Parent Questions

Are Dishwasher Pods Safe Around Babies? What Parents Need to Know

Laundry and dishwasher pods send thousands of children to the ER every year. The fix takes five minutes.

2 min read

Dishwasher pods are one of the most dangerous household products sitting in plain sight in the kitchen, and most parents don’t realize it until it’s almost too late. The concentrated detergent inside those colorful, squishy packets can cause serious chemical burns on contact, and the packaging is practically designed to attract a curious toddler.

How Dangerous Are Dishwasher Pods?

The numbers are stark. According to the American Association of Poison Control Centers’ National Poison Data System, laundry and dishwasher pods generate more than 10,000 exposure calls annually, and children under five account for the overwhelming majority.

This isn’t a "might cause mild irritation" situation. The alkaline detergent inside pods is highly concentrated. Direct contact with eyes or mouth can cause chemical burns within seconds. Ingestion can lead to vomiting, difficulty breathing, and in serious cases, require emergency care. The AAPCC has flagged pod exposures as a distinct category of concern precisely because the harm happens so fast.

Brightly colored dishwasher pods in an unlocked under-sink cabinet at floor level
Dishwasher pods stored in a locked cabinet above counter height out of a child’s reach

Why Pods Are Riskier Than Powder or Liquid

Traditional dishwasher detergent is unpleasant. Pods are appealing. They’re soft, brightly colored, and just the right size for a small fist to grab. When squeezed, which babies and toddlers do immediately, the membrane ruptures and releases detergent directly onto skin, into eyes or mouth.

Powder and liquid detergents aren’t safe either, but they don’t rupture on contact. That single mechanical difference is why pods generate a disproportionate share of poison control calls. According to the AAPCC, pods account for the majority of detergent-related exposure incidents in children.

The Dishwasher Door Is Not Safe Storage

Here’s where a lot of parents get tripped up. Loading the dishwasher and leaving a pod on the door, or storing the container in the cabinet below the machine feels convenient and low-risk. It isn’t.

In my experience, children can access under-sink cabinets far faster than parents expect. Dishwasher pods stored at floor level, in an unlocked cabinet, or balanced on an open appliance door are within reach sooner than most parents realize.

The only safe storage is a locked cabinet, ideally up high. A cabinet latch alone isn’t enough for an older toddler, use a combination of height and a lock.

  1. Under-sink cabinet at floor level
  2. Pod resting on open dishwasher door
  3. Bulk container on low pantry shelf

What to Do If Your Child Touches or Ingests a Pod

Act immediately. Don’t wait for symptoms.

  • Skin or eye contact: Rinse immediately with lukewarm water for 15–20 minutes. Remove any clothing that contacted the detergent.
  • Ingestion or suspected ingestion: Call Poison Control at 1–800–222–1222 right away. Do not induce vomiting. Have the packaging ready.
  • Breathing trouble or unresponsive: Call 911 immediately. Do not wait to call Poison Control first.

Keep the pod packaging nearby when you call, the ingredients list helps Poison Control assess the situation faster.

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Safer Habits in the Kitchen

A few practical changes make a real difference:

  • Store pods in a locked cabinet above counter height, not under the sink
  • Load the pod directly into the dishwasher and start the cycle, don’t leave it sitting in the door
  • If you buy in bulk, keep the main supply locked away and only transfer a small amount to an accessible container, which should also be locked
  • Consider switching to a child-resistant pod container if your current packaging isn’t

Safety Checklist

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The Bottom Line

Dishwasher pods are a genuine hazard, not a theoretical one. The AAPCC data makes that clear. But the risk is manageable with the right storage habits. It requires treating these products with the same seriousness you’d give any chemical in your home. Bright packaging and a familiar kitchen setting make it easy to underestimate them. Don’t.