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Tips, stories, and news from NYC's favorite laundry service.
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You live in a pre-war walk-up. The nearest laundromat is four blocks away. Your hamper weighs 30 pounds. We did the math so you don't have to.
Here's a scene every New Yorker knows: it's Sunday morning, you're staring at a mountain of laundry, and the closest washing machine is a 30-pound carry down five flights of stairs and four blocks east on Second Avenue. In the rain.
New York City has roughly 170,000 walk-up apartments — buildings with no elevator, no in-unit laundry, and stairs that were apparently designed in 1923 for people who didn't own more than two outfits. If you live in one, you already know the drill: stuff everything into a duffel bag, pray the shoulder strap holds, and waddle down the stairwell like a pack mule with a MetroCard.
The real cost of the laundromat run:
It's not just the $2.75 per washer load and $0.25 per dryer cycle. It's the 2-3 hours you lose every weekend — loading machines, waiting for cycles, folding on a table that 40 other people also folded on today. Multiply that across a year and you're spending over 120 hours — five full days of your life — doing laundry.
That's five days you could've spent at Central Park, or eating your way through Smorgasburg, or literally doing anything else in the greatest city on earth.
How pickup laundry service works in a walk-up:
You leave a bag outside your door (or with your doorman, super, or neighbor — we've seen it all). We pick it up, wash, dry, fold, and deliver it back within 24 hours. You never touch a washing machine. You never carry a 30-pound bag down a staircase that has no business being that narrow.
Our wash & fold service starts at $1.48 per pound with a membership — less than you'd spend feeding quarters into a machine on Avenue A. We pick up and deliver for free across Manhattan, Roosevelt Island, and Long Island City.
The bottom line: if you live above the third floor and don't have in-unit laundry, a pickup service isn't a luxury. It's basic infrastructure. Like a bodega on every corner or an express train that's somehow always local. It's just how the city works.
Laundromats seem cheap until you add up the quarters, the detergent, the subway fare, and the 3 hours you'll never get back. Here's the honest math.
Everyone assumes doing your own laundry is the budget move. And in most American cities, it is. But this is Manhattan, where your time costs money, your apartment has 350 square feet, and the nearest laundromat has a line at 8 AM on Saturday.
Let's break it down for a typical single New Yorker doing one load per week:
The DIY laundromat cost:
• Washer: $3.00–$4.50 per load (more for large capacity)
• Dryer: $2.00–$3.00 per load (45–60 min cycles)
• Detergent & supplies: ~$0.75 per load
• Round-trip time: 2–3 hours including wait, fold, carry
• Weekly total: $6–$8 in cash + 2.5 hours of your time
At even a modest $25/hour value on your time, that laundromat run costs you $68–$70 per week in real terms. That's $280/month when you factor in your time — and that's before the cost of schlepping a bag through Midtown in July.
The pickup service cost:
Our VIP membership at The Bubble Room covers 50 lbs per month of wash & fold with free pickup and delivery for $85/month. That's enough for a full week's worth of clothes, towels, and sheets for most individuals. Additional weight is just $1.48/lb.
No quarters. No waiting. No folding. No hauling a wet bag up six flights because the dryer ate your last $1.75 in quarters and you gave up.
What about in-unit laundry?
In Manhattan, apartments with in-unit washer/dryers rent for an average of $300–$500 more per month than comparable units without. That's the real premium New Yorkers pay for laundry convenience. An $85/month pickup membership is a fraction of that.
The verdict: in a city where a bagel costs $4 and a one-bedroom averages $3,800/month, paying someone to wash your clothes isn't an indulgence — it's the most rational line item in your budget. New Yorkers optimize everything: their commute, their coffee order, their bodega loyalty. Your laundry should be no different.
We pick up and deliver across Manhattan, Roosevelt Island, and Long Island City. Here's your neighborhood-by-neighborhood guide (plus where to grab coffee while you wait).
The Bubble Room operates out of 343 E 66th Street on the Upper East Side, but our free pickup and delivery zone covers a lot more ground than our block. Here's everywhere we go — and since you'll have a free morning now that you're not doing laundry, here's where to spend it.
Upper East Side (Home Base)
Our neighborhood. From East 59th to East 96th, First Avenue to Fifth — we know every doorman building, walk-up, and co-op on this grid. Drop-offs welcome at our store anytime during business hours.
Coffee pick: Café Jax on 78th & First. No-frills, fast, perfect drip coffee. The UES doesn't need to try hard.
