Steamers are the secret weapon of garment care. Although their place in the home-appliance canon is less established than that of irons, they can do many of the same things: “I don’t think people understand how much you can get away with steaming things as opposed to ironing,” says Zach Pozniak, a third-generation dry cleaner and the vice-president of operations at Jeeves New York. “You can steam the vast majority of your clothing and be pretty happy with the results.” Plus steaming is, in many cases, better for keeping delicate, soft textiles in good shape: “Ironing is way more aggressive to your clothes than steaming is,” says Pozniak, “because you’re drilling it with pressure and heat,” while steamers work more gently to relax fibers. To find the best steamer for you, I consulted 12 experts, from stylists to laundry influencers, about their tried-and-true favorites and tested several highly recommended models myself.
We’re categorizing steamers as travel size (less than 12 inches tall and six inches wide), handheld (too large to throw in a suitcase, but small and lightweight enough to use one-handed), and standing, the largest size, which feature a water reservoir, a hanging rack, and will usually have wheels.
The power of a steamer is measured in watts, which corresponds to how quickly an appliance heats up and how forcefully it can expel steam — think about the difference between a face mister and Jacuzzi jets. Most options on this list are between 1,000 and 2,000 watts, which is powerful enough for even heavy-duty garment-steaming tasks.
The water capacity of a steamer is an industrial-design balancing act: too small and you’ll be running back to the sink to refill it before you finish steaming a single shirt; too large and the appliance will be heavy and unwieldy when full. Most handheld options on this list have a tank capacity of between four and eight ounces of water, which provides about ten to 15 minutes of continuous steam, an output the experts I spoke to agreed was sufficient for home use. If you’re regularly taking on long steaming sessions, consider a freestanding steamer, which has a higher-capacity tank and is found in “every department store and every studio,” per costume designer Alison Freer. (It’s the style I used to steam entire racks of theater costumes at my college costume-shop job.)
Several of the experts I spoke to also shared tricks for avoiding a buildup of the minerals naturally found in tap water, which “makes a lot of steamers spit and behave poorly,” per Freer. Mineral buildup will “eject this gross white grainy sand, and if you iron it into your clothes, now it’s stained,” warns Pozniak. Filling the tank with distilled water will prevent spitting; if you want to get even more precise, Patric Richardson, host of The Laundry Guy, recommends using spring water, which contains some minerals but less than tap water. That allows the water to get beyond boiling — the same rationale as adding salt to pasta water — which makes for a hotter, more effective steam. Another suggestion from Marilee Nelson, a nontoxic consultant and co-founder of Branch Basics, is to fill the tank with a half-and-half mixture of water and an inexpensive, high-proof vodka: the alcohol will “remove allergens, body odor, and even smoke and perfume picked up on clothes.”
Size: Handheld | Power: 1,875 watts | Capacity: 7.3 ounces
The Conair Turbo Extreme Steam is a powerful, reliable steamer that can stand up to nearly any steaming task you throw at it. It’s used by three discerning users: Kate Young, Uma Thurman’s stylist and the mastermind behind her wrinkle-free 2022 Oscars look; Strategist writer Ambar Pardilla; and Pozniak, who uses it about twice a week to clean drapery and upholstered furniture in clients’ homes. Pozniak discovered the model while searching for an alternative to a standing machine, which he found unwieldy. He likes that the Conair steamer is lightweight, heats up in about 30 seconds, and can “run at full blast” for about ten minutes.
When I tested it, I was impressed with the quick heat-up time and the amount of steam it could generate on the highest setting. (The Turbo has five settings, which correspond to the volume of steam it puts out.) It’s on the larger side, but once it was in my hand, I realized all the other things I could steam and gave my pillowcases and bedding a quick once-over, too. Pardilla also loves the steamer, which she bought after the experience of stamping “big horseshoe-shaped marks onto a couple of T-shirts” made her swear off irons. “It gives you a red-carpet-immaculate finish every time,” she says.
Photo: Retailer
Size: Standing | Power: 1,300 watts | Capacity: 96 ounces
This is “the original stand-up steamer,” per Freer, favored by stylists, retail clothing stores, and costumers. She has four, the oldest of which was a gift from a mentor and is “easily 25 if not 30 years old and still works like a champ.” I had assumed a J-2000 steamer would be too heavy-duty for me — I steam a garment about once a week, usually five minutes before leaving the house — but I was curious after graphic designer and home sewer Tracy Ma mentioned that she has one. Although it “seems silly at first to have such a large thing in a New York apartment,” she says, “it’s actually an appliance I use regularly.”
After a month of use, my conclusion: If you aren’t a clothing nerd, you don’t need a standing steamer. If you are, this one is fantastic. It heats up fast, rarely needs to be refilled, and gets wrinkled nylon and creased wool crisp in minutes. Keeping it in the corner of my bedroom removed the mental block around getting an appliance out of the closet, so I ended up using it more often and thus getting more wear out of my most wrinkle-prone clothes. It’s expensive, but it will last you decades — if a component breaks, Jiffy sells replacement parts on its website, which is helpful for heavy-duty users. (“One of the wheels fell off because I’m always dragging it through a parking lot,” Freer says.) “I use it on everything — jeans, T-shirts, heavy sweaters, coats,” says chef Daniela Soto-Innes.
Photo: Retailer
Size: Handheld | Power: 1,110 watts | Capacity: 6 ounces
This smaller, less expensive version of the Conair Turbo is the go-to steamer of Queer Eye’s Tan France, who praises its “lightweight” construction and its reliability. He says, “Every stylist out there knows how annoying it is when a steamer leaks and drips,” potentially damaging delicate fabrics, but the Extreme Steam rarely does. It’s also a favorite of Strategist senior editor Simone Kitchens, who says it’s “so solid.”
Size: Travel | Power: 600 watts | Capacity: 8 ounces
This compact Jiffy travel steamer is a favorite of Freer and Barbara Corcoran, who says it steams dresses “in 30 seconds flat” and gets them looking “like I just went to the dry cleaner.” Freer appreciates its compact size — it’s about “the size of a Hydro Flask”— and says it especially comes in handy at events. “Every time I pack it and I’m at the hotel where the wedding is being held, I get phone calls,” she says. The device is small, but powerful enough to lift deep wrinkles: She mentions a time her boyfriend folded and packed a suit in his luggage, and “I coaxed that thing back to life” with just the Jiffy steamer. “That’s the thing I’m still proudest of in my entire career.”
Size: Travel | Power: 1,200 watts | Capacity: 2.7 ounces
For a less expensive travel steamer, Conair’s dual-voltage model is a great option and has the useful feature of working with 120-volt U.S. outlets and 220-volt outlets, which are more common worldwide. When I tested it, it heated up in about 36 seconds and emitted a fine, gauzy hiss of steam that unwrinkled a pair of wool pants in no time. Its capacity is on the lower end, so you’ll need to refill it after steaming a couple garments. But it’s a solid option if you’re looking for a powerful steamer you can throw in your luggage, or if you only steam one or two things at a time — it’s become the model I reach for over our best-in-class pick, the Conair Turbo Extreme Steam, when I need to give something a quick once-over before leaving the house.
Size: Handheld | Power: 1,600 watts, 1,875 watts | Capacity: 6.76 ounces
Stylist Shannon Adducci loves this Rowenta steamer, which she describes as versatile and powerful. “On long shoots, you really appreciate its thumb-saving ergonomic design,” she says. “Unlike overhead triggers on flimsier models, the trigger on the X-Cel is positioned under the steam head for you to pull with your index and middle fingers.”
Size: Travel | Power: 1,000 watts | Capacity: 3 ounces
Steamery bills the Cirrus No. 3 appliances as a combination steamer and iron, which is a bit of a misnomer — it has a front plate safe to press directly onto textiles that heats up to about the lowest level on a traditional iron, so it can’t flatten deep-set wrinkles or smooth textiles that need higher heat like linen or cotton. Strategist writer Dominique Pariso, who uses the Cirrus No.3 a few times a week, says it’s great for instances where “I realize the shirt I want to wear is wrinkled five minutes before I’m supposed to leave my apartment,” she says. (And five minutes before leaving the house is, to be honest, also when I do most of my steaming and ironing.) Its sleek design is also a plus: Strategist contributor Chris Black recommends it as a wedding-registry item, and it’s a favorite of Bread Beauty Supply founder Maeva Heim, who named it the best gift she bought herself in 2020.
Size: Handheld with tank | Power: 1,600 watts | Capacity: 37.2 ounces
Richardson swears by his Laurastar steam iron, which he’s used for several years — it combines the functions of an iron and a garment steamer into one appliance, eliminating the need to buy one of each. He especially likes the hot, dry steam it produces: “Their steam dries on contact. I can iron a shirt in 60 seconds with their iron because you only go over the area once and it’s completely dry, so you can just keep moving.” And though it’s expensive, he says it’s well worth it if you regularly spend money on dry cleaning and is made to last. “It’s like buying a KitchenAid mixer — you only ever buy one.”
• Shannon Adducci, stylist
• Chris Black, Strategist contributor
• Tan France, Queer Eye host
• Alison Freer, costume designer and author of How to Get Dressed
• Maeva Heim, founder of Bread Beauty Supply
• Julie Kandalec, nail artist
• Simone Kitchens, Strategist senior editor
• Tracy Ma, graphic designer
• Marilee Nelson, co-founder of Branch Basics
• Ambar Pardilla, Strategist writer
• Zach Pozniak, vice-president of operations at Jeeves New York
• Patric Richardson, host of The Laundry Guy
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