How to Clean a Hydration Bladder (Without Tasting Mould Forever)

Clean transparent hydration bladder drying upright with tube extended, on a wooden kitchen counter next to bicarbonate of soda and a lemon

If you've ever opened a hydration bladder after a fortnight in the cupboard and got hit by a smell somewhere between pond water and old socks, you're not alone. Knowing how to clean a hydration bladder properly is the difference between a piece of kit that lasts five years and one that gets binned within twelve months. This guide walks through the routine and deep cleans, the methods that actually work, the drying step nobody talks about and the UK specific bits like hard water and humid sheds.

It applies whether you've got a BTR 2L hydration bladder, a CamelBak, an Osprey, a Source, a Decathlon own brand or any other bite valve reservoir. The cleaning principles are the same. We'll flag the brand specific quirks at the end.

The Three Rules That Stop Mould Before It Starts

Most mouldy bladder problems aren't really cleaning problems. They're storage and habit problems. Get these three things right and you'll spend a lot less time scrubbing.

  • Water only, when you can: sugary sports drinks and electrolyte powders feed bacteria and biofilm. If you must use them, plan to clean immediately after, not next weekend.
  • Empty and rinse the same day: the longer water sits in a warm bladder, the more biofilm gets a foothold. Two minutes after the ride is enough to save you twenty minutes later.
  • Dry it fully before storing: trapped moisture is what turns a clean bladder into a mouldy one. We'll come back to this in detail.

If you stick to water only and dry properly between uses, a quick rinse with washing up liquid is usually enough. The deep clean below becomes a monthly job, not a weekly emergency.

The 90 Second Post-Ride Routine

This is the bare minimum after every ride or run, regardless of what was in the bladder.

  1. Empty any leftover water down the sink.
  2. Run hot tap water in through the fill opening, swill it round and squeeze it out through the bite valve so the tube and mouthpiece get a flush too.
  3. Repeat once.
  4. Hang it upside down with the bite valve open and the fill cap off, somewhere with airflow.

If you used water with electrolyte tablets or sugar based drinks, swap step 2 for warm water and a tiny drop of dish soap, then rinse twice. Don't leave soapy residue. It'll taste awful next time.

The Deep Clean: Five UK-Tested Methods Ranked

Once a month for water-only users, or any time you can smell something off, do a proper deep clean. Here are five methods cyclists and runners actually use, ranked from safest and easiest to most aggressive.

1. Bicarbonate of Soda and Lemon Juice (Recommended)

The default method recommended by Platypus and most outdoor brands, and it works well on hard UK water residue too. Mix a quarter cup of bicarbonate of soda with a quarter cup of lemon juice and one to two litres of warm water. Pour it in, hold the bladder upright and squeeze the mix through the tube and bite valve so every surface gets contact. Leave for 20 minutes. Empty, rinse three times with hot water, dry fully.

This is the only method we use weekly without thinking twice. No safety faff, no off taste afterwards.

2. Hydration Bladder Cleaning Tablets

CamelBak Cleaning Tabs, Bottle Bright and similar products are basically chlorine dioxide tablets that fizz in warm water. Drop one or two in, fill the bladder, leave for the time on the packet (usually five to fifteen minutes), then rinse thoroughly. Convenient and effective. Works out at roughly fifty pence to a pound per clean depending on brand.

3. Denture Tablets (The Reddit Hack)

Polident, Steradent and own brand denture cleaning tablets contain similar oxidising agents to dedicated bladder tabs and are about a third of the price. Drop two into a full bladder of warm water, leave overnight, rinse three times. Plenty of bikepackers and ultralight hikers swear by them. Rinse really thoroughly afterwards as the residue tastes minty in a bad way.

4. White Vinegar (For Mineral Build-Up)

If you live somewhere chalky like the South East or the Midlands, you'll get mineral deposits that look like mould stains but are actually limescale. White vinegar dissolves it. Mix one part white vinegar with four parts warm water, soak for 20 minutes, rinse five or six times until the vinegar smell is gone. Don't combine vinegar and bicarbonate of soda in the same soak. They neutralise each other and you've effectively cleaned with salty water.

