Since 1989 Australian garment-care experience AU & NZ local industry support SMS from 5¢ using your supported account 30 days software cancellation notice
Industry Core Intelligence™

Chemical Safety for Dry Cleaning Businesses

Dry cleaners, laundries, alteration and shoe-care operations can use detergents, solvents, spotting agents, bleaches, dyes, waterproofing and maintenance chemicals with different health, fire and environmental risks.

What this guide covers

Know every chemical on site, keep current SDS and labels, assess how it is received, stored, transferred, used and disposed of, then train staff in the approved controls and emergency response.

Create a complete chemical register

The register should match what is physically present, including small spotting bottles, maintenance products, aerosols, dyes and decanted containers.

  • Product and supplier name
  • Current safety data sheet
  • Quantity and storage location
  • Hazard classification and incompatibilities
  • Approved use and authorised staff
  • Review date and obsolete-product removal

Control storage, labels and access

Store chemicals according to the SDS, fire controls and incompatibility information. Keep original labels or compliant workplace labels on every container.

  • Separate incompatible products
  • Use suitable cabinets, bunding or containment
  • Protect from heat, ignition and sunlight
  • Control keys and unauthorised access
  • Keep transfer and measuring equipment clean
  • Never use food or drink containers

Connect PPE and ventilation to the task

A generic glove rule is not enough. Select PPE, ventilation and work method from the product, concentration, exposure route and activity.

  • Correct glove material and replacement interval
  • Eye, face, apron and respiratory protection where required
  • Local exhaust and general ventilation
  • Closed transfer or dosing where available
  • No eating, drinking or personal items in chemical areas
  • Hand washing and contaminated-clothing procedure
Do not improvise controls

Follow the current SDS, workplace risk assessment and local work health and safety requirements. Respiratory protection requires proper selection, fit, maintenance and training.

Prepare for spills, exposure and waste

Staff need an immediate, practised response that does not create a second exposure. Keep suitable spill materials, emergency contacts and waste arrangements.

  • Raise alarm and isolate the area
  • Use SDS first-aid and emergency guidance
  • Prevent unsafe entry or ignition
  • Use compatible spill equipment
  • Report and investigate exposure or near miss
  • Use approved waste and environmental disposal pathways
Professional-use notice

This page provides general operational awareness. Always follow care labels, safety data sheets, equipment instructions, workplace procedures, testing requirements and professional judgement.

Direct answers

Frequently asked questions

Clear software decisions come from clear questions. These answers describe DCME’s current product direction and commercial terms.

View all FAQs
Does every chemical need an SDS?

Hazardous products require current safety information, and the business should maintain the product documentation required by local rules and workplace procedures.

Can chemicals be decanted into smaller bottles?

Only with a controlled procedure, compatible container and compliant label. Never use an unlabelled bottle or food container.

Is one type of glove suitable for all spotting chemicals?

No. Glove resistance varies by material and chemical. Select from the SDS and task risk assessment.

Can software replace a chemical register?

Software can organise products, SDS, reviews and training evidence, but the physical controls and workplace responsibilities remain essential.

Australian garment-care software

Connect industry knowledge to the daily workflow.

Book a practical demonstration using your store type, services, terminal requirements and future technology plan.