Homemade Bath Bomb Recipe (Great DIY Gift!)

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » Homemade Bath Bomb Recipe (Great DIY Gift!)

There’s something incredibly relaxing about a warm bath, and this homemade bath bomb recipe makes it even better! There are thousands of bath bomb options available, but it’s easy to make your own with natural ingredients. Kids and adults alike love them and they make a great gift.

While they can cost up to $9 each to buy, you can make a whole batch for just a few dollars!

DIY Bath Bomb Recipe

When I was younger, I loved bath bombs. I’ve avoided them as I’ve gotten older though because store-bought versions often use artificial ingredients, dyes, and fragrances. For a while, I just used bath salts in my bath water when I wanted to unwind, but I missed having a bath bomb.

These homemade bath fizzies are a great solution! They’re made with nourishing sea salt or Epsom salts, alkalizing baking soda, and fizzing citric acid with a nourishing oil base. I’ll add different essential oils or even dried herbs depending on my mood. Peppermint, eucalyptus, or lavender essential oils are a few ideas.

If you need a gift idea for an Easter basket, Mother’s Day, Christmas, or even a birthday, then DIY bath bombs are a great option.

How to Make a Natural Bath Bomb Recipe

Bath bombs only take seconds to make, so it’s important to have the ingredients on hand and measured before you start. Once the water hits the citric acid they start to fizz and you’ll need to work fast. Most of the ingredients are pantry staples in many homes, but make sure you have these on hand:

Baking Soda

The backbone of this recipe is alkalizing baking soda. It complements the acidic citric acid and helps with the fizzing reaction. It’s a frequent ingredient in my detox baths and can even help soothe sunburn.

Citric Acid

You might not have citric acid sitting on your pantry shelf, but you’ll need it for this recipe. Citric acid is what gives us the fizzing reaction that makes bath bombs feel like bathing in champagne.

Corn Starch or Arrowroot

Corn starch provides the silky feel that we all love from bath bombs. I usually use organic cornstarch in this recipe (and my natural deodorant). Arrowroot also works but doesn’t provide quite as silky of a finished product.

Liquid Ingredients

These are all very versatile and you can pick any combination you have on hand. You’ll need some kind of:

  • Oil: Pick a simple oil like olive oil, almond oil, or coconut oil. If you’re feeling fancy use sea buckthorn, argan, or apricot oil. You could also create your own blend with several different oils.
  • Salt: Stick to basic sea salt or kick it up a notch with Epsom salt or your favorite salt for this bath bomb recipe.
  • Liquid: Basic water will work, but I also love using organic witch hazel for some extra skin-soothing. Some people find that the bath bombs stick together better with witch hazel.

Scents and Colors

There are so many options here. Use your favorite essential oils, add dried herbs and flowers, or make them scent-free. Some options include:

  • Lavender and Vanilla or Rose and Ylang-Ylang… or just use your imagination!
  • Kids love the fizzy action of bath bombs! I’m pretty cautious with essential oils around young kids so I use kid-safe blends when making them as gifts for my kids.
  • You can even add some natural food coloring to change the color.

The Best Essential Oils for Bath Bombs

While there are a lot of different oils that smell good, not every essential oil is the best option here. Some essential oils are more irritating to… ahem… sensitive tissues. Oils like cinnamon, clove, ginger, and lemongrass are more prone to irritating skin.

The recipe below uses a .5% dilution of essential oils (that’s 1/2 percent, NOT 5 percent), which shouldn’t cause problems for most people. And of course, if you tend to be more sensitive, then dried herbs are a gentler option. Here are some gentle, skin-friendly essential oils that also smell great!

Herbs for Bath Bombs

If you want to add some skin-soothing herbs or dried flowers here are some options. Keep in mind that if the pieces are too large, the bath bombs won’t hold together, so I wouldn’t mix in whole leaves or flowers. These herbs are generally safe, especially in such low amounts, but do your research to see which ones will work for you.

Homemade Bath Bomb Recipe Equipment

These are easy enough to make but for a fancier and more uniform product, it helps to also have:

DIY Bath Bomb Tutorial

Making a homemade bath bomb recipe is a great project for kids to help with. Some DIY beauty recipes (especially homemade soap) require precise measuring and handling harsh chemicals like lye, so they aren’t great to make with children around. These bath bombs are the opposite and make for a fun project to do with kids. They’re simple to make with kid-safe ingredients and are completely versatile. Let the kids think of ways to mix up the scents, colors, and other fun customizations.

