Reusable Paper Towels DIY: How to Make Unpaper Towels in 30 Minutes

I used to buy paper towels every two to three weeks without thinking twice about it.
Then I worked out what I was actually spending. A decent roll of paper towels costs around $2 to $3. At one roll every two weeks that is somewhere between $50 and $75 a year. On something I was literally throwing in the bin every single day.
Making your own reusable paper towels — often called unpaper towels — costs around $10 to $15 in fabric and takes about 30 minutes to make a set of 12. That set will last for years. The maths is not complicated
But the saving is only part of the reason to make the switch. Paper towels are one of the most wasteful items in any kitchen. In the US alone over 13 billion pounds of paper towels are thrown away every year. Every roll you replace with a reusable cloth alternative is a small but genuine reduction in that number.
In this guide you will learn:
What Are Reusable Paper Towels?

Reusable paper towels — also called unpaper towels or cloth paper towels — are small squares of absorbent fabric that replace disposable paper towels in your kitchen.
They do everything a paper towel does. They wipe surfaces, dry hands, absorb spills, clean counters, and polish glass. The only difference is that instead of throwing them away after one use you toss them in the washing machine and use them again.
A well-made set of unpaper towels lasts for years — some people have sets that are still going strong after five or six years of daily use. The cost per use drops to almost nothing within weeks of making them.
They work best as a direct replacement for the paper towels you reach for automatically — the quick wipe, the counter clean, the hand dry after washing up. For things you would genuinely rather throw away — raw meat juices, for example — you can keep a small stash of genuinely disposable cloths or a few paper towels for those specific uses.
What Fabrics Work Best
Best beginner choice: Old bath towels cut into squares. Zero cost, excellent absorbency, and they last for years. If you do not have old towels check charity shops — a large second-hand towel costs almost nothing and produces 12 to 15 unpaper towels.
Best looking option: Flannel on one side, terry cloth on the other — sewn together into double-sided towels. The flannel side looks beautiful and the terry side absorbs everything.
What You Need

For the Sewing Method
For the No-Sew Method
Method 1 — Sewn Double-Sided Unpaper Towels

This method produces the most durable and professional-looking unpaper towels. They are double-sided — soft fabric on one side, absorbent terry on the other — and have finished edges that will not fray.
What to Cut
Cut your fabric into squares roughly 25 to 30 centimetres — slightly larger than a standard paper towel sheet. Cut two squares per towel — one from your outer fabric and one from your absorbent terry cloth.
Method 2 — No-Sew Unpaper Towels from Old T-Shirts
This is the fastest and cheapest method. No sewing required. Ready in under 10 minutes.
Cotton jersey fabric — the kind most t-shirts are made from — has a natural rolled edge when cut. It does not fray. This makes it perfect for no-sew unpaper towels.
Method 3 — Zero Cost from Old Towels
The fastest method of all — and genuinely costs nothing if you have an old towel.
How to Store and Use Your Unpaper Towels

The key to actually replacing paper towels with cloth alternatives is making the cloth towels just as easy to reach for. If they are buried in a drawer you will keep grabbing paper towels out of habit.
Storage Options That Work
Dirty Towel Collection
You need a place to put used towels before washing. Options:


