Homemade Honey Face Mask & Cleanser Recipe

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How to make a honey face mask- easy recipe and tutorial
Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » Homemade Honey Face Mask & Cleanser Recipe

I’ve shared before how I wash my face with oil and how that has been the best skin care routine I’ve ever used. Some readers commented that they still hadn’t found the right combination of oils for their skin type, so I wanted to share another natural face wash I recently found …

Honey …

Sound strange? So does cleansing your face with oil, but it turns out that they are both natural and effective ways to cleanse skin naturally.

Honey Face Mask (or Wash)

For this method, raw honey must be used. Raw honey has natural antibacterial properties and contains enzymes and probiotics that are good for skin. This method can be especially good for acne-prone skin as it doesn’t stop moisture from the skin but does reduce oils and bacteria. (Acne is usually in internal problem though, so it is important to look at diet too!)

Honey Face Wash - Simple and natural recipe that nourishes skin and helps fight acneHoney is gentler than soaps, which strip the skin of beneficial oils, and it gently nourishes skin. I know a local vet who has even used raw honey to speed skin healing on animals as it helps reduce bacteria and speed healing while protecting the skin from outside disturbances. This idea appears to have some scientific backing, as there are now medical-grade ointments (like this one) that use honey for wound and burn healing in humans.

What Kind of Honey

I’ve personally tried two different types of honey for facial cleansing:

Both seem to work really well. Manuka honey is considered more cleansing and antibacterial (and has health benefits when used internally) but from what I found, either one works great for skin care (and raw honey is cheaper). I normally use a slightly lesser quality honey for face cleansing than I use with food. As long as a honey is raw and preferably organic, it is great for skin use.

Typically, I wash my face at night with the oil cleansing method since it also removes makeup, and use the honey face mask in the morning before showering. I keep a small jar of honey and a spoon on my bathroom counter for this purpose.

Bonus Ingredients

A friend of mine also recommended adding a tiny bit of vitamin C powder (which is also great for skin) to the honey face mask, along with some essential oils for extra antibacterial and acne-fighting power.

Since then, I’ve been experimenting with variations of this honey face mask and cleanser. Different variations seem to work for different skin types.

Personally, I mix a few drops of lavender and frankincense oils into the honey I keep in my bathroom. I also sometimes add a dash of cinnamon or vitamin C. I just spot test on my inner arm before trying anything new on my face and I recommend the same for anyone trying these DIY methods.

Some “bonus” ingredients to try:

  • Cinnamon – For oily or inflamed skin, add a tiny amount (less than 1/2 teaspoon) of cinnamon powder to the honey before massaging onto your face. (This is too strong for some skin types as it may be drying.)
  • Lemon – For age spots or dark patches on skin, try lemon. Adding a teaspoon of lemon juice to honey before massaging onto skin helps clean pores and lighten dark spots. Vitamin C powder also works for this.
  • Lavender – To balance skin, try lavender! Add 2 drops of organic lavender essential oil to a teaspoon of honey and massage into skin.

How to Use Honey as a Face Mask

Creating a natural face mask using honey is incredibly easy (and works amazing too!).

  1. Wet face with warm water.
  2. Place a small amount of honey in your hands (usually less than a teaspoon is plenty) and rub your hands together. I use this honey.
  3. Massage into skin in a circular motion to get all areas.
  4. Leave on for 10-15 minutes for deep pore cleansing.
  5. Wash off with warm water and pat dry.
  6. Enjoy soft, balanced skin!

How to Use Honey as a Facial Cleanser

To cleanse with honey without doing a face mask, just massage a teaspoon of honey into damp skin using circular movements. Wash well with warm water and pat dry.

Have you ever washed your face with an unusual ingredient? Tell me below!

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

246 responses to “Homemade Honey Face Mask & Cleanser Recipe”

  1. Gena Avatar

    I love the oil/honey routine!. I use hemp oil at night and honey in the am. Between this and giving up grains the rosacea on my face is clearing up. Yeah!! Less redness and the little bumps are going away. Time to get a bit of color on my face so I can stop with the makeup(organic).
    Thanks Katie!

