

Try Before you buy


Durable Leathers




By Horse Owners


Unique Gullet System
Try Before you buy
Durable Leathers
By Horse Owners
Gullet System

You pull your white saddle pad from the washing machine and hold it up to the light. Still grey. Still patchy. Still looking like it spent six months living in a field — which, fair enough, it basically has.
If this is familiar, you're not alone. White horse pads are one of the most loved and most cursed items in any tack room. They look beautiful on a clean, clipped horse. They also seem to absorb every shade of sweat, mud, and stable stain known to equine kind.
The good news? Keeping them genuinely white is doable. It just takes the right routine — not hours of scrubbing.
It's not just mud. Sweat is the bigger culprit. Horse sweat contains salts and proteins that bind to fabric fibres, and once they're set in, a standard 40-degree wash won't shift them.
Saddle leather dye transfer is another one. Over time, the oils and dyes from your saddle leach into the pad, especially around the panels. It builds up gradually, so you don't notice until the pad looks more stone-coloured than snow-coloured.
Finally, many riders simply wash too cool, too infrequently, or with a detergent that isn't designed for equestrian fabrics. The result is a pad that feels clean but looks dingy.
A quick pre-treatment makes a real difference. Do this after every ride:
It sounds like a lot, but it genuinely takes two minutes and keeps the pad in much better shape over time.
Once you have the pre-treatment down, here is the routine that keeps a white saddle pad looking its best:
The dryer is convenient. It is also one of the fastest ways to yellow a white pad.
High heat breaks down the brightening agents in the fabric and can set any stains that weren't fully removed in the wash. If you must use a tumble dryer, use a low heat setting and remove the pad while it is still slightly damp.
Ideally, dry flat or over a clean fence rail in natural daylight. Sunlight is a natural whitener, and it works. A couple of hours outside on a bright day does more for a dingy white pad than most commercial products.
Avoid drying directly on a radiator. The uneven heat creates patchy drying and can distort the shape of shaped or contoured pads.
You don't need a cupboard full of specialist products. These are the ones that earn their place:
That's genuinely all you need. The routine matters more than the products.
Clean pads stored badly go yellow faster than you'd expect. A few simple habits help:
A well-cared-for quality white saddle pad should stay looking presentable for a long time. But there comes a point where no amount of washing will bring it back — and a sad, grey, compacted pad is not doing your horse's back any favours either.
Here are signs it's time to replace rather than rescue:
Replacing a worn pad isn't an indulgence. A pad that sits unevenly or has lost its cushioning can affect how your saddle sits and put pressure on your horse's back.
If you've been thinking about your overall tack setup, it's also worth taking a look at our full guide to saddle pads for horses and ponies — it covers everything from sizing and shape to materials and fit.
Keeping a white numnah genuinely white comes down to three things: act fast after every ride, wash correctly, and dry in daylight when you can. Nothing complicated.
The kindest thing you can do for your horse is make sure the pad sitting against their back is clean, well-maintained, and still doing its job properly. A grey pad that's seen better days is easy to overlook — but your horse will notice.
Take a look at our saddle pads to find the right fit for your horse. While you're there, you're welcome to browse the full saddle range too.
Not sure where to start? Find a saddle fitter near you, or if you're considering a new saddle, our 14-day free trial means you can take the pressure out of choosing entirely.