Using Tea Bags – Recycling Tips for Home and Garden use.

Using Tea Bags – Recycling Tips for Home and Garden use.

Here is my list of 15 ingenious ways for using tea bags in the home and garden. 

There are so many different ways to reuse a teabag (other than obviously making another cup of tea).

Tea bags are not just for tea! You may not be English and have a cup of tea at various times throughout the day but many people do drink tea quite often.

My daughter Jess spent a semester studying in the UK and she drinks tea all the time now.  But don’t throw those used tea bags away!

Recycling saves money and also saves the environment!

15 ingenious uses for using tea bags in the home and garden - thegardeningcook.com/tea-bags

Gardening tip of the week.  Recycle used tea bags.

Grab a cup of tea (and don’t forget to use my Music Sheet Tea Coasters) and check out these ideas!

Tips for Using Tea bags in the Garden

Here are some favorite gardening recycling tips for tea bags that you can incorporate into your tea drinking ritual.

Cleaning Plants

Wet, used tea bags are great for cleaning the leaves of household plants. Since the plants absorb the tea through the leaves, they get a real treat as well.use tea bags to clean plant leaves

Enriching garden soil

Tea bags do wonders for the garden. They enrich the soil by increasing nitrogen levels, and also give earthworms (fertilizers) something yummy to eat.  Just be sure to remove the tags first. They take a long time to break down and might be plastic coated.

Adding to a compost pile

Add tea bags to a compost pile.  This reduces garbage in general and adds nutrients to a compost pile.  Remove the tags if they have staples in them.add tea bags to a compost pile

Making weed tea

If you don’t have a compost pile,  just steep a tea bag in water with some garden weeds until the water slightly changes color, and then use the liquid to water your plants. See other DIY garden fertilizer ideas here.

Trench Composting

You could even just bury the tea bag outside directly in the garden to add nutrients to the soil.  Don’t worry-the tea bag will decompose.

Note:  Just be sure to remove the staple and tag it if has one.  We don’t want that in the compost or soil next year!

Using tea bags in the home

Don’t have a garden?  There are still lots of great uses for used tea bags:

Eye compress

Soothe your tired eyes with a tea bag compress.  Soak them in cold water first.  The tea will rejuvenate your face, removing the redness and puffiness after a while.use tea bags to soothe eyes

Meat Flavoring

Flavor tough meat!   use tea bags (or even leftover tea) to marinade your meat. The sweetness of the drink will add a savory taste to your dish and tenderize it too.

Healing canker sores

Help with a canker sore.  The tea’s healing properties will soothe the pain and make the sore go away faster. This method also helps when you have a pulled tooth by limiting the bleeding.

What other uses have you found for your tea bags?
Dozens of uses for tea bags in the home and garden

For more gardening tips, please visit my Facebook page.

More Tips for using teabags from readers of the blog:  (thanks for your submissions!)

Sunburn relief

Patti says:  Strong tea is wonderful for sunburn. I burn very easily and have used tea all of my life.

and Socialgal52 says:  Lay wet tea bags on a sunburn to draw out the burn.

use tea bags on sunburn
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.

Stop bleeding

Edna Dabbs says:  When you have cut use a wet tea bag to stop the bleeding.

For roses and Vegetables

Martha says:  I keep an empty ice cream bucket in my freezer and empty the used coffee grounds every morning. Once it is full, I put it outside to thaw and then fill with water and pour the grounds over my roses and vegetables. Been doing this for 35 yrs. No mold. Tea bags will do the same.

Healing Nipples from breastfeeding

Jacki Tigg Mathis says:  When I was just beginning to breast feed my babies, I was very sore and the skin was broken on the nipples, I used warm tea bags and placed them over them for a while, I healed up in no time at all.

Faux Suntan

Lynda says:  Rubbing a wet teabag over legs and arm will give you an instant light suntan (you might need more than one) or pouring strong tea into your bath water will do the same.

Foot odor

Dawn says:  If you have a stinky foot odor problem ,soaking your feet in tea water helps ,Thank You Dr. Oz !

Elizabeth also says: After using a tea bag, I let it dry, and I put the tea bag inside my shoes in the closet and it keeps free from odor and also keep the leather free from molds.

dirty feet

Relief from Poison Ivy

David W. says that due to a compromised immune system, he is susceptible to rashes of the ‘poison’ variety when he inadvertantly scratches an area on the surface. He has found that a teabag offers some relief.

Thanks to my readers for the great tips for using tea bags in the home and garden! If you have a tip be sure to add it in the comments below so that I can include it (with a shout out to you) in the post.

Would you like a reminder of this post for using tea bags around the home? Just pin this image to one of your household tips boards on Pinterest so that you can easily find it later.Tips for using tea bags in the home and garden-----------------


57 responses to “Using Tea Bags – Recycling Tips for Home and Garden use.”

  1. Strong tea is wonderful for sunburn. I burn very easily and have used tea all of my life.

    • I remember my dear old mum-in-law bathing my sunburn in tea when I was 16 (before I was married to her son) 🙂 At the time I thought she was mad!! That was back in 1957!!

  2. If you don’t have a compost pile, and you don’t garden, but have rose bushes, hydrangea, and azaleas, and want to save tea bags and coffee grounds how long can these be saved to use on the plants? Freeze them? Refrigerate them? How long till they begin to grow mold?

