Easy-to-Make Natural Liquid Dish Soap

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How to make your own natural dishwashing soap
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I’ve managed to tackle homemade laundry detergent, but homemade liquid dish soap for handwashing dishes has been on my DIY list for a long time. Making a natural dishwashing soap that works and is the right consistency can be tricky. Fortunately this version is natural, easy, and it really works!

It’s not difficult to pick up a natural dishwashing soap at your local supermarket, or even on Amazon. However, even some of the so-called natural ones have a laundry list of ingredients that I’m not so thrilled about. Plus, many of them don’t work nearly as well as advertised. And of course, there’s always the issue of cost. With a fairly large family to clean up after, dish soap doesn’t last for too long around here (especially when the kids are “helping” with the dishes).

Why Green Cleaners Don’t Always Work

I love my homemade cleaners, but they’re not without their downsides. I chronicle my ups and downs with DIY green cleaners over the years in this post.

Many recipes call for vinegar (powerful, but I can’t stand the smell) or Borax, which is controversial. I also just don’t have the time I used to (because kids, work, and life!). I still make natural cleaners when I can, but have found a few store-bought options like the Sal Suds featured in this recipe.

Still, I wanted to try my hand at making liquid dish soap for the reasons listed above, but most recipes I had tried in the past (not all though) fell flat. A lot of DIY recipes call for castile soap, which is great for so many things, but doesn’t have quite the same “oomph” as store-bought dish soap. For those who have hard water, castile soap can sometimes leave a film on glassware.

To get extra degreasing power, many recipes combine vinegar with the castile soap, but that doesn’t work so well either. The vinegar unsaponifies the soap, which is a fancy way of saying that the soap is no longer soap and doesn’t clean. Not something I want to use to wash dishes!

An Effective Natural Liquid Dish Soap

This dish soap recipe relies on Sal Suds instead. It’s a concentrated natural cleaner that’s produced by the Bronner family, the same company I buy my Bronner’s castile soap from. Both cleansers are equally safe and effective, but for the purpose of this recipe, the Sal Suds seems to work better.

Greasy dishes can be difficult to clean, so there’s also washing soda in this recipe to give it an extra degreasing boost. Washing soda is a staple in our home and goes into several of my homemade cleaning recipes. (This is not the same thing as baking soda, but baking soda can be baked in the oven to make washing soda.)

Conventional brands rely on synthetic thickeners to adjust the consistency, so natural dishwashing soap is often on the thinner side. There is an easy natural solution, though: plain table or kosher salt. (Mineral-rich sea salt and Himalayan salt are ideal for consumption because of their extra minerals, but the minerals interfere with cleaning power when it comes to soap.)

Clean and Fresh Essential Oils

I’ve used citrus oils here for their fresh, clean scent and antimicrobial properties. Lemon essential oil is a potent antibacterial and helps cut through grease. Grapefruit is also an antibacterial and antifungal disinfectant, and lifts the mood.

It’s possible to add almost any essential oil to this recipe, including lavender, sweet orange, peppermint, and eucalyptus. The Sal Suds cleaner in the recipe already has fir and spruce essential oil, so it’s best to pick an essential oil that will blend well with the pine scent. The additional essential oil can also be omitted if desired.

Natural Liquid Dish Soap Recipe

There are a lot of homemade liquid dish soap recipes you can find online, but I’ve found this one to work better than all the others.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. In a small pot heat the water and salt, stirring frequently until everything is completely dissolved. Remove the pot from the heat and pour the contents into a small bowl. Set the salt mixture aside. I used kosher salt and it wouldn’t completely dissolve, so I just strained the residual salt pieces out.
  2. Add the washing soda and 1 and 1/3 distilled water to the pot and heat just until dissolved.
  3. Add the Sal Suds, washing soda and water, and essential oils to a dish soap dispenser. If your container has a small opening, then it works best to mix this in a glass mason jar.
  4. Add 1 tablespoons of the salt water to the soap and stir. It will turn cloudy and thicken. Add another tablespoon of salt water mixture if you want it thicker. Keep in mind that it may thicken more over time.
  5. Pour the mixture into a soap dispenser.

Note: Over time this liquid dish soap may thicken a little too much. If this happens, add a little more water until it is the desired consistency again.

Ever tried making your own liquid dish soap? How’d it turn out? Share your experiences below!

How to Make Natural dish washing soap

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

72 responses to “Easy-to-Make Natural Liquid Dish Soap”

  1. Alicia Avatar

    The first step is to add water and the salt in a pot and wait until it’s dissolved. Is this the 1 1/3 cups of distilled water or is there another amount of water I’m adding to this part then adding the distilled water with the sal suds later? How much water is in this total

  2. Mantis Avatar

    Hello Wellness Mama,
    Im very pleased to have read your pages & recipes for home-made natural dish & laundry soap. For the record, I didn’t stumble onto your site but in fact, I was searching for these. My main motivation for this is: I am on an environmental and self-awareness mission to not only rid my home of every speck of plastic, but to NEVER purchase anything contsisting of plastic whatsoever, forever…and ever! The quandry I have with the dish doap recipe is the Sal Suds is in liquid form in a plastic bottle. Can you make an alternative recommendation here or is this the end of the line?
    Thank you!

  3. Lynn Avatar

    I can’t find Sal suds in my country. What alternative can I use?

  4. Janet Avatar

    Oops. Sorry for asking a question you already answered. Didn’t see the comments at the bottom of the post.

  5. Janet Avatar

    Sodium Lauryl Sulfate is the second ingredient in Sals Suds. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I believe that is an ingredient that you strongly recommend avoiding. Am I confusing this with something else? Did a search on your website, but could not find anything else about it. Thanks!

