Luxurious Homemade Whipped Body Butter

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diy natural body butter recipe homemade gift
Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » Luxurious Homemade Whipped Body Butter

I love making natural beauty products as gifts, and homemade body butter is one friends and family always love to receive. It’s a gift that is easy to personalize with custom natural scents (and even can help with sleep if you add a little magnesium!).

Put the finished product in a cute glass jar with ribbon and a tag, and you have a thoughtful and beautiful gift that will make them feel pampered for months.

Even if you aren’t typically the type to make your own gifts, this recipe is easy for DIY beginners and fun to make. Give it a try!

Why Body Butter?

Body butter is thicker than lotion and contains less water. This means it takes longer to penetrate the skin (don’t walk on a floor barefoot after applying body butter to your feet!) but it’s very moisturizing and softens even those tougher, very dry spots like the knees, elbows, and feet.

By whipping body butter, you get the best of both worlds since it is soft and easy to apply but still extra moisturizing.

How to Make Body Butter

This new recipe has similar ingredients to these homemade lotion bars, but removes the beeswax and whips the mixture as it cools to create a cloud-like lotion that is extremely nourishing! The shea butter and cocoa butter combine for a luxurious feel, but you can also add mango butter if that’s what you have.

This body butter is great for babies or sensitive skin, and scents can be added to make it a custom gift for anyone (or to keep for yourself!).

My current favorite is a peppermint-scented version for the holidays, but I also like a citrus/lavender combination.

diy natural body butter recipe homemade gift
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4.58 from 103 votes

DIY Whipped Body Butter Recipe

The combination of shea and cocoa butter with two nourishing oils makes a highly moisturizing combination, but whipping the mix helps it go on smoothly without being oily.
Active Time25 minutes
Chilling time1 hour 10 minutes
Total Time1 hour 35 minutes
Yield: 2 cups
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

  • In a double boiler or glass bowl, combine all the ingredients except for the essential oils.
  • Heat over medium heat, stirring constantly until all ingredients are melted.
  • Remove from the heat and cool slightly.
  • Stir in the essential oils if using.
  • Place the bowl in the refrigerator and chill for 1 hour or until the mixture is starting to harden around the edges.
  • Use a hand mixer to whip for 10 minutes until fluffy.
  • Return to the fridge for 10-15 minutes to set.
  • Store in a glass jar with a lid and use as you would regular lotion or body butter. If your home is above 75°F, the body butter may soften and need to be kept in the fridge to maintain the whipped texture.
  • Keep for yourself, or give away! Enjoy!

Notes

Cocoa butter, shea butter, and mango butter are all interchangeable in this recipe. If you only have one or two on hand, feel free to substitute or play with different proportions.

Body Butter FAQ

This recipe has been around for a while, so here are some of the questions you’ve asked the most:

Will it be greasy?

Body butter is definitely more emollient and has a heavier texture than lotion does, but after a few minutes it will penetrate the skin and lose any greasy feel.

How long will it last?

Stored away from moisture and light this homemade body butter should last 6-8 months. Using a spoon or spatula to dip rather than your fingers will extend the life of the body butter.

Why is mine not white like yours?

Shea butter especially can vary in texture and color depending on the brand. Not to worry, it will still work just as well!

Will this clog my pores?

Nope! This body butter actually did wonders on my cystic acne back in the day.

Other Body Butter Variations

Mastered the recipe? Try mixing up your own combinations! Here are some ideas to get you started:

Ever made your own body butter? Want to try this recipe? Share below!

How to make simple and luxurious whipped body butter with shea butter and natural oil

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

735 responses to “Luxurious Homemade Whipped Body Butter”

  1. Faithy Avatar

    Call me crazy but by straining the shea and cocoa butter all of the wonderful benefits and healing properties that those properties have will be mostly destroyed.