5. Bleach (Last Resort)

Some brands explicitly permit bleach (Platypus, for example) and some don't. Two to five drops of unscented household bleach per litre of water, soaked overnight, then rinsed three to five times with hot water until you can't smell it. Never mix bleach with vinegar or any other cleaner. If your bladder is already showing visible mould stains that won't shift any other way, this works. If it's just a routine clean, the first three methods are easier and safer.

How to Clean the Hydration Bladder Tube and Mouthpiece

The tube and bite valve are where most problems hide. Smooth bladder walls are easy. The narrow bore of a tube and the awkward little channels in a bite valve are not.

  • Tube: push your cleaning solution through the tube several times during the soak, not just into the bladder. A cheap hydration tube cleaning brush (about £4 on Amazon) is the only way to physically scrub the inside. Worth it if you're getting persistent off taste.
  • Bite valve: remove it if it's removable. Open it during all soaks and rinses so the cleaning solution actually flows through. Scrub the channels with an old toothbrush. Bite valves are cheap to replace if they perish, usually £3 to £6.
  • Quick disconnect fittings: if your bladder has a quick release between bladder and tube (most CamelBak and Osprey models do), separate them for cleaning. Bits of biofilm collect in the connector.

If your bladder still tastes plasticky after two cleans, it's almost always the tube and mouthpiece, not the bladder itself. They're cheap to replace as a pair if you can't get the smell out.

Drying Matters More Than Cleaning

This is the bit most guides skim over. A clean wet bladder put away in a cupboard is a perfect mould incubator. A clean dry bladder is fine for months.

The trick is keeping the bladder open while it dries so air can move through it. Three options that work:

  • Paper towel rolled up inside: wedges the walls apart, soaks up the last drops, takes the moisture with it when you remove it the next day.
  • Cardboard tube from a kitchen roll: same principle, reusable and longer lasting if you do this regularly.
  • Plastic clothes peg or hanger: clip the fill opening so it stays open, hang upside down with the bite valve open. Lets gravity drain the tube as it dries.

Twenty four to forty eight hours of airflow is the rule. If you live somewhere damp (rural Wales, the Lake District, anywhere with a draughty shed), pop it in the airing cupboard or near a radiator for the last few hours.

Storing Your Bladder Between Uses

Once it's fully dry, your two best storage options are:

  • Loose in a drawer: bite valve open, fill cap off, somewhere dry and out of direct sunlight. Direct sun degrades the plastic over time.
  • In the freezer: if you can never quite get the bladder bone dry (humid summers, group house with no airing cupboard), pop it in the freezer. Freezing pauses bacterial growth. It's not a substitute for cleaning, just an insurance policy if drying is a struggle.

Don't store a damp bladder rolled up in a backpack or stuff sack. That's the classic recipe for the swamp smell.

Hard Water and That Funny White Residue

If you live in an area with hard water (most of Southern and Eastern England), you'll get a white or grey residue inside the bladder that looks worrying but isn't mould. It's calcium and magnesium deposits, the same stuff that builds up in your kettle. The vinegar method above shifts it. A monthly vinegar soak is enough for most riders. If yours sits unused for weeks, top up with a wash of dish soap so the bladder isn't sitting wet.

Brand Specific Notes

Most reservoir bladders clean the same way, but a few quirks are worth knowing.

  • BTR 2L Hydration Bladder: wide fill opening makes scrubbing easy, BPA free plastic, removable bite valve. Standard cleaning methods all work fine. Don't dishwash.
  • CamelBak (Crux, Antidote): Quick Link disconnect at the bladder makes tube cleaning easier. Top rack dishwasher safe according to the brand, but most users find handwashing safer for the silicone valve. Replacement bite valves and tubes are widely stocked.
  • Osprey Hydraulics / Source: very wide fill openings (you can almost get a hand inside), which makes physical scrubbing the easiest of any brand. Source bladders are anti-microbial coated, so don't use bleach as it can damage the coating.
  • Decathlon Quechua and own brands: simpler designs, no special coatings, very forgiving. Standard methods all fine. Bite valves can perish faster than premium brands, so check before a long ride.

