7 Natural Remedies for Eczema

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Natural Remedies for Eczema
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I get quite a few questions about skin problems like eczema and psoriasis. I’m not a dermatologist by any means, but I have had some personal experience with eczema (in myself and my family) and have found some natural remedies that have helped us so I wanted to share. As always, ask your own doc and specialists before trying anything!

The Diet Connection With Eczema

I feel it is important to note that all of the topical remedies in the world didn’t help us until we addressed the underlying problem, in our case: diet and lifestyle factors that were causing/contributing to eczema.

Just as you can’t out supplement a bad diet in other areas, topical remedies don’t address the underlying problem.

Certainly, eczema and other skin issues are complex conditions with a potential variety of causes, but there do seem to be some common things that help (both dietary and other).

My Son’s Eczema (& What We Tried)

In our family, our son struggled with eczema off and on for a long time. He was born via c-section (due to placenta previa) and was given antibiotics and steroids as soon as he was born. This led to problems with his gut bacteria, some learning delays, and some skin/digestive problems.

We started the GAPS program (find all the details here) combined with a pretty intensive supplement and lifestyle change for him and finally started to see improvement.

If you haven’t heard of it, GAPS is an intensive diet that focuses on gut-healing foods like bone broth (traditionally prepared and long-simmered so it’s gelatin-rich) and many healthy fats and nutrient sources we typically don’t get enough of in our modern diets. It also includes a fair amount of fermented vegetables, making their nutrients more accessible to those with impaired digestive systems and helping the overall healing process.

How to Try a GAPS Diet

Depending on the severity of the patient, one either begins with or works up to the Introduction Diet, which is the strictest part of the protocol, focused on intensive healing. There are then stages as the person begins to introduce other foods. The most difficult factor of the GAPS diet is that in order to be effective, especially in the beginning, one must be 100% compliant. This means a lot of preparing foods at home, as practically any foods prepared by someone not familiar with the protocol will have things that can aggravate the gut.

For us, it meant consuming more homemade broth and soups (or ones from a quality source) as well as removing certain foods including gluten and casein (wheat and dairy). We also found that it was helpful to avoid food dyes and any processed ingredients, though this was as much from a behavior perspective as a skin one.

If you or a family member struggle with skin problems, allergies or behavior struggles, I’d definitely recommend at least checking out the book Gut and Psychology Syndrome to see if the protocol would be helpful for you.

Natural Remedies for Eczema

Of course, once diet has been addressed, there are some things that can be used topically that may speed healing or limit discomfort during the healing time. For us, these things were helpful:

1. Coconut Oil

Seven Natural Remedies for Eczema

We use coconut oil for skin, hair, teeth, and even soap making at our house! It is also great for eczema (as long as the person isn’t allergic/intolerant… I found this out the hard way when I took this genetic test and found out I don’t tolerate it well as a food.)

I’ve found that a thin layer of coconut oil or a coconut oil lotion bar helps cool eczema itching and pain.

For those sensitive to coconut oil, these hypoallergenic lotion bars work really well too.

2. Sea Salt Magnesium Spray

For eczema that is wet/oozing, I’ve found that drying it works better than trying to moisturize it. I’ve often heard people with skin problems say that they felt better at the beach, and it makes sense between the vitamin D from the sun and the magnesium and the minerals in the salt water.

For those who don’t live near the ocean, this homemade magnesium salt spray can help achieve some of the same benefits at home.

3. Omega-3 Oils (While Limiting Omega-6)

This natural eczema remedy may not provide immediate relief but may help get at the root cause. Certain research as recently as 2016 found that consuming high levels of omega-3 (that is, more than you would get from occasionally eating fish), especially at an early age may reduce the risk and severity of eczema. This is due to the DHA and EPA fatty acids found in fish.

While some studies suggest that more research is needed to pinpoint the degree of effectiveness,  it seems that avoiding inflammatory omega-6 oils (found in many processed foods and vegetable oils) while increasing omega-3 sources from fish oil and consumption of fish had a positive effect on eczema in the studies listed below.

Unfortunately, studies suggest eating fish alone probably isn’t enough to get therapeutic benefits (though we do incorporate low-mercury seafood often). I find I get the most benefit when I take a fish oil supplement. I get the most benefit from these capsules due to the quality and ratio of omega-3 to omega-6. This company makes a chewable supplement for kids as well.

4. Magnesium Baths

For some people with eczema, soaking in water makes it worse. For those who tolerate it, magnesium baths and other types of detox baths can be helpful in skin healing.