Bath bombs are a great way to relax in the tub after a long day of dealing with kids, cooking, and all the other activities that motherhood entails. If you’ve never tried them, I highly encourage it. It’s one of my favorite things to do at the end of the day.

bath bombs recipe
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3.78 from 45 votes

DIY Bath Bomb Recipe

This easy bath bomb recipe features simple, nourishing ingredients for a relaxing bath. Great for kids and adults alike!
Prep Time5 minutes
Active Time5 minutes
Drying time2 days
Total Time2 days 10 minutes
Yield: 23 ounces
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

  • In a large mixing bowl, combine all of the dry ingredients (baking soda, citric acid, corn startch, and sea salt) and stir well.
  • In a small bowl combine the carrier oil, vanilla extract, essential oils, and natural dye if using.
  • Slowly add the wet ingredients to the dry mixture and work it together with your hands until its crumbly.
  • Add in the dried flowers or herbs if using.
  • Spritz the witch hazel or water onto the bath bomb mixture, mixing well with your hands to combine. Do this just until the mixture holds together when squeezed without crumbling. It should feel like wet sand. You may need to add slightly more witch hazel if it hasn't achieved this consistency yet.
  • Firmly press the bath bomb mixture into silicone molds, muffin tins, ice cube trays, or bath bomb molds.
  • Gently turn the molds over onto a flat surface to remove the bath bombs and allow to dry for 48 hours, or until hardened.

Notes

  • Storage: Keep the bath bombs in an airtight container away from moisture.
  • Shelf Life: About 6 months. 

Non-Toxic Pre-Made Bath Bombs

I finally found some natural bath bombs that use a similar recipe to mine. These are gorgeous and use only natural ingredients. They’re also much bigger than most bath bombs and last longer in a bath. I’ve been sending them as gifts lately and my friends are loving them too!

Bath Bomb Troubleshooting

Although this recipe is easy and doesn’t have a ton of ingredients, they can be a little tricky to make sometimes. The key is to add the right amount of liquid and work quickly when molding.

  • Bath bomb sticks to mold: You may have used too much liquid or didn’t remove them from the mold quickly enough.
  • Bath bombs fall apart: Either too much or too little liquid or they may have been left in the mold too long.
  • Bath bombs cracking when dry: too much moisture in the mix or humidity in the air.
  • Bath bombs sink in the tub: too much moisture or humidity or they haven’t dried long enough.
  • Bath bombs don’t fizz enough: They might not have had enough time to harden, or they weren’t wrapped before storage and they had a reaction with the air.

More Natural Bath Recipes

Ever made your own bath bombs? Do you have any favorite scents or herbs you’d add to these? Share 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

278 responses to “Homemade Bath Bomb Recipe (Great DIY Gift!)”

  1. Teresa Avatar
    Teresa

    How much dried ginger should I use in the bath bomb recipe?

  2. Barbara wellman Avatar
    Barbara wellman

    Can I use magnesium flakes for part of the Epson salt?? I need the effects of the mag for my chronic nerve damage, complex regional pain syndrome. I have uncontrollable muscle cramps and am trying to get of the drugs one by one. The magnesium flakes are a better quality mag than Epson so I hope this will work in the bombs. I’m guessing that mixing the two will cause no trouble. Any other ideas for nerve damage and cramping to add? Thank you for all you do and your time.

  3. Jenn Avatar

    I followed the recipe and mine fell apart after drying.
    Should I just use oil and not witch hazel/water?

  4. Colleen Grant Avatar
    Colleen Grant

    Hi Wellness Mama!
    Thanks again for a wonderful recipe to try! I am truly grateful for all your information that you share with us to help better our families! One question…I was trying to click on the link to purchase the aluminum-free baking soda that you use, but it was not working. Is there somewhere else in your website that you have the link that I could try?

    Thanks!

  5. Caitlin Avatar
    Caitlin

    How much mixture makes 1 bath bomb? How many bath bombs would this make?

    1. Cindy Avatar

      For me, it made 10-12 in a silicone muffin pan. I filled them about halfway full.

  6. Trudy Schuett Avatar
    Trudy Schuett

    Citric acid is no longer produced from citrus fruits. For the massive amounts now used in a wide variety of products, using the fruit in that way would not produce enough for the industry. The name probably comes from the original process from 1890. So the citric acid available now should not be a problem for someone with a citrus fruit allergy.
    More info here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citric_acid

  7. Brian Steere Avatar
    Brian Steere

    WE just mix epson salts (optional magnesium relaxant), sodium bicarbonate and citric acid as dry powder and add to our bath – and add a drop of essential oil to our bath. This doesn’t do the packaged packet – but it does the CO2 bubbles and soft water. So if you want to effect with less hassle – you may also appreciate this information.

