Homemade Baby Balm Skin Cream Recipe

Katie Wells Avatar

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Homemade baby balm recipe with all natural ingredients
Wellness Mama » Blog » Motherhood » Homemade Baby Balm Skin Cream Recipe

When I was pregnant with my first child, I was given literally 11 bottles of baby lotion by friends and relatives. The smell reminded me of my own childhood and I loved that it was a lotion specially formulated for baby. I figured all of the ingredients must be natural and safe since it was for babies after all… and then I actually read the ingredients.

What’s in Baby Lotion?

I wondered why things like propylene glycol, parabens, artificial fragrances, synthetic waxes, and petroleum-based oils were considered safe for children. Turns out, they aren’t considered safe for children and the products I’d been given had a hazard rating of 5-6 on the EWG website and had “moderate risk of allergies and immunotoxicity as well as reproductive and developmental toxins.

I definitely wasn’t going to put that on my baby, so I started looking for natural options. I found some great ones, but also found out that most of them were pretty expensive.

Baby Balm Skin Cream Recipe

I decided to try to make my own from all natural, food safe ingredients and this ended up being less expensive for me anyway since I had many of these ingredients on hand for my homemade lotion bars and other homemade beauty products.

Choosing Natural Ingredients

Instead of propylene glycol, parabens and synthetic ingredients, I wanted to find all-natural ingredients to put on my baby’s skin and I wanted them to even be safe enough to eat!

I decided to use:

I loved that this recipe is completely oil-based with shelf stable ingredients. Since no liquid is added, it has an indefinite shelf life and will last for months or years. It takes a few minutes to absorb in to skin and only a tiny bit is needed. I’ve had friends say that this was incredibly helpful for eczema and skin problems as well.

Baby Balm Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup cocoa butter (or 32 cocoa butter wafers)
  • 1/4 cup shea butter
  • 2 Tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 Tablespoon castor oil
  • Essential oils of choice. I used 15 drops each of Frankincense, Myrrh, Chamomile and Rose.

Baby Balm Instructions

  1. Heat all ingredients (except essential oils) in a double boiler or in a glass jar or bowl over a small pan of boiling water.
  2. Stir carefully until melted.
  3. Remove from heat and add essential oils if using.
  4. Pour in to a glass jar for storage.
  5. Use a small amount as needed for baby’s skin (or adult skin)

What did you use on your little ones? Ever made your own? Share below!
This natural homemade baby balm combines skin nourishing cocoa butter, shea butter, olive oil and castor oil with essential oils for a baby safe lotion.

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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

138 responses to “Homemade Baby Balm Skin Cream Recipe”

  1. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    I too am not enjoying the smell of cocoa butter. Can I replace it with coconut oil or would more shea butter be better? I see the question a few times, but no answer.
    Thanks so much. This blog is amazing!

  2. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    I am not sure what I did wrong, but mine is liquid, it never solidified. I just placed it in the fridge. Any ideas of what I did wrong or caused it to be this way?

  3. Alicia Avatar

    Hi Katie, I was wondering if I could use roman chamomile in the place of the blue chamomile? Does it change the cream much?

  4. Nella Avatar

    Hi!
    I was wondering if this is gentle enough to be used on the face.
    Haven’t seen a response to previous questions.

    Thanks.

  5. Maher Avatar

    Hi there! I made this lotion ($80.00 later after a trip to wholefoods 😉 and it literally smells like a batch of brownies (from the cocoa butter)…any recommendations on how to make this smell more like a skin product than an edible dessert? 😉 Also, mine has solidified and would have to be scraped and melted each time I were to use it…i was hoping for something easier, after all, what mama has time to melt after giving baby a tubby.?. could use some input. Thanks so much! ox

    1. Nicole Avatar

      I’ve had to stop using cocoa butter completely because I can’t stand my cosmetics smelling like chocolate, and I’ve been utterly unable to cover up the scent with essential oils. If I were you, I would replace the cocoa butter with either more shea butter, mango butter, or tallow (I’ve never used that personally but I read that it is amazing for skin. I like shea and mango both).

      As for the consistency, you can re-melt it and add more of a liquid oil like olive, jojoba, apricot kernel, almond, etc. Alternatively, once you scrape a tiny bit out, it should just start melting on contact with your boo boo’s skin so you really don’t have to melt it when you are putting it on.