I regularly add a cup of Epsom salts or magnesium flakes and a few tablespoons of Himalayan salt to my kids’ baths. When I have the time, I take relaxing baths in this mixture also.

When I can’t take the time for a bath, magnesium oil also helps. Amazingly, I notice the benefits of transdermal magnesium on the skin much more quickly than when I take internal forms of magnesium.

My favorite magnesium bath recipe is:

These three detox bath recipes are also all great if the person can handle warm water.

5. Probiotics

Research on whether probiotics help eczema is mixed. A 2018 review found probiotics had “little to no effect” on eczema symptoms, although no adverse effects were noted either. This article at NationalEczema.org reviews many of the existing studies and concludes that “probiotics are not effective for the treatment of established atopic dermatitis but may be helpful in prevention.” It also points out that the current body of research may not be conclusive since the type of probiotic strain seems to matter greatly.

I know that probiotics seemed to help my son (high quality probiotics are an important part of the GAPS diet). I’m also constantly seeing more research on the many ways that gut bacteria influence our health, and I can’t believe that skin health is any exception. Could there be a link?

Probiotics and probiotic-rich foods are an element that is increasingly missing in the modern diet as we moved away from traditional food preparations like fermentation. (Find out how to bring back those methods here.) We also make an effort to wash our hands and our food (a good thing with the chemicals on them these days) which also wash off the beneficial soil-borne micro-organisms that provide friendly bacteria to the gut.

I’ve also found that the probiotic strains in those foods were not enough for us. We all now take Probiotics and have seen dramatic improvements in skin and digestive health.

6. Gelatin-Rich Foods

I’ve mentioned that bone broth was an important part of a healing diet for us, and this was partially because of its high gelatin content. Gelatin helps soothe the gut and the collagen it contains is also great for hair, skin, and nail health.

To make broth, you basically save the carcass when you roast a chicken, duck, turkey, or goose and follow these steps. Ideally, the animal lived its life outdoors eating its natural food. This means you’re looking for bones from grass-fed cattle or bison, pastured poultry, or wild-caught fish. Since you’ll be extracting the minerals and drinking them in concentrated form, you want to make sure that the animal was as healthy as possible.

There are several places to find good bones for stock or tallow (rendered fat) from healthy animals:

  • From a local butcher, especially one who butchers the whole animal
  • From local farmers who raise grass-fed animals (ask around at your local farmer’s market)
  • Order online from companies like Butcher Box or US Wellness Meats
  • I use grass-fed tallow when cooking or in soaps. I get mine at a discount from Thrive Market.

For those who aren’t ready to jump into having a pot of boiling bones on the stove, there is now a great pre-made shelf-stable bone broth available and I always keep this stocked in my pantry.

I also use gelatin in recipes like:

I also stir powdered collagen into smoothies, since this form of gelatin doesn’t clump in cold water.

7. Homemade Healing Salve

For scars or blisters from eczema that take longer to heal, a homemade healing salve was helpful for us. Our son would get eczema on his face before we were able to heal his gut and we are still working on reversing the scars from that. One thing that is helping is this homemade healing salve.

My homemade healing salve (or “boo-boo lotion”, according to the kids) is helpful on eczema as well as: cuts, bruises, stings, poison ivy, and skin irritations. It also helps diaper rash and baby skin irritations- just don’t use with cloth diapers or line them first!

A Note About Infant Eczema

Eczema isn’t a problem just because it causes pain and itching. In babies, it can be a risk factor for other problems. I didn’t realize this when we were figuring out my son’s issues, but according to newer research babies with eczema have a 1 in 3 chance of developing a food allergy later in life. In fact, they are 11 times more likely to develop a peanut allergy by their first birthday compared to infants without eczema.

It’s also important to note that symptoms of eczema often occur earlier than a food allergy, furthering the importance of food allergy prevention for babies with eczema.

Due to this research and other landmark clinical trials such as the LEAP trial, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) now recommend introducing allergenic foods early and often — specifically for infants with eczema — to reduce their risk of developing a food allergy. (I explain more in this post.)

Helpful Eczema Resources

I vividly remember how terrible it was to watch my son suffer through his eczema and I know the pain of not being able to take away the pain/itching a child experiences. The book The Eczema Cure is a very thorough resource and provides answers when it feels like you’ve tried everything else.

For more, don’t miss this podcast interview with Jennifer Fugo, an expert on all things eczema (both personally and professionally), this one with Dr. Nelli Gluzman, and Getting Rid of Eczema for Good With Dr. Ana-Maria Temple.

