

Diapering
Updated on 29 May 2026
Medically Reviewed by
Dr Rajan Gupta
Dr. Rajan Gupta has over 2 decades of experience in treating children. he provides excellent patient care and has extensive knowledge - MBBS| MD (Pediatric)
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Quick Answer: In India, the real difference between cloth and disposable diapers is cost and convenience, not diaper rash. Disposable diaper pants retail at roughly ₹10 to ₹20 per piece, and at the 6 to 10 daily changes a baby needs, that adds up to somewhere around ₹70,000 to ₹1,30,000 per child across the roughly 2.5-year diapering window. A reusable cloth stash of 20 to 25 diapers plus accessories costs ₹13,000 to ₹30,000 once, and can be reused for later children. On rash, the largest recent study, a 2024 questionnaire-based study of 1,389 infants in the Jornal de Pediatria, found no statistically significant difference in diaper dermatitis between cloth and disposable users (Uber et al., Jornal de Pediatria, 2025). A Cochrane systematic review reached the same broad conclusion: there is not enough good-quality trial evidence to favour either type (Cochrane Review CD004262). What actually decides whether a baby gets a rash is changing frequency, barrier cream and detergent choices, not the diaper itself.
Cost, disposables: Roughly ₹2,000 to ₹6,000 a month, totalling around ₹70,000 to ₹1,30,000 per child over the full diapering window.
Cost, cloth: A one-time stash of 20 to 25 diapers plus accessories at ₹13,000 to ₹30,000, reusable across siblings. Mylo states cloth can save up to ₹20,000 a year versus disposables.
Rash, the evidence: No statistically significant difference between cloth and disposable users in a 2024 study of 1,389 infants, 47.0% versus 47.5% for mild rash, 13.0% versus 10.7% for severe (Uber et al., 2025).
Cochrane verdict: Not enough good-quality randomised-trial evidence to support or refute either type for preventing rash (Cochrane).
What actually drives rash: Trapped wetness, friction, contact with urine and stool, and detergent residue, not the diaper category.
The honest takeaway: Choose on cost, time, and lifestyle fit. On rash prevention, how you use the diaper matters far more than which type it is.
Pediatric guidance is to change a diaper every 2 to 3 hours and immediately after a stool, which works out to roughly 6 to 10 changes a day, heaviest in the newborn months and tapering as the baby grows (American Academy of Pediatrics, HealthyChildren.org, accessed May 2026). That changing frequency is the engine of the cost difference.
The table below lays out the two options on the same assumptions: ₹10 to ₹20 per disposable pant, and a cloth stash of 20 to 25 diapers at ₹500 to ₹1,000 each plus ₹3,000 to ₹5,000 of accessories.
|
Disposable diaper pants |
Reusable cloth diapers |
|
|
Unit cost |
₹10 to ₹20 per pant |
₹500 to ₹1,000 per diaper |
|
What you buy |
A fresh pack every few weeks, for 2.5 years |
A one-time stash of 20 to 25 diapers plus accessories |
|
Spending pattern |
Ongoing: roughly ₹2,000 to ₹6,000 per month |
Upfront: ₹13,000 to ₹30,000 once, then close to zero |
|
Cost across the full diapering window |
Roughly ₹70,000 to ₹1,30,000 per child |
The same ₹13,000 to ₹30,000 stash, plus laundry running costs |
|
Reusable for the next child |
No |
Yes, the same stash |
The disposable figure is worth unpacking, because it is easy to under-count. At 6 to 10 changes a day and ₹10 to ₹20 per pant, the daily spend is ₹60 to ₹200, or about ₹2,000 to ₹6,000 a month. Multiplied across the roughly 30 months a child is in diapers, and allowing for usage that is heaviest early and lighter later, the total lands somewhere around ₹70,000 to ₹1,30,000 per child. The cloth stash, by contrast, is a single ₹13,000 to ₹30,000 outlay that carries through the whole window. Mylo states that switching to cloth can save up to ₹20,000 a year compared with disposables (Mylo, Reusable Cloth Diapers, accessed May 2026). The saving grows further if the same stash is reused for a second child.
Cloth is not free after the initial purchase, and an honest comparison has to count what comes after.
