The washing is done, but where on earth do you put it? If you've stared at a damp pile of clothes while grey rain streaks the window, you're not alone. British autumn and winter make outdoor drying almost impossible. The air turns cold and heavy, the garden line stays empty for weeks, and every radiator ends up draped in soggy towels.

So we improvise. Clothes go over doors, banisters, airers wedged into corners. Yet everything dries slowly, the windows fog up, and that musty smell creeps in. Sound familiar?
There's a smarter way to handle it, and it won't send your energy bill soaring.
Why the Tumble Dryer Isn't the Answer

The obvious fix is the tumble dryer. Quick, warm, done. But there's a catch, and it's a pricey one.
Tumble dryers are among the most expensive appliances to run in any home. They gulp electricity, and with energy costs still stubbornly high, a few loads a week can quietly add up over a season.
How a Dehumidifier Speeds Up Drying

Here's the clever bit. A dehumidifier quietly pulls moisture out of the air in the room. As your washing dries, it releases water vapour, and damp air slows everything down. The dehumidifier draws that moisture in and collects it in a tank, keeping the air dry and thirsty.
The result? Your clothes dry dramatically faster, often overnight. No fogged windows, no damp smell, and a real chance of keeping condensation and mould at bay too.
Best of all, dehumidifiers use a fraction of the energy a tumble dryer does. Set one up in a spare room or by your airer, close the door, and let it work. It's an environmentally smart swap that's kinder to your wallet and your home.
Many modern dehumidifiers also come with a dedicated laundry mode — and it's a feature worth knowing about. When you switch it on, the unit runs at a higher fan speed to push more air across your wet clothes, while working harder to pull moisture out of the room as quickly as possible. Some models will even keep running until the humidity in the room drops to the ideal level, then dial back automatically. It's a simple setting, but it can shave hours off your drying time compared to leaving the dehumidifier running on its standard setting. If you do a lot of indoor drying through autumn and winter, it's genuinely one of the most useful buttons on the whole machine.
A Solid Option to Consider

If you fancy trying one, it's worth buying from a trusted retailer. Devola specialises in dehumidifiers for the home and stocks a wide, well-reviewed range.
The Devola models are a lovely place to start. The Devola 12L suits smaller homes and flats beautifully, while the Devola 20L handles bigger family loads with ease. Both are designed for everyday home use, so you can match the size to your space and washing habits.
If you want to go a step further, it's worth looking at carbon filter dehumidifiers. The Devola 20L Carbon Filter Dehumidifier & Air Cleaner (DVH20LCF) does everything a standard dehumidifier does, but its built-in carbon filter also tackles odours, gases, and VOCs — particularly useful in homes with pets, or rooms that can get a little musty through winter. And if air quality is a real priority for your family, the Devola 20L Platinum Hybrid (DVHA20L) takes things further still, combining powerful moisture extraction with medical-grade HEPA filtration, a UV lamp, and an ioniser — so it works as both a dehumidifier and a full air purifier in one. A genuinely smart choice for any household that wants cleaner, fresher air all year.
Ready for a Drier, Cosier Winter?
You don't have to battle damp laundry all season. A dehumidifier dries your clothes quickly, cuts your running costs, and keeps your home fresher, all without the tumble dryer's hefty bill.