  2. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    I’ve often wondered why I can’t wash my face with nothing more than a washcloth and warm water?
    I have normal/dry skin and no acne problems. My only complaints are normal aging; wrinkles and age spots/sun damage.
    I was in a deployed environment many years ago and couldn’t get a hold of my normal skincare products. Not wanting to use regular, commercial soap I used warm water and a washcloth. It seemed to work great and the longer I went without my product the less important it became to have it. I’m still using warm water and a washcloth and still very happy with it.
    There seems to be nothing in any of the DIY natural skincare information available from many sources about this option. Why do I need to cleanse using honey or oil or anything? Is there something I’m missing by not using any product? Would using a product improve my wrinkles and/or age spots/sun damage?

    1. Stephanie Avatar
      Stephanie

      Washing your face is just to get better skin, though oil and honey have good vitamins, nutrients, and other beneficial properties. If what you’re doing is working for you, especially that simple, I’d stay with that.
      To fight wrinkles, sunspots, or sun damage, I would just incorporate a sunscreen and moisturizer.
      Honey is great for moisturizing, but I still use store bought products, especially from Origin. A lot of that’s natural and organic which makes me feel better about using it.

  3. Debra Avatar

    This sounds great and I’m excited to try it. Is the honey wash and oil wash okay for use on oily skin? I’d be concerned it would create too much oil on my skin which is already oily. Thanks so much!

  4. Bethany Weger Avatar
    Bethany Weger

    Wow this sounds great! I will try this ASAP, see if it helps with my adult acne

  5. Dawn MH. Avatar
    Dawn MH.

    How much honey do you use to make you jar of face wash?? You say you add a few drops of the 2 oils but not how much honey you need?

  6. Cat Avatar

    I love honey as a cleanser, I tried adding oats and storing it in a jar and after a couple weeks, the side of the jar got moldy. Any recommendations to avoid this?

    1. Mia Avatar

      Keep it in the fridge! Maybe take it out some time before you’re going to use it so it returns to room temperature before you apply it to your face.

  7. Tamara Avatar

    Ive been oil cleansing with jojoba oil and even moisturizing with argan oil for several months now and my skin is still terribly dry. What would you try next? I’m really frustrated and honestly about ready to buy the skin care products that worked for me before I tried to do this naturally.

    1. Mia Avatar

      I have had intense trouble with my skin my entire life, from horribly teen acne to dry or oily skin and now adult acne. I’m finally getting control of my skin and I have to say that what I’ve found that works best for repairing dry skin is grape seed oil or extra light/ extra virgin olive oil, left on over night. You can use either but I really recommend grape seed oil, maybe in conjunction with grape seed extract (a natural pill found in most pharmacies). I buy both from Wal-Mart (I literally live in the middle of nowhere so Wal-Mart supplies a lot of things I can’t get from more local stores). I poured the oil into a clean soap dispenser, squeezed a bit onto my hand, and then used my fingers to pat a just a little onto my major dry spots. Within a week, I saw huge difference. My skin is all dewy now and I love it! It also works as a great massage oil, and has properties that naturally repair and heal skin. I started using it with Melaleuca (tea tree) oil on bug bites, razor burn, acne, even stretch marks and have seen huge differences. I’ve also started putting a couple spurts of the grape seed oil into my bath water. In ten minutes of soaking my skin is just soft, and it’s such a light oil it doesn’t make my hair all greasy! Love it, recommend it, hope you see some difference.

  8. Hanna Avatar

    Hi Kate

    You state that honey shouldn’t be heated because it destroys some of the goodness in it, but you haven’t mentioned that depending on where you live Manuka honey may have gone through quarantine where it has been irradiated. This process definitely destroys a large part of the microbes in the honey, any thoughts?

  9. Erica Avatar

    I skin that is VERY sensitive. Even soap that’s supposed to be gentle to sensitive skin causes my skin to become very red/rashy/dry/flaky. But if I didn’t use any soap at all, my skin would break out in horrible zits and blackheads.

    I finally found a skin care regimen that is perfect for me, my dry flaky skin has cleared up 100%. I don’t have any zits on my face AT ALL any more. Even old scars from me picking at zits are now fading. My skin is velvety soft now and ALMOST flawless, except for some blackheads on my nose, but even those are a lot smaller and a lot less of them. Hopefully with time those will fade too.

    Here’s my skin regimen:

    Facial cleanser (morning and night):
    1 tsp honey.