The running costs are water, electricity and time. A full-time cloth setup means roughly three wash cycles a week, each with its own water and power cost, which is a real consideration in Indian cities with metered water or limited supply. Drying is the other constraint: each diaper needs several hours to dry fully, and in humid coastal regions or during the monsoon that can stretch longer, which is exactly why a working stash is sized at 20 to 25 diapers rather than a handful. For disposables, the hidden cost is environmental rather than financial. Disposable diapers add steadily to landfill volume and take a long time to break down, and that is the genuine trade-off against the laundry time they save.
Neither hidden cost is a dealbreaker. They just mean the choice is about your household setup, washing infrastructure, drying space, and how you value your time, not only the sticker price.
This is the question most parents actually worry about, and the popular belief, that cloth causes more rash, is not supported by the best recent evidence.
The largest recent comparison is a 2024 study published in the Jornal de Pediatria, which used questionnaires to compare diaper dermatitis in 1,389 infants, 1,269 using disposables and 120 using cloth (Uber et al., 2025). The results were close enough to be statistically indistinguishable.
|
Diaper rash frequency (a few times a year) |
Disposable group (n=1,269) |
Cloth group (n=120) |
p-value |
|
Mild diaper rash |
47.0% |
47.5% |
0.47 |
|
Severe diaper rash |
13.0% |
10.7% |
0.66 |
Source: Uber et al., Jornal de Pediatria, 2025. A p-value above 0.05 means the difference is not statistically significant.
The study's own conclusion was that using cloth diapers did not increase the frequency of diaper dermatitis compared with disposables. Two honest caveats: it was a questionnaire-based study, so rash frequency was reported by parents rather than examined by doctors, and it was conducted in Brazil, not India. A Cochrane systematic review of the randomised trials reached a compatible conclusion, that there is not enough good-quality evidence to support or refute either type for preventing diaper rash, though it noted a weak signal in favour of modern absorbent disposables (Cochrane Review CD004262). The evidence is not perfectly unanimous, some case reports have linked poorly rinsed cloth diapers to dermatitis, but the overall picture is clear enough: diaper type is not the main driver.
If the diaper category is not the deciding factor, what is? Diaper rash, clinically called irritant diaper dermatitis, is driven by a trio of factors: skin wetness, friction, and prolonged contact with urine and stool. When urine and stool sit against the skin, they raise its pH and break down its protective barrier, and that is what triggers the rash, regardless of whether the diaper is cloth or disposable (American Academy of Pediatrics, HealthyChildren.org, accessed May 2026).
There is one factor that is specific to cloth, and it is worth knowing. Detergent residue left in a cloth diaper that has not been rinsed thoroughly can itself irritate the skin and trigger dermatitis (Contemporary Pediatrics, 2026). This is a solvable problem: rinse cloth diapers two to three times, skip fabric softeners, and use a gentle detergent. It is not a reason to avoid cloth, just a reason to wash it properly.
The practical implication is the same whichever type you use. Change the diaper every 2 to 3 hours and promptly after stools, apply a thick zinc-oxide barrier cream at each change, and avoid wipes containing alcohol or fragrance. Those habits prevent far more rashes than any choice between cloth and disposable.
Both categories have moved a long way from where they started. Modern disposables use an Acquisition Distribution Layer, a layer engineered to pull fluid in and spread it evenly so it is not sitting against the skin, along with breathable top sheets that let air circulate. Mylo's Baby Diaper Pants are disposable pants made with OEKO-TEX certified materials, with an aloe vera-infused top layer, ADL technology, breathable fabric, and up to 12 hours of leak protection, in a size range running from Newborn upward (Mylo, accessed May 2026).
Indian cloth diapers have moved well beyond the traditional cotton langot. Mylo's Reusable Cloth Diapers are made from hypoallergenic, OEKO-TEX certified fabric, are size-adjustable by snap buttons for babies from 3 months to 3 years, and come with an absorbent insert pad; Mylo positions them as India's first OEKO-TEX certified cloth diapers (Mylo, accessed May 2026).
OEKO-TEX is worth a quick explanation, since both products carry it. It is an independent international textile certification: a fabric carrying it has been tested and confirmed free from a defined list of harmful substances. For anything worn against a baby's skin all day, that is a meaningful, verifiable assurance, and it is one of the few labels in the diaper category that is independently checked rather than self-declared.
Since rash incidence is not the differentiator, the decision comes down to cost, time, environmental footprint, and how your household actually runs.