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Scott Soerries, MD, Family Physician and Medical Director of SteadyMD. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor.

Have you ever struggled with eczema or skin problems? What helped you? Share below!

Eczema can be unbearable, especially for children. Diet is important but these natural remedies can help get rid of it once and for all!
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

347 responses to “7 Natural Remedies for Eczema”

  1. Ashly Avatar

    I know this is an old post, but wanted to share what helped me. I tried to cut different things out of my diet from time to time, but it never helped. But After I switched to a mostly organic diet, my eczema disappeared for the first time since it appeared. It’s been gone for about a year now 🙂

  2. Ashanti Simpson Avatar
    Ashanti Simpson

    My allergy doctor prescribed me a cream called triamcinolone/lct/libriderm . This cream works fast ! You rub it in like lotion on the areas & in 1-2 months it is gone . Depends on how bad you have it & how much you use it . I never thought my eczema would clear up but it did . Now I enjoy showing my arms ! Also what helped me was switching my laundry detergent to the ALL hypoallergenic free of perfumes & dyes . I hope this helps someone

  3. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    Question: I am going to make the eczema cream for my son to use. However he is allergic to nuts among other things. Do you think I should substitute the shea butter or any of the other ingredients or will the shea butter be ok?

    Thank you!!

  4. xingu Avatar

    I would suggest water fast. I had relentless eczema and all on my face and neck — isn’t it that great? It flared up so much that I looked terrible. I took advice from a friend who has been dealing with this for a long time. She told me that she does water fast. So I did water fast. For 10 days! it wasn’t easy, but MY GOD was the result ASTONISHING!!! I probably could have done a longer fast, but the timing didn’t allow for that. Anyway, throughout the 10-day fast, the eczema healed about 75%. Then over the next few weeks, it continued to heal and vastly reducing the scar. Post water fast, my advice would be to eat clean. Stay away from the known food offenders as much as possible (though if you fall off the wagon, it’s OK): gluten, dairy, processed foods, anything chemical on your skin or eaten. This, by far, was THE most effective method I have used and I searched and searched for an answer for YEARS. May it be helpful to you.

  5. Siupolu Sarwara Avatar
    Siupolu Sarwara

    Hi there
    My 2 year old has a flaky type of eczema and he’s forever scratching. We were given Hydrocortisone and Micreme and we have yet to see any good progress, it’s making his skin worse. We bathe him twice a day and sometimes 3 4 times a day. Our doc has only prescribed us with Pamol and the endless visits to the doctors is frustrating not only for him but for us aswell. His diet is good, no foods with tomato sauce and we’ve limited the amount of dairy products he has a week but just lastnight, he was in so much agony, he scratched til he bleed. I’ve noticed it now on the top of his head and around his ears but his arms, hands and behind his knees are the worse parts. I’m in desperate need of help and really need my poor son to have one night of proper sleep without the irritation of scratching

  6. Karen Avatar

    How long did it took for your son to completely heal from eczema? How long till a 100% clear skin? We are entering 9 months into only fruits-veggies-meat diet for my son, 8 months of eliminating trigger foods and our ownnatural protocol. I just now learned more veggies in the nightshade family which flares his skin. We do bone broth, though on and off (hard to source grassfed cows here), cod liver oil, probiotic, digestive enzyme, epsum salt, apple cider vinegar baths, now trying sea salt baths, sea spray. He drinks lots of veggie juice and Eats lots of green smoothies. In my assessment, his skin is 90% healed. I felt healing plateaued. I am getting impatient and weary. This week, I see some improvement on the 10% patches. His skin is so much better when he wakes up first thing in the morning. But come evening it turns red. Though not flaming red.

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      Is he consuming any eggs? These were a trigger for us for a while. I also found that sometimes stopping the probiotics for a while can help, or changing strains, as he seemed to plateau with certain strains. Is he getting enough healthy fats and have you also experimented with removing coconut?

      1. Karen Avatar

        He is not eating eggs. We finally got a schedule to have him checked by our natural health practitioner 2 mondays ago. And candida came back. Also he tested positive for parasite. She gave us organic whole food supplements to address candida and parasite. We also bought another strein of probiotic which we stopped since is more pricey. We are getting more significant healing progress after addressing candida and parasite plus the stronger strein of probiotic. We’re giving him more cod liver oil now. 2 tablespoon a day. And he always eats coconut oil before bed too. And flax seeds in his breakfast smoothie. Thank you for replying! Such a morale booste.