  2. Frankie Avatar

    5 stars
    I LOVE how you make your recipes printable and easy to print! It’s so hard to print other recipes that dont look like yours and i will get part of the recipe cut off or a big square advertisement block will show up right where i need to read the recipe! lol So Thanks very much..u should know that i appreciate your style and recipes! 🙂

  3. Mary Ann Combs Avatar
    Mary Ann Combs

    5 stars
    About the body butter. I made one similar and I wasn’t able to whip it until the next day. It was a different consistency the end of the first day. So, I am having a DIY gathering with a lot of ladies to take home a glass container of whipped body butter. To make the most successful attempt, do you think I could melt the butters and put it in the fridge and then the next morning before they come set it out 2 hours before then add EO and whip when they are here? You are more experienced and I appreciate the tips.

  4. Laura m Avatar
    Laura m

    1 star
    I followed this recipe and I could not whip it with a mixer for 10 minutes, it basically turned into soup. After I put it in the fridge it still wasn’t fluffy nor “hardened”. It’s just really extremely oily when I dip my finger in it, so I’ve been fluffing by hand instead of the mixer, back in fridge, wait 10-15 min, nope, an hour, nope, is there anyway to make it 1.less greasy, and 2. To get it to harden? I made two batches and neither on of them are turning out like a butter

    1. Joyce Avatar

      Laura,

      I’m n\having the same problem. Since you posted a few months ago, did you ever find a solution? I have now added another cup of cocoa butter and then a pound of corn starch. It’s still very oily. It looks fluffy, but as soon as I touch it, the oil hits my finger.

    2. Joyce Avatar

      I hope you can help me with making a soft, smooth lotion.

      Here is the recipe I used:

      Whipped Body Butter

      1 c coconut butter
      1 c cocoa butter
      1 c shea butter
      1 c sweet almond oil (I used liquid)
      1 tsp vitamin E oil
      5-10 drops essential oils

      So I put everything except for the last two ingredients in a double boiler, put in the last two, put it in the refrigerator for 2 hours.
      After the two hours, my mix was still liquid, so I added another cup of cocoa butter. In the morning it was hard, and I whipped it into a frosting type state. Now, as soon as it is touched, the oil immediately hits my finger. I went to the store and bought corn starch. I whipped in a small amount at a time, and ended up putting in the entire pound. The lotion looks and smells great, but is still VERY oily.

      Do you have any suggestions? I do still have some shea butter, cocoa butter, and even mango butter on hand.

      Thank you

  5. jen Avatar

    Is it possible to make this a magnesium whipped butter by adding the amount of magnesium flakes that is used in the magnesium lotion?

  6. Barb Munson Avatar
    Barb Munson

    I have tried 3 times to make a body butter. The first time I used 1/2 c. coconut oil and 1 T. shea butter soap. It had small chunks of white in it. The second time I used 1/2 cup coconut oil and 1 T. shea butter soap and burnt it but it did not have any small chunks in it The third time I used 1 cup coconut oil and 2 T shea butter but it is very grainy (small grains of what) . I heat it each time and used the mixer on it each time.
    What is wrong?

  7. Amber Avatar

    5 stars
    Ahhh i love this recipr! I do have one question though. Can I substitute coconut oil with a different oil?

  8. Irene Thomas Avatar
    Irene Thomas

    5 stars
    Hi
    I absolutely love your blog too – so many wonderful tips. I’ve been using this body butter for a few months and my nails are splitting and breaking very badly. This started happening a few weeks after using the body butter. Do you have any idea at all on what I could add to the product to improve my nails? Has anyone else had this problem? My nails have never been great but they are a mess now. Many thanks

  9. Kalena Avatar

    Haven’t tried this recipe, it want to. I have a question, though. I have tried whipping coconut oil with my Kitchen Aid stand mixer and all it does is basically liquify it. It doesn’t get light and fluffy at all. My home is kept at 68 degrees so I know the temperature wasn’t an issue. Also, the coconut oil was solid. It wasn’t even soft!