    • I keep an empty ice cream bucket in my freezer and empty the used coffee grounds every morning. Once it is full, I put it outside to thaw and then fill with water and pour the grounds over my roses and vegetables. Been doing this for 35 yrs. No mold. Tea bags will do the same.

      • Vinegar works for sunburn also. So does canned evaporated milk, it will have a sour smell if sunburn is real red, but it does help the burning sensation.

          • I can attest to that personally. The last time I had a terrible sunburn was in 1972. I had been to Daytona Beach and spent the night with a friends ex in-laws. They had nothing but soured evaporated milk and vingar. I lay in the bathtub took one cotton ball after another and dabbed sour milk, then vinegar water.

  3. When I was just beginning to breast feed my babies, I was very sore and the skin was broken on the nipples, I used warm tea bags and placed them over them for a while, I healed up in no time at all.

  4. Rubbing a wet teabag over legs and arm will give you an instant light suntan (you might need more than one) or pouring strong tea into your bath water will do the same.

  5. Also If you have a stinky foot odor problem ,soaking your feet in tea water helps ,Thank You Dr. Oz !

  6. I never knew there were so many uses for tea bags! I’ll be bookmarking this post! So many wonderful ideas! I will start off trying it as a meat marinade. Thanks a ton!

  7. Our cat recently had her eyes matted up and watering, I looked it up and it said to use a tea bag to wipe her eyes twice a day. Tannic acid heals the eye ducts. Worked first wipe!

  8. When you visit a dentist and if there is any bleeding, wet a “Lipton tea bag” and put it directly on the spot where it is bleeding and leave it there for a couple of minutes or till it stops bleeding.

  9. Take the tea bag and let it dry in sun, then you take tea bag and put in container, take paraffin and trough over and use to lit a fire.
    I use this to lit my fireplace and it work wonderfully.

  10. Didn’t know you can still make use of these tea bags! This is awesome. Instead of just throwing them out, utilise them for the purposes mentioned.

  11. hot tea bags are great when you have a “sty” on your eyelid. use as a warm compress
    through out the day for relief

  12. First of all I thought how it is related to recycling after reading this entire article I got an idea to recycle.

  13. I love your tea bag post. There are some great ideas. I was disappointed to recently learn about the plastic mesh being used in so many tea bags (see link). I’ve stopped putting them in my compost. I’d like to know which companies are not using plastic. Does anyone know?
    Thank you!

  14. A tea bag may soothe a burn, but it cannot “draw out a burn” which is damage to the skin.

    These are very helpful tips, and I’m noting this page, but that remark is blatantly medically impossible.

    • Hi Pat. I’m sure the reader who submitted the tip had soothing in mind when she took her time to submit her tip. I’d rather not edit someone else’s comments, so I will leave the wording as it is. Carol

    • Hi Leeanne. I’ve never done this so I can’t say for sure. It might be too strong. Perhaps water it down a bit with new fresh water about 1/2 after you soak? Carol

    • HI Julia. I have never seen this happen in mine. The main things to worry about with any type of composting or soil adding materials is to avoid meat and oils. They do definitely attract pests. Carol

    • I decided to try this last week. Something is digging the bags up every day. I’m not sure what kind of critter is doing it, but yes, some sort of animal is very interested in the green tea bags. I suspect chipmunks

      • Hi Chris. That is really interesting. You could try cutting open the tea bags and just using the tea to see if they keep digging for it. Might be the flavor of tea? Carol

  15. I have been using black tea seeped in a quart of water and 1 T epsom salts in a gallon of water to fertilize pansies and rhubarb. It’s amazing! I used to drink flavored teas and I was going to start using them (like constant comment, etc) up. Is there any reason not to use these as well as the plain black?

    • Hi Heidi, I can’t see any reason why they would not work in a similar way. Just try it lightly at first to be sure. Carol

  16. I have discovered a tin of tea bags. They would be many years old! I’m not a tea drinker and wouldn’t think of doing anything but throwing them out had I not discovered your site. Could these tea leaves still be used to benefit my garden?… and if so, could the tea be used without actually making the tea? I wondered if I could simply drop a tea bag into my watering cans?

    • Hi Linda. To be honest, I have not tried them in cold water. The warm water releases the tea flavor. But the purpose of this is to have them break down in the soil to add nutrients, so I can’t see a reason why just tossing them into the cold water in the watering can would not work. Carol

  17. Thanks so much for a useful article. I love the comment from the reader that saves coffee grounds in the freezer for her roses! I will be trying this and some of the others. Thank you to those that posted clever ideas… Tea Time!!☕🌿🌹😃

    • Ladies , cut banana peels into
      a covered container,let
      deteriorate and bury around flowers,especially roses you will be the talk an envy of your neighborhood. ENJOY !!

  18. Due to a compromised immune system, I am susceptible to rashes of the ‘poison’ variety when I inadvertantly scratch an area on the surface. I have found that a teabag offers some relief.

  19. After using a tea bag, I let it dry, and I put the tea bag inside my shoes in the closet and it keeps free from odor and also keep the leather free from molds.

Leave a Reply to David Williams Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.