How to Make Natural Lotion Bars (Recipe + Variations)

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Easy recipe to make your own natural lotion bars
Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » How to Make Natural Lotion Bars (Recipe + Variations)

At our house, we love lotion bars. In fact, we rarely use regular lotion anymore since these lotion bars are so much easier to make and work so much better. They are also mess-free, even when the kids use them!

Even though I could buy lotion bars at the store, making beauty products and toiletries by hand is a hobby I enjoy and feel good about doing. I love that I’m not putting any chemicals on my family’s skin and I know exactly what is in each product. (Ever tried to read labels on beauty products? What a headache!)

Did I already mention it is super easy?!

What Is a Lotion Bar?

I’ve made lotion in the past, but was excited to stumble on this great variation, which is solid at room temperature and looks like a bar of soap. It is also even easier to make than lotion because it doesn’t require any emulsifying with water, which is the tough step. These are solid at room temperature like a bar of soap, but when rubbed on the skin, a tiny amount melts and is transferred to the skin, leaving a highly moisturizing and very thin layer.

lotion bar ingredientsThere are endless ways to adapt this lotion bar recipe too. Here are just a few of the ways to customize a lotion bar:

  • Mix and match essential oils for various scents or skin benefits (we love lavender and lemon)
  • Add zinc oxide to make a natural diaper rash bar
  • Mix in menthol and arnica for a pain-relieving sore muscle or wound treatment
  • Add odor-fighting Probiotics for a homemade deodorant stick
  • Add argan oil for stretch marks
  • Toss in some cocoa powder and natural mineral makeup powder for a bronzing bar!
  • And the list keeps going!

Lotion Bars Make a Natural Gift!

These lotion bars make fun and easy presents that are sure to please. Make a gender neutral or more masculine scent for the men in your life in a simple mason jar or stick, or fancy it up with floral essential oils with a decorative glass jar and label. Gift them for baby shower gifts, birthdays, Christmas, or mothers-to-be!

Sometimes I use these empty plastic deodorant sticks when shipping a gift. I’ve even found them at the dollar store. For a more personalized look, just cut some burlap to size and glue around the stick.

Easy recipe to make your own natural lotion bars
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4.38 from 113 votes

Easy Lotion Bars Recipe

A basic recipe for homemade natural lotion bars; see below for ideas on how to customize them.
Prep Time5 minutes
Active Time19 minutes
Yield: 12 bars
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

  • Combine all ingredients except essential oils and vitamin E in a quart-size glass mason jar.
  • Place the jar in a small saucepan of water and heat over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the ingredients are melted.
  • Remove from heat and let cool slightly.
  • Stir in any desired essential oils and/or vitamin E.
  • Carefully pour the mixture into molds or whatever you will be allowing the lotion bars to harden in (ideas below).
  • Allow the lotion bars to cool completely before attempting to pop out of molds.

Notes

  • This recipe can be adjusted to make any quantity that you’d like. I use equal 1 cup measurements as specified in the recipe which makes 12 lotion bars with my molds. For a small batch, this recipe could be cut in half or even one fourth.
 
  • Make in different shaped molds for different holiday gifts (hearts for Valentine’s Day, flowers for Mother’s Day, etc.) or made in a square baking pan and then cut into actual bars.

how to make homemade lotion bars recipe

As Promised … More Lotion Bar Recipes!

I’ve been experimenting with and making lotion bars for a long time, and I’ve built up quite the collection of recipes for different needs over the years. That’s the beauty of it — make what you need, when you need it!

1. Sensitive Skin Lotion Bars

These lotion bars use an unconventional ingredient in place of coconut oil for those with an allergy or aversion to coconut oil. These are especially helpful for those with eczema or skin dryness and they are equally simple to make.

Click here for the sensitive skin lotion bar recipe.

2. Bronzing 3-in-1 Lotion Bars

These 3-in-1 lotion bars are the perfect summer trifecta: bronzer, sunscreen, and bug repellent in one! Coffee-infused coconut oil makes this a great smelling and lightly bronzing lotion bar. One caution: the sun protection factor is low since I like to absorb some of the benefits of sun.

Here is the recipe.