    Does anyone have any ideas? I really don’t want to go to the expense of buying the other ingredients if I’m going to end up throwing it out.

    Thanks!

    1. Betsy Avatar

      Kalena, I thought I was having the same problem. Made this using 1 cup of shea butter, 1/2 cup of coconut oil, and 1/4 cup grapeseed oil. Chilled it for an hour, still liquid. Chilled it for another hour and finally started hardening up. Once in a semi-hard state I used a hand blender and whipped it up just fine.

  10. Alicia Avatar

    5 stars
    Just made this today. The scents I used were lavender and vanilla. It turned out amazing and smells so yummy!! Thanks for yet another great recipe Katie 🙂

  11. Corinne Fox Avatar
    Corinne Fox

    I followed the recipe verbatim, and was wondering if I could add vitamin e oil and if so how much?

  12. Joy Avatar

    When do you add EO? It never says when. What if I do not have a hand mixer, will a fork/spoon do?

  13. Kim Avatar

    Do you use the shea, cocoa, and mango butter together and add the coconut oil and other oils at once, or do you use one butter and one oil. Also can you take out the coconut oil if someone is allergic will it still come out the same?

  14. misty Avatar

    i am looking for a face moisturizer for my daughter and i. i have been using a mixture of coconut oil, jojoba oil, argon oil and essential oils. i was wanting to make something more like your whipped butter. is this a super thick moisturizer or can it be used for the face? thanks!!!!!

    1. Nancy Avatar

      I use it on my face (and any dry areas on my body) before I go to bed and whenever my skin is feeling dry. It is greasy at first, but it absorbs pretty quickly. I’m really happy with the results. I’m in my late 50’s and I’m sure I’ve noticed diminished wrinkles and a ‘peaches and cream’ complexion since I’ve been using it. I don’t look 20, but my color is good and my skin feels great.

      I add German camomile, rose hip seed oil, sea buckthorn oil, essential rose oil, vitamin E, and I use a mixture of shea butter, cocoa butter, mango butter, sweet almond oil, jojoba oil, argan oil, castor oil, and organic extra-virgin olive oil.

      I don’t think I could find a better quality product for any amount of money, and I’m so pleased to know that all of the ingredients are safe and good for me. I can reuse the packaging too, so I’m not generating all that waste.

  15. Julie Avatar

    5 stars
    Quick question for you: I’d love to add all three butters that you’ve listed (cocoa, shea, mango). Would this recipe hurt if I added another 1/2 cup of butter?

    This is out of my soaping comfort zone lol, I don’t know the science behind it. If there was a bodybuttercalc.net I’d be on that.

  16. Kathy Sizemore Avatar
    Kathy Sizemore

    5 stars
    This recipe has all the ingrediants I would like to use to replicate a lotion bar that someone gave me. If I just added beeswax would that make this recipe solid enough to be a bar. How much beeswax should I start with? Thank you.

  17. Lindsey Avatar

    4 stars
    Hello everyone!

    I have made several of your products (I love them all!) but I’ve run into a problem I’m hoping someone can help me fix. When using shea butter and bees wax, I have a hard time cleaning the tools I’ve used – it’s a greasy mess! Does anyone have any suggestions on what I can use to clean my mixer, measuring cups, etc with? Anything will be of a HUGE help!

    Thanks 🙂

    1. Nancy J Jackson Avatar
      Nancy J Jackson

      Dawn dish soap & very hot water cleans any of my utensils used to make homemade lotion, deodorant, etc.

  18. Lisa Salter Avatar
    Lisa Salter

    I would grate it with a cheese grater or shave it off with a sharp knife or vegetable peeler. I’ve done it both ways when using solid cocoa butter or mango butter.

  19. Jennifer Avatar

    My Cocoa Butter is in a brick form …. how do i measure this for 1/2 cup? Do i melt it until it measures 1/2 cup melted liquid in my measuring cup? Or another way?

4.58 from 103 votes (63 ratings without comment)

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