Homemade Healing Salve

Katie Wells Avatar

Reading Time: 4 minutes

This post contains affiliate links.

Read my affiliate policy.

homemade healing salve
Wellness Mama » Blog » Natural Remedies » Homemade Healing Salve

Last week, within the span of one day, three of my kids needed a Band-Aid for some reason. With six kids who like to climb, jump, and live in their treehouse, this is a common occurrence. I decided to find a natural salve option to use instead of conventional ones like Neosporin.

How to Use a Healing Salve

I’m not a fan of Neosporin because it’s made with petroleum jelly. Plus there are plenty of natural options that work just as well.

My homemade healing salve (or “boo-boo lotion”, according to the kids) is helpful on cuts, bruises, stings, poison ivy, and skin irritations. It also helps with diaper rash and baby skin irritations. For cloth diapers be sure to line them with a disposable liner first.

This herbal healing salve is also great for eczema, scrapes, abrasions, and insect bites. And it’s moisturizing to dry skin and cuticles. If there’s a problem and it’s with your skin, this healing salve is likely to help.

Healing Salve Herbs

So how can one salve do so much? The healing herbs here are naturally antibiotic, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, and astringent. This makes it perfect for any herbalist’s first aid kit.

  • Echinacea – Antimicrobial, analgesic, and anti-inflammatory. Can help prevent infection from venomous snakes and insects from spreading. Good for burns. At risk in the wild so choose cultivated sources (or grow your own!).
  • Comfrey – Nicknamed bone-knit for its ability to heal broken bones so quickly. Stimulates tissue repair for fast healing. Used for sprains, swelling, and bruises, anti-inflammatory, antiseptic.
  • Plantain – Dubbed “Indian Band-Aid” by the Cherokee. Good for bites, stings, cuts, and scrapes, poison ivy, and sunburn. A plantain poultice helps draw out splinters and stingers. Stimulates collagen growth for faster wound healing.
  • Calendula – Anti-inflammatory, astringent (tightens loose tissues), antibacterial, antiviral, and antifungal. Used for cuts, burns, diaper rash, bites, sprains, bruises, rashes, sunburns, abrasions, and slow-healing wounds.
  • Yarrow – Helps restore stagnant or congested blood flow while also helping staunch bleeding. A vulnerary, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, astringent, and relieves pain.
  • Rosemary – Antiseptic, antibacterial, antifungal. Shows positive results against drug-resistant infections. Stimulates blood flow to the area, and eases muscle pain and inflamed joints. Also good for sores, bruises, wounds, eczema, and sprains.

Note on Comfrey

Because comfrey can heal skin so quickly it’s important to use it along with other herbs. You don’t want the skin to heal so fast that it seals infection in. By using antimicrobial herbs like rosemary and echinacea it helps prevent this issue.

Other Ingredients

You can also add some lavender essential oil or tea tree oil for extra skin benefits. Lavender is a natural antihistamine so it’s great for soothing itchy skin and bites. Tea tree is a potent anti-fungal and it also offers some soothing itch relief. You can use any skin-friendly blend of essential oils you prefer in this. Frankincense, chamomile, and helichrysum are some more options.

It’s easy to make and some of the ingredients even grow in your front yard during the summer One of the herbs I use is Plantain, which grows in most of the US and is great for the skin. You may also be able to find yarrow growing wild in your area. All of the above herbs are useful for lots of things and some can also be used internally or in food.

Almost any liquid oil will work in this recipe but I usually use olive oil. If you use coconut oil you may want to reduce the beeswax some or it can get too hard in cooler temperatures. Sunflower oil, almond oil, and grapeseed oil are more options.

Choosing Your Container

Salve goes well in metal tins or in a glass jar. I prefer the tins for easy travel and I don’t have to worry about a glass jar breaking. Lip balm tubes are another great option. These make it really portable and easy to apply.

homemade healing salve
Print
4.47 from 49 votes

Healing Salve Recipe

This healing salve is a natural alternative to antibiotic ointments. Great for all kinds of cuts, scrapes, rashes, and more.
Prep Time5 minutes
Active Time20 minutes
Infusing Time3 hours
Yield: 2 cups
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

Infuse the Herbs

  • Combine the olive oil and herbs in a jar with an airtight lid and leave for 3-4 weeks, shaking daily. This option doesn’t work well with coconut oil.
  • OR heat the olive oil (or other oil) and herbs over low heat in a double boiler for 3 hours (low heat!) until the oil is very green.
  • Another option is to put the herbs and oil in mason jars with lids. Place in a water bath in a crockpot set to low and let this infuse for at least 24 hours. Refill the water in the slow cooker as needed.

Make the Salve

  • Pour the oil through a cheesecloth and strain out the herbs. Squeeze the cheesecloth to get as much oil out as possible.
  • Compost the herbs.
  • Combine the infused oil and beeswax in a double boiler.
  • Heat over low heat, stirring occasionally, until the wax is melted.
  • Add essential oils if desired.
  • Pour into small tins, glass jars, or lip balm tubes and use as needed.

Notes

Store in a cool, dry place for up to 2 years.

Storage and Shelf Life

This healing salve lasts for a year or more when stored properly, so I make it in big batches. However, you can reduce the size if needed. I always keep this on hand when I’m gardening for skin irritations and bug bites. Be sure to store it in a cool, dry place away from light and heat.

Adding some Vitamin E helps extend the shelf-life and keeps the oils from going rancid as quickly.

Ever made your own salves? Share below!

