Indole plays a significant role in the production of products such as spices, medicines, and exogenous auxins. Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) formed by indole and quaternary ammonium salts (QASs, including tetraethylammonium chloride-TEAC, tetrapropylammonium chloride-TPAC, triethylmethyl-ammonium chloride-TEMAC) were found and proposed to efficiently extract indole from model wash oil. The effects of time, temperature, mole ratio of QAS to indole and initial indole concentration on the extraction of indole were studied. The results indicate that these QASs can extract indole from wash oil with efficiencies up to 96.7% (TPAC). The extraction process can be finished within 5 min. It is also found that the ultimate concentrations are almost identical for one kind of QAS although their initial concentrations are different, and the indole concentration in model wash oil can be reduced to a very low level of 1.3 g/dm(3) (TPAC). The maximum distribution coefficients of indole are 40.8 for TEAC, 91.9 for TPAC, and 29.5 for TEMAC at the studied conditions, and the extraction ability follows the order of TPAC > TEAC > TEMAC. Moreover, QASs in DESs can be reused without obvious reduction in extraction efficiency. The extraction mechanism was studied by FT-IR, and the results indicate that there is a hydrogen bond between QAS and indole. Finally, a comparison was made between this method and other methods to verify and demonstrate its desirable properties of efficiency and environmentally friendliness.