3. Moroccan Bronzing Bars

Being of Irish descent, I have naturally fair skin. I’ve actually darkened naturally quite a bit since changing my diet, but in the winter especially, I often feel very fair skinned. This bar is how I compensate and get a little glow going any time of year. The optional essential oils give this bar an exotic scent.

Here’s the recipe.

4. Pain Relief Lotion Bars

When our family started taking martial arts, these bars came in handy. They use natural ingredients like arnica, menthol and mint to help sooth sore muscles (just not while pregnant or nursing!). They are a natural cool/heat bar that helps ease muscle stiffness and pain.

Here is the recipe.

5. Bug-Off Lotion Bars

We don’t have nearly enough bats in our area for the number of mosquitos we have. In the summer months, mosquitos are really bad at our house, especially since we have so much shade around our house. These lotion bars have been a huge help! They protect the skin with natural oils and moisturize at the same time.

Here are the directions for bug repellent lotion bars.

6. Sunscreen Lotion Bars

We don’t use sunscreen often, but when we will be outside for longer than usual, these are a great natural solution. They use zinc oxide with the basic lotion bar recipe ingredients for a low SPF lotion bar.

Details here.

7. Winter Bliss Lotion Bars

This recipe uses my base for lotion bars with the addition of wintergreen, peppermint, lavender, and orange essential oils for a perfect invigorating wintery blend. The gender-neutral scent makes this one a perfect Christmas gift for anyone on your list (kids and pregnant moms excluded … see the post for more).

Here’s the recipe.

8. Gold, Frankincense, and Myrrh Lotion Bars

This recipe really does include gold (mica powder), frankincense, and myrrh and is a great way to celebrate the meaning of the Christmas season. Again, makes a great gift!

Try them here.

9. Lotion Bar Sticks

Although I don’t find lotion bars particularly messy (unless one of the kids mistakes one for soap and uses it in the shower … (I don’t recommend it!), it is possible to make lotion in stick form in an empty deodorant container. I use this version when I travel or when I want to ship gifts and need lightweight packaging.

Get the recipe as well as where to find the containers here.

10. Eczema Relief Lotion Bars

Allergic to coconut oil, or just have reactive skin in general? This eczema-friendly version uses cod liver oil for skin-soothing soluble fat vitamins and omega-3s. They are also gentle enough to use on baby.

Read how to make them here.

11. Deep Moisture Shea Butter Lotion Bars

I use this recipe in the winter months as it has an extra dose of shea butter to protect and nourish chapped, dry skin in need of extra care.

Get the details here.

12. Coconut Oil Lotion Bars

Don’t have mango, shea, or cocoa butter around? This recipe uses just coconut oil, beeswax, and a few drops of essential oil!

This super easy recipe is here.

13. Hypoallergenic Lotion Bars

On the flip side, if you’re allergic to coconut oil, try this allergy-friendly version with skin-soothing CLA and beneficial fats from tallow.

I explain more here.

Don’t Want to Make Them?

If you want to use lotion bars but don’t have the time or ingredients to make them yourself, I found a great small business, Made On, that makes all kinds of lotion bars, soaps, natural baby products, and hair products that are up to my standards. If you use the code WELLNESSMAMA, you’ll get a 15% discount off your order!

Do you use lotion bars? Ready to make your own? Share below in the comments, and let me know any variations I missed!

Lotion bars intensify the moisturizing effects of natural lotion in a convenient and non-messy bar. Make your own with this easy DIY recipe.

Sources

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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

678 responses to “How to Make Natural Lotion Bars (Recipe + Variations)”

  1. Shannon Avatar

    Thinking of making these as gifts. How would you suggest packaging them to give away? Also, how long do these last before going bad? Thank you!!

  2. Melissa Piket Avatar
    Melissa Piket

    Can’t wait to try them! Do you ever have a problem with your shea butter or cocoa butter crystalizing?

  3. Ande Ritchie Avatar
    Ande Ritchie

    These are fabulous! So, so easy to make and I love that there is no packaging to have to dispose of or even recycle. I added lavender and sweet orange and put them in a teddy bear mold from the dollar store. Heavenly!

  4. Mallika Avatar

    I live in India and I just CAN’T find beeswax. Can I do the bars without it since coconut oil is solid below 24C. If not then do you ship internationally?