  8. Julie Hays Avatar
    Julie Hays

    When I make bath bombs for myself, I like to make them “naked”, without any EOs. Then while I’m filling up my tub I drop on my EOs. That way I can customize my scent for each bath and the scent is strong, not dissipating over time. Mine keep fine over 2 weeks, they are just less fizzy but still enjoyable!

  9. Becky Avatar

    I have eczema so I have really sensitive skin. I’ve always had to be careful what I use because I’ve reacted to a lot of bath products before and never been able to use other bath bombs or bubbles. Are these safe for me to use or is there something different I can do? I’m fine with salts but I’m always unsure with citrus as it could sting loads help please ?

  10. Ann L. Avatar

    As someone who has a normal appetite during the day and then starts having food cravings at night, I don’t want anything in a soothing bath that remotely reminds me of food. That rules out certain florals, citrus, and spices that I use in baking and food preparation.

    Luckily, that leaves me with a lot of other options. I love the smell of juniper and use it when I can find it at a reasonable price. Personally, I don’t like to buy blends that are labeled serenity, joy, relaxation, and other feel-good terms. If I want to blend scents, I do it myself – either by recipe or by experimentation.

    Sometimes home experimenting can be disastrous. I once made some soap and used dried celery leaf flakes from my kitchen pantry as one of the inclusions. The soap felt and smelled great but it left green-brown blobs on my skin that I had to be very careful to rinse off before getting out of the tub or shower. Maybe I should have pulverized them in the blender before adding to the soap mix. I made several bars in the batch, and I was so glad that I hadn’t gifted (or donated them to a non-profit fund raiser) before I tried them myself!

  11. Amber DeGrace Avatar
    Amber DeGrace

    I made these exactly to the recipe, and they ended up pushing out of the molds for a good 15 minutes. Finally, I let them go and they stopped at about an inch high out of the mold. After 48 hours they were dry, but when I put them in water, they don’t fizz at all! The end result is hard, crunchy bits that don’t want to dissolve at all in water. They smell great, but aren’t even usable. Any ideas what went wrong? I don’t want to waste the time making them again and waste money on the resources unless I can troubleshoot what happened. Thanks!

    1. Tasha Avatar

      They reacted early cause of too much liquid. Use a spray bottle and spray 1-2 at a time, then grab a handful of product and squeeze. If it stays together then it’s ready for the mold. If not spritz again. If the mix gets super cold in your hand it may be reacting. You can also keep a 2:1 ration of baking soda and citric acid on hand to sprinkle in and offset the wet ingredients. Keep practicing!!!

  12. Juli Avatar

    Hi all to are having issues with overflow… I just made mine and was diligent about pressing down continuously for about half an hour. After they overflowed, I’d pull of the extra and put that into it’s own mold. After about an hour it stopped reacting and seemed to be ok. Maybe try that if you haven’t already. They smell wonderful.. though I may have gone overboard with the lavender. I’m going to put the silicone mold in the bedroom tonight to reap the EO benefits. 🙂

  13. Deborah Avatar

    Can we add vitamin c to neutralize chlorine? Ascorbic acid replace citric? I’m trying to turn the children’s detox bath into a bath bomb to make bath night easier. Thanks!

  14. jenny Avatar

    if you look up other recipes they include corn starch and after they are put in molds they are immediately taken out to dry

  15. Grace.S Avatar

    I use oil in place of the water or witch hazel. The oil does not trigger the fizzing and they are very moisturizing!

  16. lara Avatar

    doesn’t citric acid have msg in it. Can I ask your thought about eating any product that contains citric acid which so many organic products do. I have read that some citric acid can have msg in it.

  17. Laurie Avatar

    I hope you get this since this post was so long ago. I have a 3yo boy who refuses to potty train. I stmbled across on Amazon some sort of tablet that rhe kod can drop in the potty and it turns colors when they pee on it. My first rjpught was your toilet and bath fizzies. Since I don’t necessarily need to clean my toilet a dozen times a day 🙂 do you think there’s a way to make a tablet like this that would hold shape but not nessearily be as strong? I’m gping to experiment on my own, but thought I’d ask someone who has already played with these! My older kids are girls…they were so much easier! 😉 TIA

  18. Rachel Henderson Avatar
    Rachel Henderson

    Isn’t citric acid made from GMO corn? Why would you want to bath in that?

    1. Jean Tierney Avatar
      Jean Tierney

      Sara Waters
      Did you say you used coconut oil instead of the olive oil AND instead of the which hazel and water? If so how did they turn out?

      1. Carol L Avatar
        Carol L

        No, most all citric acid is now made from GMO corn, as she said.

    2. Kristen Ivy Avatar
      Kristen Ivy

      I bought citric acid on Amazon that is non-GMO, food grade, and approved for organic foods.

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