    Toner (I only use this at night, as it dries my face out if I use it morning and night… you might try it twice a day unless it starts to dry your skin out too):
    1/2 cup bottled water
    1/2 cup organic apple cider vinegar
    1/4 tsp lemon juice.

    Moisturizer (morning and night):
    2 tsp olive oil
    2 tsp sweet almond oil
    1 tsp coconut oil
    1 vitamin E capsule (pierced and emptied into oil mixture)

    Facial scrub (every 3-4 days):
    1 tsp honey
    1 tsp baking soda

    1. Mama Hauck Avatar
      Mama Hauck

      So awesome. Thank you for listing your routine. I am going to try as well. 🙂

  10. Michaela White Avatar
    Michaela White

    I just wanted to say that you are supremely awesome! I will definitely try this and maybe tweak it to my liking. I wish more people could know about natural remedies such as this.
    Thanks for all the great stuff you’re doing! And yay for simple eco-friendly alternatives that keep us all in good health and looking good 🙂 Will definitely pass on your website to some close friends.
    Michaela

  11. SB Avatar

    I’m very new to all these natural beauty solutions and I just tried this last night and it made my face feel amazing! But it doesn’t remove makeup. 🙁 Is there something I could add to it to remove makeup?

  12. Lauren Avatar

    What if we use a Clarisonic to exfoliate our skin? I bought mine from my derm and I love it but want to switch to something natural to cleanse and honey would ruin the brush. How would you incorporate a Clarisonic in a natural face cleansing method? I don’t want to give the Clarisonic up!

    1. Dawn MH. Avatar
      Dawn MH.

      I use a Clarisonic too and use the brushes with my coconut oil cleaning. I will be trying it with Honey cleansing and assume it will be just fine 🙂 (Trying honey cleansing because I still am having issues with raised bumps that pop up every so often).

  13. Michaela Avatar
    Michaela

    I have been cleansing my face with oil and washing it in the morning with honey about 3 times a week since I stumbled across your natural recipes. Suffice it to say my skin has never been better! It’s absolutely amazing that two such simple things, organic and chemical free, could have such a positive effect on my skin! Thank you, eternally, for doing what you do Katie!

  14. Johnson Avatar

    I love the honey face wash method however, I have found that raw honey is quite dense (near solid consistency) – is there a trick to adding essential oils to raw honey?
    Thanks!

  15. Kaitlyn Avatar

    Hi Katie,

    What essential oils would you recommend adding to the honey face wash for acne-prone, oily skin? Also, is it okay to mix multiple essential oils in the honey, or is it better to have separate containers of the honey + 1 essential oil?

    Thanks!

      1. Kaitlyn Avatar

        Great, thank you!! How may drops of lavender would you recommend adding to what amount of honey?

  16. Ciara Avatar

    Would it be okay to add the homemade magnesium oil to the honey mixture or will that make it go bad more quickly? Also is it okay to add oils to the honey?

  17. Kim Avatar

    Those that have changed their diet and beauty routine and still have breakouts even though it is not “that time of the month”, you might want to get your hormones checked by an endocrinologist. I am in my thirties and I have been breaking out like a teenager since I was 13. About 8 months ago I finally found out why: Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS). I went to an endocrinologist to find the cause of the PCOS. I am insulin resistant and that was causing my hormones to be completely out of whack, excessive Testosterone levels. The insulin resistance has caused a lot of things to be out of whack. So, if you are doing everything that you know of to get rid of the acne, take a step back and do a self assessment. Look at recent body changes: weight gain and appetite, oily skin, menses cycles, etc. and talk to your doctor about these things. Now most doctors rather treat/cure something without using medicines.

  18. Hannah Avatar

    I’ve also found if you need a gentle exfoliator you can mix the honey with baking soda and that works quite well especially in the corners of the nose.

  19. Ann-Marie Avatar
    Ann-Marie

    Great post! I’ve been washing my face with honey for about 6 months now and love the effects! It’s so gentle and leaves my skin feeling smooth and supple. For an extra punch, I use a honey mask once or twice a week by adding a few shakes of nutmeg and cinnamon to honey, applying to my face and leaving on for 20-30 minutes. Afterward, my skin is radiant and healthfully moisturized.

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