  7. brooke tempest Avatar
    brooke tempest

    I had broken out in an awful eczema rash on my hand, and all my normal products that I use haven’t been working at all. I tried Made from Earth’s Butter Beeswax Balm (I thought it was a lip balm, but its in a jar) and after using it for 3 days my eczema is clearing up already. I’ve never had such fast results in my life, and I’ve suffered with eczema since being a young child.

    It should help you out. I dont use it on my lips, but it works really well for eczema.

  8. Carrie Avatar

    My 12-year old daughter has been suffering eczema all her life, it was fairly mild and started just at the joint behind the elbow. It now almost touches her wrist, up her shoulders and under them, the eczema touches her chest everywhere and is even on her stomach. It continues on to her thighs. She uses Hydrocortisone and says it soothes the itching, but I recently learned that it’s terrible for her skin. Her face is fine because I buy Clarins skincare lotions, and face washes, but there is a mild case of it under her chin. She’s an average tween and wants to go off wearing t-shirts and shorts, but she came home crying once because people stared at her and made jokes about it. This is lowering her self esteem and she is always self conscious when wearing a swimsuit that shows her stomach and arms. It’s terrible for me and for her, she has a beautiful skinny body, but the eczema is keeping her from showing those beautiful arms and legs. Please help me! She doesn’t want any baths or detox!

  9. Sara Avatar

    I did what any ancient Christian Elder would do when my poor baby Grandson cried from the pain of full body excema. I prayed in the name of Jesus over him for the curse of skin disease to be broken and to be healed. He literally stopped crying the first time. I prayed again a second then third time. He is now glowing a typical healthy baby glow. Miracles still happen when all else fails.

  10. Rachel Avatar

    Hey guys, I know this forum is old but people still come back and comment so I thought I could share what worked for me and ask a question. Personally, I find if I can treat my allergies then my eczema is very good. When I am stressed out or forget to take allergy medicine, I tend to breakout in itchiness, wet eczema, and a rash that looks like many small bumps in whatever area I scratch. Recently it has been very good and calm, but recent stress and eating lentils I was allergic too brought it back all over my back itching like CRAZY. I suggest treating the root whatever it may be for you, allergies or diets. Also, does anyone get like a itchy wet neck after having the skin folded for a long period? Like I will be watching TV with my chin down laying and it starts feeling really itchy and then like oozing eczema. Would the salt spray help? Usually the next day it will turn really really dry and flaky. I always try to ice it when it turns wet. Any tips? Thanks!

  11. brett Avatar

    Hi all! I must say that I read a lot of the above information and it all really helped. I am not a doctor, but I will tell you what all helped me, based on the above comments… one thing I do know is, in my opinion, the saying “the cure to a problem lies in its source.” I know when the first time I had that dermatitis (or whatever it was). I was rooting a sewer line, and touched my face.. and from then on, in the place where I touched my face, It just came. By continually touching my face after that in the same areas, and under times of dryness in the air and stress, it would come back, to the same spots. That’s why I believe, in my own personal world, that it may originate as more of a fungus (at least some forms), or something you “catch”, rather than something inherited. I was sick of those flakes, so I attacked it will full force – I started with salt water, and organic coconut oil, and olive oil. Then I moved to jojoba oil and zinc sulfate and peppermint castile soap. But, the best I found (as in the above) was Tee tree oil. It is said to be a powerful anti-fungal oil. And, if I did “catch” that dermatitis, then it came from something, it lives and spreads much like something alive. Well, the oil has been working good so far. The main thing I recommend is do not touch those areas with your fingers! In the shower, with running water, its occasionally okay, but don’t use real soap. Oils from your hands can help irritate those areas. Also, this is a battle – every time I saw that famous flaky skin, I treated it with a layer of tea tree oil! Whatever it really is will try to survive, and keep coming up (at least a little bit). Show no mercy. Keep putting the smelly oil on any flakes of skin, and eventually it may take it out. Now, my skin is much better. I try not to stress, don’t touch those areas at all, and don’t give the flakes a chance to see the light of day. Hope this helps.

  12. Edward Avatar

    My daughter had eczema on her hands. We tried everything for her. Her hands were so chapped, red, and raw. I felt helpless as a parent seeing her suffer from being itchy, uncomfortable, and embarrassed by it. We tried a cream from the doctors, that didn’t work for her for long. The only thing that worked in clearing it up and preventing it from coming back was a lotion that has tea tree oil in it. Not sure if anyone else has tried tea tree oil, but it certainly worked for my daughter and I would recommend it.

