I started placing my dryer sheets in the lint trap compartment instead of the drum for 14 days this June. This is what happened

Placing dryer sheets in the lint trap instead of the drum turned out to be less of a gimmick and more of a nuanced trade-off. Static cling dropped dramatically, especially on synthetics and athletic wear, making laundry easier to fold and wear right away. The scent became softer and more even—clean and present, without that overpowering perfume blast when the dryer door swings open. For anyone sensitive to strong fragrances, this alone could be reason enough to switch.

Yet the method wasn’t perfect. Light garments didn’t feel as luxuriously soft as when the sheet tumbled with them, and each used sheet looked oddly “underworked,” raising doubts about waste and efficiency. Safety-wise, experts urged caution: blocking airflow, even slightly, can be dangerous over time. My final compromise was simple—use the lint-trap trick only for static-prone loads, and return to the traditional method whenever plush softness truly matters.