If you're trying to learn how to clean a CamelBak bladder specifically, the methods above are exactly what CamelBak's own care guide recommends, just without the brand specific cleaning tablet upsell. Bicarbonate of soda and lemon juice does the same job for pence.

When to Stop Cleaning and Replace

Bladders aren't forever. Replace yours when:

  • Black or green mould stains persist after three deep cleans (mould has got into microscopic cracks in the plastic)
  • The bite valve silicone is flaking or cracking
  • The bladder shows pinhole leaks or seam splits
  • The water still tastes off after a full strip-and-clean and three fresh fills

A decent bladder costs £8 to £20. Tubes and bite valves separately are usually £5 to £10. Don't ride with a knackered bladder hoping it'll come good. It won't, and dehydration on a long ride is genuinely unpleasant.

Done properly, this whole routine is far less effort than it sounds. A 90 second rinse after every ride, a 20 minute soak once a month, and proper drying between uses. That's it. Look after the bladder and it'll last you years instead of months.

Frequently asked questions

How often do I really need to clean my hydration bladder?

Rinse and dry properly after every ride. Do a deep clean (soak with bicarbonate of soda and lemon, or a cleaning tab) every 4-6 uses, or roughly once a month for casual riders. Sugary sports drinks change the maths. Clean immediately after using anything other than plain water.

Can I put my hydration bladder in the dishwasher?

Mostly no. CamelBak says top rack only and most users still don't recommend it because heat can damage silicone valves. BTR, Osprey, Source and Decathlon bladders are not dishwasher safe. Stick to handwashing. It's safer, gentler on the bite valve and not much slower.

Why does my hydration bladder still taste plasticky after cleaning?

Almost always the tube or bite valve, not the bladder itself. Soak the tube specifically with a bicarbonate of soda solution for 20 minutes and scrub it with a tube brush. If the taste persists, replace the bite valve. Tubes and bite valves are cheap parts. New bladders sometimes need a couple of warm bicarb soaks to wash out manufacturing residue too.

Is bleach safe to use on a hydration bladder?

Only as a last resort, and only with brands that specifically permit it (Platypus does, Source doesn't). Use two to five drops of unscented bleach per litre, soak overnight, and rinse five times with hot water. Never mix bleach with vinegar or any other cleaner. For routine cleaning, bicarbonate of soda or cleaning tablets do the job without the safety faff.

How long should I leave my hydration bladder to dry before storing?

24 to 48 hours with good airflow, with the bite valve open and the fill cap off. Use a paper towel or cardboard tube inside to keep the walls apart. If your home is damp or you don't have an airing cupboard, the freezer is a useful backup once the bladder is at least mostly dry.

Will hard UK water make my hydration bladder mouldy?

Hard water doesn't cause mould directly, but it leaves white or grey mineral deposits that look like mould and trap residue against the bladder walls. A monthly soak in 1 part white vinegar to 4 parts warm water for 20 minutes shifts the limescale. Don't mix vinegar with bicarbonate of soda. They neutralise each other.

Need a fresh hydration bladder to start with a clean slate?

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Bryn Morgan, founder of BTR Sports

Bryn Morgan

Founder of BTR Sports. Creating cycling and running accessories and clothing since 2013. Sussex based, keen cyclist and designed every product in the BTR range.

Running a cycling blog, a club or a bike shop? BTR has programmes for all three: affiliate, clubs, trade.

Related reading: What Is That Plastic Taste in My Hydration Bladder, and How Do I Get Rid of It? | BTR Hydration Bladder: Full Demo and Instructional Video | The BTR Hydration Bladder: A Hydration Backpack Solution


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