  5. Mayabee Avatar

    Can these go bad? As in if i make a dozen or so and keep them lying around while i finish using one? Also, how long does each one last? And Should i keep them in the fridge while not in use??

  6. Candy Avatar

    We made the lotion bars tonight with beeswax, coconut oil and doubl butter glycerin soap from the craft store. It is separating as it cools. Clear on top and milky white on the bottom. Did we do something wrong? Will we be able to still use it as a lotion bar?
    It is cool now and looks fine, but does not feel like a lotion or a soap? HELP! What did we do wrong? Can we fix this?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      I don’t know what double butter glycerine is bet I’m guessing that is the problem. It has to be oil based like shea or cocoa butter to work.

    2. Susan Avatar

      Why did you put double butter glycerin soap in a lotion bar? A lotion bar is a leave on product and soap is a wash off product. I don’t understand:(

  7. Salpi Tchalikian Kazezian Avatar
    Salpi Tchalikian Kazezian

    My mason jar broke in the hot water and I wasted a lot of ingredients. I finally used a heat safe measuring cup.

  8. Heather C Avatar
    Heather C

    How long did it take for you to get to the point that you are now making all toiletry products by hand?

  9. Sarah Avatar

    Are you using white beeswax? I didn’t see any at MRH. Could you tell me a good source to purchase that? Thank you.

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      I use the natural beeswax from MRH… Amazon carries white though…

  10. Chifly Avatar

    I love this recipe but have a friend who is vegan and will not use anything with beeswax in it. Is there something that I could substitute for the beeswax? Thanks and love the website!

  11. Sue Mahlburg Avatar
    Sue Mahlburg

    Thanks for the recipe! They were fun & easy to make. However, they turned out too soft for me. I will add more beeswax next time, but is it possible to melt down this batch and add more beeswax to it? Just wondering. Thanks!

  12. Kelly leach Avatar
    Kelly leach

    Hi…I just made these for the first time and am pretty excited about the outcome, though in retrospect I wish I had added more essential oils, because I find the coconut oil fragrance almost overpowers the intended scent. My question, would it be possible to re-melt the bars to add more oils to the liquid form? Would this affect the quality of the bars to be melted then reset to harden?

  13. heather Avatar
    heather

    i made these just now, but they came out with lotion at the bottom and then the rest of the bars seem fine. It didn’t seem like the mixture liked “mixing” all that well. I could see lotion “bubbles” floating in the oils. I mixed as well as i could, but they didn’t turn out so great. what did i do wrong?

  14. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    WooHoo!!! I made this. It was so easy and we love how it feels on our skin. I will be writing this one down. We live in a very hot climate so I added a little more bee wax but it is still very silky. Thank you so much for this post!!!!

  15. Deanna Avatar

    How long does it generally take for them to cool down completely? Just want to know what time frame I am in for! Thank you kindly!!! Can’t wait to try!

  16. Meera Keister Avatar
    Meera Keister

    Would these melt in the summer? Or do they retain their shape pretty well? Love your blog! Thanks:)

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      depends on temp but mine are fine on my dresser this summer so far…

  17. Lisa Ford Rodgers Avatar
    Lisa Ford Rodgers

    I have made this recipe twice now and love it!! I first bought a lotion bar at our farmers market a couple of months ago. I kept it on my nightstand and used it on my hands, cuticles, and feet every morning and night. It has helped 100%! I was so glad to find this recipe so I can now make my own lotion bars. I use foil baking cups in my muffin tins to hold my lotion mixture. It makes for easy removal and virtually no clean up. The foil cups are also great to keep the bars in so the oils don’t transfer to unprotected surfaces.

  18. Maria Avatar

    This looks great!!! I have a couple of questions though. I’m going to be hiking/camping soon and it’s probably going to be quite hot. Will these bars melt a lot? I’m wondering if I should add more beeswax to keep them as solid as possible. Also, do these bars leave the skin feeling oily/greasy? Thanks a lot 🙂

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      They don’t leave the skin feeling greasy, but you might want to add more beeswax to keep them from melting…

4.38 from 113 votes (91 ratings without comment)

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