Q-Tips are the original. They have been in bathrooms for a century, they're cheap, and they work. So why does LastSwab exist, and how does it actually compare? Here is the honest answer.
| Feature | LastSwab | Q-Tips |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Reusable silicone swab | Single-use cotton swab |
| Tip material | Thermplastic | Cotton wound on stem |
| Stem material | PP with fiberglass | Paper (UK/EU post-2021) |
| Uses per item | Up to 1,000 | 1 |
| Case/carry | Included plant-based carry case | Cardboard box |
| Recyclable packaging | Yes | Partially (box yes, any plastic no) |
| Liquid absorption | Lower | Higher (cotton absorbs) |
| Makeup precision | Excellent (firm tip, easy control) | Good (softer tip) |
| Ear canal use | Not recommended (same as Q-Tips) | Not recommended ("do not insert" on box) |
| Waste per year (daily user) | ~0 ongoing | ~365+ swabs + packaging |
| Cost per year (daily user) | ~£0 after purchase (~£10–12 once) | ~£2–4 |
Performance: The Honest Truth
Makeup Tasks
For makeup correction — the use case cotton swabs were actually designed for — LastSwab performs very well. The silicone tip is firmer than cotton, which gives you more control when cleaning up a mascara smudge or correcting a lipstick line. It picks up product rather than absorbing it, so you see what you're removing as you work. Most people prefer it to cotton for precision makeup tasks after a short adjustment period.
Outer Ear Cleaning
For cleaning around the outer ear — the ridges and folds of the auricle — LastSwab is equivalent to a Q-Tip. The silicone tip is gentle on skin and picks up debris effectively. Neither a LastSwab nor a Q-Tip should be inserted into the ear canal; both carry the same guidance on this.
Liquid-Heavy Tasks
Q-Tips absorb more liquid than silicone. If you use a cotton swab to saturate a tip with antiseptic to clean a wound, or to pick up and apply a large amount of product, cotton holds more per tip. For most everyday precision tasks this difference is not meaningful, but it exists.
Electronics Cleaning
Silicone wins here. Cotton sheds fibres that can be problematic in sensitive electronics. A silicone tip cleans keyboard gaps, controller crevices, and device ports without leaving any fibres behind.
The Adjustment Period
Almost everyone who switches from Q-Tips to LastSwab notices the difference in the first few uses. The silicone tip is firmer and feels unusual against the ear or skin compared to the familiar softness of cotton. This typically resolves after 5–10 uses as you adjust technique slightly. Users who have made the switch consistently report that the adjustment is minor and the habit becomes natural quickly.
Environmental Comparison
One LastSwab versus 1,000 Q-Tips: this is where the comparison is most stark. Q-Tips, even with paper stems, are single-use. Every use generates waste. Every pack purchased generates packaging waste. Over one year of daily use, that's 365+ swabs and multiple packs of packaging.
LastSwab generates no ongoing waste. The carry case is plant-based and long-lasting. End-of-life is the only disposal event.
Verdict
Q-Tips have a 100-year head start, tactile familiarity, and a lower barrier to impulse purchase. They are genuinely good at what they do.
But the case for switching to LastSwab is strong for anyone who uses cotton swabs regularly: comparable performance on most tasks, better performance on some, significantly lower long-term cost, and a fraction of the ongoing environmental impact.
For the full context on how reusable cotton swabs work, read the complete guide.