You hang up a clean, grey towel after your morning routine. Hours later, you spot it: a neon-orange splotch that looks like someone highlighted your fabric. You wash it—twice—with extra detergent. The stain remains, stubborn and surreal.
You haven't lost your mind. You've met benzoyl peroxide—the silent towel assassin hiding in your acne cream.
🔬 The Real Culprit: It's Not a "Stain"—It's a Chemical Reaction
Here's the critical truth most articles miss:
Benzoyl peroxide doesn't stain fabric—it bleaches it.
Benzoyl peroxide (BP) is an oxidizing agent used in acne treatments (CeraVe, Clean & Clear, Proactiv, prescription gels). When it contacts fabric dyes:
- It breaks down dye molecules through oxidation
- The bleached area reveals the fabric's underlying fiber color (often yellowish)
- On grey, blue, or black towels, this creates orange, pink, or yellow splotches
- Because the dye is chemically destroyed—not sitting on the surface—the "stain" won't wash out. Ever.
💡 Why orange? Most cotton towels have a natural yellowish undertone. When BP bleaches dark dyes (grey/black), the yellow base shows through—creating orange (yellow + red dye remnants).
🚫 Why Washing Makes It Worse (Not Better):
