The Best Baby Bottle Washers
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If you’re in the bottle-washing phase of your life, you know what a task it is to sanitize them. Sure, hand washing the nooks and crannies of parts with a bottle brush is tedious, but the real toll is the precious time the chore takes away from your baby. And you don’t know chapped hands until you’ve been wrist-deep in hot, soapy water multiple times a day.
Enter the baby bottle washer: A unicorn for new parents. Just plop in the dirty bottles, fill the water reservoir, and in less than two hours you have sparkling-clean, ready-to-go bottles. It’s a game changer, and I’ve lost count of “well in my day …” comments I’ve received during the testing process of these miracle machines. The technology is pretty new, so there aren’t a ton of options on the market. But here at WIRED, we’re getting ahead of the curve and have tested every baby bottle washer available to see if the appliance is worth it.
Be sure to read our other baby gear guides, including the Best Baby Carriers, Best Breast Pumps, Best Baby Monitors, and Best Strollers.
Can I Wash Other Baby Items in a Bottle Washer?
Yes. Check the instructions of the specific bottle washer you’re using, but most machines can wash things like pacifiers, breast pump parts, and small toys and teethers, so long as the pieces are steam-resistant.
How Often Should I Clean a Baby Bottle Washer?
It’s a good idea to give your baby bottle washer a good cleaning every one to two months, especially if you start to notice milk residue or hard water buildup.
How Do I Clean a Baby Bottle Washer?
Most manufacturers suggest running a cycle with a vinegar and water solution or a descaling product made for steam cleaners. Follow the instructions for your machine, and make sure to rinse all parts well afterward.
Do I Have to Use the Brand’s Detergent Tablets?
As far as we know, yes. All bottle washing machines are calibrated for their own dissolvable tablets.
Can I Wash Glass Bottles in a Bottle Washer?
Yes. Just make sure the glass bottles are dishwasher-safe, and handle them carefully when loading and unloading, especially because glass will hold heat from the dryer. Also avoid sudden temperature swings (like moving an ice‑cold bottle straight into a hot cycle) to prevent cracking.
How Long Does a Typical Cleaning Cycle Take?
Cleaning times vary by machine and by which mode(s) you choose. Expect a cycle to take from 20 minutes for a quick wash to about 90 minutes for a full wash-sterilize-dry cycle.
How I Tested
I tested these bottle washing machines in my own kitchen as a new parent to a now 8-month-old, starting when my daughter was around 3 months. I tested each machine for at least a month, running two cleaning cycles a day early on when she was still taking bottles overnight. Now that she’s sleeping through the night, we’ve settled into one full wash per day. I tested a variety of items—narrow and wide-neck bottles (both glass and plastic), breast pump parts, pacifiers, and teethers—to see how each machine handled different shapes, materials, and levels of breast-milk and formula residue.
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