This natural healing salve is a chemical free alternative to antibiotic ointments and has herbs to help prevent infection.
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

299 responses to “Homemade Healing Salve”

  1. Tiffany Avatar
    Tiffany

    5 stars
    This recipe is awesome! I have used this for diaper rash and takes it away. Mosquito bites and the next day they are a little pin holes. I have given some people a tube of this for skin conditions and they loved it! Thank you Katie for this recipe!

  2. Ann W. Avatar

    Will you please start selling all the recipes you have on your site? Body, household, everything. They will fly off the shelves. For years I’ve been wanting to make them, but with little kids all the time, and work, not 1 minute to make them. Important note: they MUST be called “Wellness Mama” – ie, “ Wellness Mama Lifestyle” or “Living” – a new name will have ZERO brand recognition. It will be starting from square 1 going uphill. Use your already strong brand name and build it. Every marketing effort will yield 100x the results with your existing strong brand. (I went to the top rated business school in the US and world, and I do marketing for the company that I own. I found your website when my first child was 1 year old. It’s great! What a great gift to mothers and people everywhere! These products are how to monetize on that. It will be a massive help to your audience. No matter if the products exist elsewhere- what people want to buy is your brand, so they don’t have to spend an hour elsewhere reading and analyzing ingredients and searching.)

      1. Elizabeth Avatar
        Elizabeth

        Hi there. You often offer a favorite commercial product for things you don’t have the time or inclination to make. Do you have a recommendation for type of ointment?

  3. Shelly Avatar

    I would really like to make this, but I wanted to know if the ratios of beeswax and oil described above make it a fairly soft salve? We’re heading into winter here in Montana and if there’s too much beeswax in the mix, the colder temps make it super hard and difficult to dig out of whatever container it is in. Does anyone have advice or experience with this?

  4. elizabeth Avatar
    elizabeth

    where do you buy your loose herbs? i can’t find anything out there except 1# bags from Frontier… if i buy from them, i then have “filed” herbs in my freezer for YEARS because i can’t get through it all.

  5. mary Avatar

    the Healing Salve:

    Can this be used on dry, split lips by someone who inexplixably keeps wearing a lip splitting lipstick? (cough)

  6. Roxana Patterson Avatar
    Roxana Patterson

    I love the Wellness momma herb infused salve.It has really helped me with my eczema.
    I am just now making my second batch.
    And it’s not that hard to make.
    And it’s really cheap!!!
    I recommend it to anyone.
    I have even posted a similar salve on my Facebook page.But, I think I got better results with yours.

    Thank you so much
    Roxana

  7. silvia Avatar

    I have eczema on the palm of one hand and on the sole of one foot . The usual cracking, thickened skin and itching.
    Tried a variety of cortisone creams after natural remedies didn’t work. Also tried Ungvita creme which used to be used for nappy rash.
    I have had best results with MooGoo which dairy farmers used to heal the cracked udders of their cows. In combination with an antihistamine some days, the skin seems to be healing. Here’s hoping it lasts. MooGoo is available in any chemist.

  8. Leanne Long Avatar
    Leanne Long

    I recently went camping and developed a rash that was very very tender. One of the things that I noticed about the salve was that on very tender skin, I needed a less solid salve! What I did at camp was melt down a little of the solid salve and add a bit of olive oil leaving it more of a soft gel like consistency. It worked like a charm. What was about to destroy my enjoyment of the trip was thwarted! So, my thought is to have both a soft salve and a more solid salve on hand.

  9. Janet Avatar

    Hello I was wondering if I could add sea buckthorn oil to this recipe? If so how much would you add? Thank you.

  10. Ambra Avatar

    I’m just wondering if anyone has actually infused these herbs into tallow? How did it turn out?
    Thanks!

    1. Cheryl Barden Avatar
      Cheryl Barden

      I don’t have olive oil or almond oil. Could I use coconut oil? Or are there properties in the olive oil that are healing? I realize the first al product would be thicker, and not liquidy.

  11. Shannon Carole Avatar
    Shannon Carole

    This is great! I added a about 10-20mg of an organic full spectrum CBD/coconut oil blend for some added healing benefits!

  12. Leslie Avatar

    I do make my own salve and use plantain, comfrey and calendula, all growing in my garden but have not tried the rosemary and yarrow. I do add St. John’s Wort, also growing in my garden and self heal/heal all as well.

  13. Charlyanne Avatar
    Charlyanne

    I love this sight??
    I have been doing a lot of research and this is very helpful!
    P.S I very much respect your policy 🙂

  14. Tiffany Korrigan Avatar
    Tiffany Korrigan

    I made a few tins of this for my family and to take on my attempted Appalachian trail thru-hike. This stuff is amazing! I was giving it out to everyone that had bites and one person that had blisters on his heels that had ripped open. It was very obvious that it caused these things to heal faster than relying on the body alone to do it. I ended up giving my tin away when I got off the trail after 450 miles so they would have it to use until the end. I still use it now on pretty much every scratch, cut, bite and burn I get.

  15. Wendy Avatar

    Hello, I’m going to make this salve today. I have a bag of powdered comfrey leaf. Can I throw a spoonful of that into the salve without getting mold or other bad things growing in the salve? I’m too much in a hurry to put it in oil.

  16. Celeste Avatar

    Hi. Any recommendations on products like your healing salve that I don’t have to make myself? I’m tired of researching and always finding an ingredient I don’t consider healthy.

  17. Bethani Avatar

    Just wondering how long the dried herbs will last. I have some from when I started making this a few years ago and I’m just wondering if they’ll still be as potent. Thank you!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating