear. After the pool or the beach: wring out the swimsuit first, put it in the wet bag and keep dry clothes separate.
  • Workout gear. Sweaty gym clothes stay separate — and smell less — until they reach the washing machine.
  • Travel. Keep dirty laundry apart from clean in your suitcase, or corral bottles and tubes that might leak.
  • Snacks and small things. A small wet bag becomes a reusable pouch for fruit, crackers or wet mittens.
  • Nursing accessories. Handy for pump parts or nursing pads on the go.

Many people hold on to their wet bags long after the diapering period, simply because they're so useful.

At our house they're actually used daily, not just on the go. After an accident or a bit too much mess, the clothes go into a wet bag and down into the regular laundry basket — that way neither odor nor moisture spreads, and it all goes along with the next wash. Gym clothes take the same route: straight into a wet bag, so it doesn't smell of sweat before it reaches the machine. And I get to skip the plastic bags — I'd rather use a wet bag over and over than a single-use bag that gets thrown away.

Wet bag or mesh laundry bag — what's the difference?

Easy to mix up, but they do different things. The wet bag is water-resistant and made to carry wet things on the go — it keeps moisture in. The mesh laundry bag is for the wash itself: you collect diapers and inserts in it and put the whole bag in the machine, so they stay together and wear less. Many people have both — a wet bag in the diaper bag, a mesh laundry bag at home by the machine.

Choosing the right size

Wet bags come in different sizes, and which one suits you depends on how you use it:

  • A smaller one — easy to always have with you. Fits in a handbag or diaper bag for a diaper, a couple of wet mittens or a small change of clothes.
  • A slightly larger one — for longer days, daycare or travel, when there's more to gather up.

A tip: it's worth having more than one. One in the diaper bag, one at home on standby, one in the car. They weigh almost nothing and quickly become part of everyday life.

Washing and care — how to make it last

  • Machine-wash the wet bag together with the diapers, up to 60°C.
  • No fabric softener. It's not needed — and since the wet bag is usually washed together with the diapers, it's extra worth skipping: fabric softener leaves a coating on the inserts' fibers and makes them absorb less well (it takes a few washes to get out again).
  • Air-dry when you can — it's gentlest on the laminate and goes quickly: a wet bag is often dry on the line within an hour.
  • Is the bag extra dirty? Turn it inside out when you wash it, so the inside gets properly clean.

Cared for this way, a wet bag lasts for many years — far beyond a single diapering period.

Common questions about wet bags

Doesn't it smell if you keep used diapers in a bag?
The water-resistant layer keeps the odor surprisingly well contained as long as the zipper is closed. Empty and wash the bag regularly and it stays fresh.

How long can the diapers sit in the wet bag?
A couple of days is fine — most people wash every two to three days. Put the used diaper straight into the bag (tip solid poop into the toilet first) and close the zipper. Longer than a few days and it can start to smell or stains can set, so aim to run the wash within that.

Can I use the wet bag for things other than diapers?
Absolutely. Keep one for the wet and dirty — swimwear, a wet change of clothes, workout gear — and another for small things like snacks, cloth wipes and pacifiers. A good travel tip: dampen the cloth wipes and put them in a wet bag before you leave home, so you have them ready when you need them. That's why many people keep their wet bags long after the diapering period.

How many wet bags do I need?
Two or three is plenty for most: one in the diaper bag, one in the wash and one on standby.

Ready to make everyday life a little easier?

A wet bag is a small investment that quickly becomes a natural part of the routine — and with a few in different sizes you always have one to hand.

New to cloth diapers? Then the complete guide to cloth diapers is a good next stop.

Read on: night diaper, cloth diapers for newborns and traveling with cloth diapers.

— Emelie & Time Ahead Sweden