Upper West Side
Cross-park delivery, every day. From Columbus Circle to Morningside Heights, we cover the full UWS. Lots of families over here — our Executive plan (100 lbs/month) is popular with the brownstone crowd on West End Avenue.
Coffee pick: Hungarian Pastry Shop near 111th & Amsterdam. Order a coffee, grab a table, pretend you're writing a novel. Classic UWS.
Midtown East & Murray Hill
The studio apartment capital of Manhattan. If your building has a laundry room in the basement that requires a special card that's always broken — we're your backup plan. Heavy pickup volume around Lexington and Third in the 30s and 40s.
Coffee pick: Joe Coffee on East 40th near Grand Central. Grab one before you catch the 4/5/6 — or after, now that your Saturday morning is free.
Roosevelt Island
Yes, we deliver to Roosevelt Island. The tram is iconic but carrying a laundry bag on it is not. We pick up from apartment lobbies across the island — Main Street, Southpoint, Octagon — all of it.
Coffee pick: Bread & Butter on Main Street. It's basically the island's living room.
Long Island City, Queens
LIC has exploded with new high-rises, and a lot of them still don't have in-unit laundry despite charging $3,500/month for a one-bedroom. We pick up from the Court Square area down through Hunters Point. Jackson Avenue, Vernon Boulevard, Center Boulevard — we're there.
Coffee pick: Sweetleaf on Jackson Avenue. One of the best espressos in all five boroughs, and that's not an exaggeration.
Gramercy, Flatiron & Chelsea
South of Midtown, north of the Village. The pre-war buildings around Gramercy Park and Irving Place are beautiful — and almost none of them have laundry. We pick up from 14th to 30th, river to river.
Coffee pick: Everyman Espresso on East 13th. Tiny, serious, perfect.
East Village & Lower East Side
Walk-up central. These neighborhoods were built when "laundry" meant a washboard and a prayer. Fifth-floor apartments, narrow staircases, zero storage — this is where our pickup service makes the most difference. We cover everything from Houston down to Delancey, Bowery to Avenue D.
Coffee pick: Abraço on East 7th. Cash only, no laptops, incredible olive oil cake. This is New York.
Can't find your neighborhood? Contact us — we're expanding delivery zones regularly and can usually work something out. We're a New York laundry service built for the way New Yorkers actually live: in small apartments, on high floors, with better things to do on a Saturday.
From overloading the machine to ignoring care labels — here are the most common laundry mistakes we see (and how to fix them).
Living in NYC means small apartments, shared laundry rooms, and the eternal temptation to cram everything into one load. We get it. But after processing thousands of bags every month, we've seen patterns.
1. Overstuffing the bag. More isn't better. Clothes need room to move for a proper clean. We recommend 10-15 lbs per bag for the best results.
2. Ignoring care labels. That cashmere sweater? It doesn't belong in a hot cycle. We sort every bag by fabric type — it's why your clothes last longer with us.
3. Waiting too long. Stains set. Odors build. The sooner you get clothes washed, the better the results.
4. Using too much detergent. More soap doesn't mean cleaner clothes. Excess detergent leaves residue that attracts dirt.
5. Skipping the fold. We get it — folding is the worst part. That's literally why we exist.
Give the gift of clean clothes and free weekends. Our Valentine's Day membership plans start at just $85/month.
This Valentine's Day, skip the flowers that die in a week. Give your partner something they'll actually use — a Bubble Room membership.
Our VIP plan at $85/month covers 50 lbs of wash & fold with free pickup and delivery. That's every towel, sheet, and outfit handled for less than $3 a day.
For families, the Executive plan at $155/month covers 100 lbs — more than enough for a household of four.
We've been at 343 E 66th Street for years. Here's why we love this neighborhood — and how we serve it.
The Upper East Side is more than just our home — it's where we built our business, one bag at a time. From the families on York Avenue to the professionals on Park, we know this neighborhood.
Our free delivery zone covers all of Manhattan, Roosevelt Island, and Long Island City. But the UES will always be home base. If you're nearby, drop off anytime — no appointment needed.
Store hours: Mon–Fri 8AM–6PM, Sat 9AM–5PM
Address: 343 E 66th Street, New York, NY 10065
Join thousands of New Yorkers who got their weekends back.
This AI assistant provides general information about The Bubble Room's services. Responses are AI-generated and may contain errors. Verify all information with staff at (917) 653-3546. See our full Terms and Privacy Policy.
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