  13. Nora Avatar

    I’ve had eczema since I was like 7 or 8, and used a cream from the doctor but I don’t know what it called, it went away for a while but came back worse, now I have it all over my arm and it’s starting to show on my face, what should I use?

  14. Sus Avatar

    To add to the discussion – I’ve had eczma from infancy – now I’m in my 50’s. It has vastly improved now, but I have been required to be gluten free, dairy free, no citrus, minimal tomato, no chilli spices etc. I have a latex allergy, and my skin improved when I stopped using rubber gloves. I use nitril gloves when preparing food because I react to potato, onion, and garlic. I still have dry skin, but the roughness has been eliminated. It’s a long road to discover what the triggers are, everyone is different, but improvements can be made. Using steroids to pull the condition under control, and using antibiotic steroids to reduce infection have their place in treatment, but not for longterm use, eventually other methods need to be found to prevent steroid damage to the skin.

  15. monicca Avatar
    monicca

    Hi WM, would you be able to suggest a bodywash recipe for eczema prone sensitive skin of a toddler .

  16. shannan Avatar

    One thing that is very important for eczema sufferers’ AVOID LANOLIN it is derived from Lambs Wool!!!! I’ve yet to meet anyone suffering from eczema who can wear wool (next to your skin:) surprisingly most doctors recommend products with lanolin and or lanolin alchohol (aquaphor anyone) they have no clue, but then how would the doc’s & drug co make any more money unless we unnecessarily suffer with the added insult of exposing ourselves and loved ones to harsh chemical.

  17. Andre Guvar Avatar
    Andre Guvar

    Hi,
    I am 23 years old (male) and for the past month and half I have been going through the worst deppression. On christmas day 2015 I noticed that I have a red bumpy circle on my leg which caused me to freak out that I had psoriasis (my mother caught it at 41). I thought I had it. A couple days later my whole body was itching from head to toe and I was noticed spots that would appear on my body. When I shower lots of bright red spots appear all over my body it gets really bad on my torso back and legs not much on my arms and feet though. MY primary doctor said it looks like pityrias Rosea and my dermatologist said its numular eczema looking it up the symptoms look exactly the same. I want to know which one I have. I am scared I am going to be on benadryl and prednisone for the rest of my life. someone help what should I do? I feel the doctors dont want to tell you the root cause of the problem. I am just shocked that it came out of nowhere. I cant even take a normal hot shower without red spots covering my entire body. I HATE IT! I feel I dont know my body anymore. I will say I use an african black soap by shea moisture called “eczema and psoriasis therapy” and eucerin and cetaphil lotion.

    1. Angie R. Avatar

      There is so much advice here. Start with the recommended diet changes. Eat tons of veggies! Avoid dairy, wheat, and most importantly sugar. Take a good probiotic. Try Sea Salt sprays. Coconut Oil or Shea Butter. Get rid of all unnatural products, hair, body, laundry. I like the Dr Bronners liquid soap. Drink lots of water. I’m sorry for what you are going thru! I get the battle. Don’t give up! Keep researching. If you need more direction find a natural Dr in your area to help guide you. You aren’t stuck with this, there is a cause, and therefor a cure. But it might take some time to figure it out. God Bless you!

  18. Asazii Avatar

    Has anyone had any experience dealing with plaque psoriasis? My grandmother has a pretty bad case on her foot. Doctors took over a year to diagnose and is now quite bad!! It is very painful for her to walk. I would like to know if anyone has a natural remedy cream that can be made. I have read extensively on the subject and there are many different things that can be used however I do not know where to start when it comes to making a cream.

    I am commenting on this post as it is the closest thing on the website I could find to the question I had…

    1. Theresa Avatar

      I have not dealt w plaque psoriasis but did have very dry scaly skin. I tried Dr Bonners Hemp oil peppermint liquid soap and within a few applications on a loofah my skin healed up. They sell it at Target, Walmart and drug stores. I use it all the time now and it keeps my skin from being itchy.

  19. Desiree keys Avatar
    Desiree keys

    I heard of the fermented cod liver oil being rancid or something and that it was causing health issues in many people?! Does anyone else know of anything else on this subject? Also, I know this probably sounds weird but I use burt’s bees diaper rash ointment on my sons eczema, it works wonders! Noticeable difference just after one application! You can buy it at target and I think that Walmart may carry it now. ?

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