  6. Kelly Avatar

    What happens if you don’t use distilled water? I’m trying to avoid buying anything packaged in plastic to make this recipe.

    Also, I tried another recipe from Dr. Axe’s website but it turned into a solid when I was done. It still works but I have to scoop it! I was wondering if you’ve tried this recipe yourself and had success. Any tips and tricks in the cooking process?

  7. Theresa Avatar

    I am confused on the recipe for homemade natural liquid dishwashing soap. Am I to have two seperate waters or do I only use the 1 1/3 cup of my salt water or do I use another cup of just the distilled water and then only add the TBS/TSP salt water then mix. Thank you.

  8. Jessica Avatar

    Is there any way for this recipe to stay at the thickened liquid state instead of solidifying the next day and being all curdled and clumpy? It still works but would be so nice to find a recipe that stayed fluid.

  9. Donel Rourke Avatar
    Donel Rourke

    Great tips but I don’t have time to make non-toxic cleaners so I just buy them from Melaleuca. Has anyone else tried them? I also heard Norwex products work, but have not tried yet. Not saying these recipes don’t work, but for me, I need things as easy as possible.

  10. Jill Avatar

    Will this dish soap work in a built-in dish soap pump (that would be installed with the sink into the counter/or sink)?

  11. Cara Avatar

    Hi, I was wondering what the benefit of the salt is to the mixture? Is that what is used as the thickening agent? I have seen similar recipes online that don’t use salt or washing soda. Thanks!

  12. swetha Avatar

    I have a query, a 32oz sal sud will make how much quantity & lasts for how many days

  13. Mick Avatar

    I already work 60 hours a week for 10 months of the year so when I find the time to make laundry detergent, shampoo, etc. I make it in bulk like 10 gal of liquid laundry detergent and 2 gallons of shampoo, etc. Other than needing a little water to thin it down if it sat too long, is there any other reason that you may know of that I couldn’t make this by the gallon? Thanks!

  14. Jackie Avatar

    Katie, I apologize for asking a question you already answered. I thought I scrolled to the bottom of the article where the comments are located and I did not see any comments. However, after I posted my comment, all of the other comments appeared. Thank you so much for addressing this concern regarding SLS.

  15. Jackie Avatar

    Katie, I purchased all of the ingredients for this dish soap and when I received the Sal Suds, I read sodium lauryl sulfate within the ingredient list. Have they changed the formula since you created this recipe? Is there another product you would recommend in place of the Sal Suds?

    I cannot find a safe dish soap that truly cuts through grease. I was hopeful yours was the answer. 🙂

    Thank you, Katie!

  16. Amy Avatar

    My daughter followed this recipe to use in a science experiment where she compared this homemade dish soap with a major store bought brand and a store bought natural brand. Your recipe performed best in the experiment! Now she wants to do a price comparison but we did not measure the yield of the recipe. Do you happen to know how many ounces of dish soap this makes?

  17. shelley Avatar

    Thanks for your recipe. I am excited to try it. Also thanks for the added information and the clarification with the difference between SLS and sodium laureth sulfate. I didn’t know that was a common mistake but I can see it happens a lot.

  18. Gabriela Avatar

    I’ve using sal suds for a long time for laundry, DIY cleaners and dish liquid soap and it’s great!
    True it can be irritant for the skin due to the SLS if you wash your dishes by hand (I learned the hard way), but using gloves will solve the problem.

    Most of the comments I read, said that they won’t use sal suds because of the SLS, which is fine if they decide not to, but what are the others alternatives out there that are “safe” to use? Even the ones that say “natural dish liquid soaps”, most of them contain ingredients that we don’t even know what they are, they also contain SLS (like this one that the EWG rated “A” ( https://www.ewg.org/guides/cleaners/2541-biokleenNaturalDishLiquidCitrusEssence ), and which is a great dishwashing soap ) and they may also even contain Sodium laureth Sulfate, which is the ingredient we don’t want to come across to. So, what is left? Using the “regular” dishwashing liquids? I didn’t think so either.

    When we prepare our own dish liquid and other cleaning products by ourselves, at least we know what we are adding inside the bottle. But that is just my opinion.

    Talking about the preparation, I think it is a great idea to add a thickening agent (I use guar gum by the way, but I am going to try the salt) because just watering down the sal suds, even though they are already thick, make the soap very liquid and a lot goes to waste, unless one just add a few drops to a sink full of water and just clean our dishes there.

    Thank you Katie
    Warm regards.

    1. Robert Avatar

      If you want other choices based on SLS, there’s Clorox Green Works and Mrs. Meyer’s Clean Day, both of which disclose their ingredients as if they were cosmetics. I was disappointed when Clorox Green Works got rid of its laureth sulfate, because I LIKE ethoxylates and am certainly not afraid of them just because of slight contamination with a weak probable carcinogen. (All the strong carcinogens have long since been determined, so we’re left finding weaker and less significant ones.)

      If you want to know the ingredients of a dishwashing detergent, find one that comes in a version that’s also labeled as antibacterial hand soap, because they have to disclose their ingredients as a cosmetic. You can then assume the non-antibacterial version of that brand is the same, just without that active ingredient. Trouble is, with triclosan no longer generally recognized as effective in that role, I don’t know whether any dish liquids are still labeling themselves as antibacterial hand soaps. Or you can buy shampoo; the simple stuff (not the fancy) sold in jugs for salon use is probably as cheap as dish detergent.

      Or you can just buy SLS and make your own. I believe Procter and Gamble still sells Orvus brand SLS in retail amounts, as paste, solution, and powder. It’s commonly used as livestock shampoo. Equex is another such brand, pitched for horses.

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