Cloth tends to suit families who have washing and drying infrastructure at home, who are focused on cost across the full 2 to 3-year window, or who are planning more than one child and can reuse the stash. A practical starting stash is 20 to 25 diapers. Disposables tend to suit families who travel often, who have limited drying space, especially through the monsoon, or who simply place a high value on the time saved on laundry. Many Indian families land on a hybrid: cloth at home where washing is easy, and disposables for travel, daycare and overnight, which captures most of the savings without the inconvenience at the hardest moments.
Whichever you choose, the rash-prevention rules do not change: change every 2 to 3 hours, change promptly after stools, use a zinc-oxide barrier cream, and keep the diaper area clean and dry.
Do cloth diapers actually cause more diaper rash?
No. The largest recent study, a 2024 study of 1,389 infants in the Jornal de Pediatria, found no statistically significant difference in mild or severe diaper rash between cloth and disposable users. Mild rash occurred in 47.0% of disposable users and 47.5% of cloth users, and severe rash in 13.0% versus 10.7%, with both differences statistically insignificant (Uber et al., 2025). A Cochrane review similarly found insufficient evidence to favour either type. What matters far more than diaper category is how often the diaper is changed, whether a barrier cream is used, and, for cloth, whether detergent is rinsed out thoroughly.
How much can I actually save by switching to cloth diapers in India?
The saving is substantial, because disposables are a recurring cost while a cloth stash is bought once. Disposables run roughly ₹2,000 to ₹6,000 a month, totalling around ₹70,000 to ₹1,30,000 per child across the diapering window, whereas a full cloth stash costs ₹13,000 to ₹30,000 one time. Mylo states that cloth can save up to ₹20,000 a year compared with disposables (Mylo, accessed May 2026). The figure improves further if the stash is reused for a second child. Against that, factor in the running cost of water, electricity and laundry time, which cloth adds and disposables do not.
How many cloth diapers do I need to start?
A practical full-time stash is 20 to 25 cloth diapers. That number is set by the wash-and-dry cycle: with roughly three wash loads a week and each diaper needing several hours to dry, a stash smaller than this leaves you short on a slow-drying day. A minimal stash of 12 to 15 can work if you are willing to wash every two days, and it is a reasonable way to try cloth before committing. If you live somewhere humid or are diapering through the monsoon, lean toward the higher end, since drying takes longer.
Are disposable diapers harmful for sensitive baby skin?
Not inherently. Modern disposables made with OEKO-TEX certified materials, breathable top sheets and aloe vera-infused linings are designed for daily use on sensitive infant skin. Current evidence shows similar rash rates for cloth and disposables (Uber et al., 2025), so a disposable is not a worse choice for a baby's skin as long as it is changed frequently. The OEKO-TEX certification is a useful thing to look for, since it independently verifies the materials are free from a defined list of harmful substances. As with cloth, the single biggest factor in keeping skin healthy is changing the diaper promptly when it is wet or soiled.
What is OEKO-TEX certification, and why does it matter for diapers?
OEKO-TEX is an independent international textile certification confirming that a fabric has been tested and found free from a defined list of harmful substances. For a diaper, which sits against delicate skin for hours at a time, that provides a verifiable assurance against chemical residues, certain dyes and heavy metals, rather than relying on a brand's own word. It is one of the few diaper-category labels that is independently checked. Both Mylo's Baby Diaper Pants and its Reusable Cloth Diapers carry OEKO-TEX certification.
Cochrane Review CD004262, "Disposable nappies for preventing napkin dermatitis in infants"
Contemporary Pediatrics, "Cloth diapers: Are they the answer to less diaper rash?", 2026
American Academy of Pediatrics, HealthyChildren.org, "Diaper Rash", accessed May 2026 (URL to be added at publish)
This article is for informational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Consult a qualified paediatrician for guidance specific to your child.
Medically reviewed by Dr Rajan Gupta , MBBS, MD (Pediatric) on 27 May 2026. Last updated: 29 May 2026.
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Medically Reviewed by
Dr Rajan Gupta
Dr. Rajan Gupta has over 2 decades of experience in treating children. he provides excellent patient care and has extensive knowledge - MBBS| MD (Pediatric)
View Profile
Written by
Priyanka Verma
Priyanka is an experienced editor & content writer with great attention to detail. Mother to an 11-year-old, she's a ski
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