    2. Stephanie Avatar
      Stephanie

      You can use refined cocoa butter, it’s white in color and doesn’t have the cocoa scent. I buy mine on wholesalesuppliesplus.com. Hope this helps!

  6. Vijay Avatar

    Hi Katie,
    Thanks for the wonderful post, how do you get the greenish color? i used the exact same ingredients except the chamomile and it has buttery color.

    Thanks

  7. Elena Avatar

    Hi all,

    What do you think, may I add an aloe gel without changing a consistency?

    Thank you in advance.

    ES

  8. Jessica Avatar

    Hi- so excited to try this lotion. I noticed my castor oil bottle says not to use on broken or skin w/ a rash. I plan to use this balm on my daughter who has mild eczema. Has anyone ever used this recipe w/ the castor oil on eczema? Thanks! Jess

  9. rabab Avatar

    Hi Katie. I love your blog. Can I substitute coconut oil in place of olive oil?

  10. norma Avatar

    where did you get the little glass jars that you can write on the lids?

    Thanks! Norma

  11. Deanna Marsingill Avatar
    Deanna Marsingill

    I was just wondering could you swap cocoa butter for coconut oil and add bees wax?

  12. Jennifer Avatar

    Lately, I’ve been looking for a good recipe for homemade face cream. I have been having some eczema-related issues lately and a recipe like this sounds like it might be helpful! Two things: would you recommend this as a face cream and, if I wanted to add magnesium oil, how much would you recommend?

    As always, thank you for your amazing recipes!

  13. Dan Avatar

    My daughter recommended your blog I find it very good. I am writing to recommend that you research DMSO which is one of the best anti inflammatory’s around. All skin problems have an inflammatory component. It also aids in absorption being using for that purpose in many other human body applications. It is however controversial with our gov’t agencies. Have a nice day.

  14. Diana Avatar

    I so want to make this, but I do not have the means to buy Frankincense, Myrrh and Rose.

    I have these EO: Lavender, clove, peppermint, lemon, orange, rosemary, melaleuca, and Roman chamomile.

    what combo can I use?

    thank you!!!

    Diana

  15. Heather Avatar

    This looks fantastic. I use essential oils quite often and wonder how the dilution ration for the oils works out. I’ve recently been made aware of how important it is to dilute them properly. Would this be a good hand lotion as well? I work with money all day long and my hands are always dry!

    1. Katie Avatar

      The dilution rate for this is 1.8% which is too high in my opinion. I would drop it down to .5 or 1% depending on if he baby is older. .5% would require 7-8 drops of each oil for a total of 28-32 drops to the 33 teaspoons (165 ml or 5.5 oz carrier oil). I would also recommend keeping this is a dark jar if you want it to keep for a long time (years).

  16. Sonja Avatar

    Hi Katie,

    I just love this cream, too, but just like Laura’s, mine turned out sort of grainy. The little grains melt away on the skin, but do you have an idea why they occur in the first place or what we could do against it? I love it anyway, but it would be perfect without.

    I’ve just made it for the second time (first time was grainy, too). I made a bit more of it this time (added about 40% more olive oil so it is less solid) and filled it into small glass containers, then I scented each one individually. I used lavendar, rose, orange and chamomilla in different combinations (they all go very well with the coacoa scent). My favourite is rose-orange, but really they all smell incredibly good to me. I think I’ll make some more of these as christmas gifts, maybe I’ll try some vanilla extract essential oil with (or without) the others this time.

    My 2-year-old son really likes this cream; he has rather bad eczema and usually doesn’t like to have any cream applied to his skin but he specifically asks for “butter. cream.” now.

    Love your website, really; thank you for being WellnessMama, you are an invaluable resource to me.

    1. kathy Avatar

      The graininess probably came from the shea butter. Check the texture of the shea butter (or even mango butter) before you use it–my guess is that is feels a bit grainy in its original container. Some batches are like that. What you can do is take some of the shea butter and melt it in a double boiler all by itself. Heat till it melts and bring temperature to about 170 degrees (you need a thermometer). Keep it at that heat for about 10 minutes, then pour it into a shallow container and cool quickly (refrigerator). Some oil suppliers tell you not to heat your shea butter like this, but it’s the only way I’ve found I can eliminate graininess when I get a batch like that.

  17. adria Avatar

    Katie-
    Can this balm be used on the face daily? I am always nervous to put something too heavy or pore-blocking on my dd’s face but it’s so dry! Thanks in advance!

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