What is a Lotion Bar? + A Basic Lotion Bar Recipe, 5 Ways (2024)

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Lotion bars are a wonderful, natural alternative to traditional lotions that are easy to make at home. I’m sharing my basic lotion bar recipe with you today, and 5 easy ways to customize it to make it your own.

Want to know a secret? This is the very same recipe I used when I sold my own products for several years. These little lotion bars were a customer favorite, and I could hardly make them fast enough!

What is a Lotion Bar?

A lotion bar is a solid, concentrated bar of moisturizing goodness. It is made of natural, nourishing oils and beeswax combined to make a body lotion that is in solid form.

Lotion bars are far more concentrated than a typical liquid lotion because they do not contain any water, and the handheld bars look like a bar of soap. Because they contain no water, lotion bars do not require any preservatives and are shelf stable for at least 6 months.

Why Should I Use a Lotion Bar?

There are lots of amazing reasons to skip traditional lotion and use lotion bars instead! Here are my top 5 reasons to use lotion bars:

  1. Lotion bars are made with completely natural ingredients and they are SO fabulous for your skin!
  2. Lotion bars are super concentrated because they contain no fillers, additives or preservatives – just the good stuff your skin needs.
  3. Lotion bars are extremely portable, especially if you store them in a metal tin like I do. They fit perfectly in a purse, diaper bar or car console for any dry skin emergency (but don’t leave them in the car during summer months – they melt!).
  4. Lotion bars are completely customizable if you make them yourself. With my lotion bar recipe you can use any scent you like and even customize the oils to meet your own skin’s needs.
  5. Lotion bars are inexpensive. A little goes a long way when you are using a lotion bar, so they are very cost effective.

How Do I Use a Lotion Bar?

It is easy to use a solid lotion bar! You simply rub it on your skin, and the heat from your body slowly melts it. I especially love them for dry feet and hands, but they can be used all over the body just like a traditional lotion.

I find lotion bars do not absorb as quickly as many traditional lotions, so I like to spend a little extra time rubbing it in.

What Do I Need to Make Lotion Bars?

If you already make some of your own skincare products you will likely already have some of these ingredients. You’ll need:

I have used all of these molds for lotion bars, and they all make similar sized bars. These will also all fit in these metal travel tins that are perfect for storing and gifting lotion bars.

Lotion Bar Recipe

These basic bars will have a slightly sweet, chocolatey scent because of the cocoa butter. They are perfectly wonderful as is with no additional scent added! I actually prefer them unscented for babies (and have a special baby lotion bar recipe below). However, I do love them with a variety of different essential oils added.

Lotion Bar Recipe by Weight

My preferred method for creating any body products at home is to measure my weight because it makes a more consistent product. This is easy to do with a normal kitchen scale ( I use this one). If you don’t have a kitchen scale, use the recipe below that measures by volume.

  • 1.2 oz Beeswax
  • 0.4 oz. Shea Butter
  • 0.7 oz Cocoa Butter
  • 0.9 oz. Almond Oil
  • 0.3 oz. Jojoba Oil
  • 50 drops (apx. 1/2 tsp) essential oil of choice (optional)
  • 1/2 tsp vitamin e oil (optional)

Lotion Bar Recipe by Volume

  • 1/4 cup Beeswax
  • 1 Tbs. Shea Butter
  • 2 Tbs. Cocoa Butter
  • 2 Tbs. Almond Oil
  • 1 Tbs. Jojoba Oil
  • 50 drops (apx. 1/2 tsp) essential oil of choice (optional)
  • 1/2 tsp vitamin e oil (optional)

Directions:

  • Add beeswax, shea butter and cocoa butter to a double boiler and slowly heat the oils until melted.
  • Once melted, turn off the heat and add the almond and jojoba oils.
  • Lastly, add essential oils and vitamin E if using.
  • Pour into silicone mold.
  • Let bars sit until completely hardened, then carefully remove from mold.
  • Best if used within 6 months.

This recipe makes 5 small, handheld lotion bars using a mold very similar to this round silicone mold. Each finished lotion bar is approximately 0.7 oz.

5 Versions of Lotion Bars

Margarita Lotion Bars

Use the basic recipe above and add 35 drops lime + 15 drops lemon essential oils at the end before pouring into molds.

Lavender Lotion Bars

Always a favorite, add 50 drops (1/2 tsp) lavender essential oil in the basic recipe above.

Citrus Burst Lotion Bars

Use the basic recipe above and add 20 drops of orange and 30 drops of grapefruit essential oils.

White Chocolate Mint Lotion Bars

Skip the shea butter and use all cocoa butter instead for a subtly chocolate scent. Combined with peppermint essential oil these lotion bars smell almost edible!

  • 1/4 cup Beeswax
  • 3 Tbs. Cocoa Butter
  • 2 Tbs. Almond Oil
  • 1 Tbs. Jojoba Oil
  • 25 drops (apx. 1/4 tsp) peppermint essential oil
  • 1/2 tsp vitamin e oil (optional)

Lotion Bars for Babies

This gentle version for babies uses avocado oil instead of almond oil and contains no essential oils. These lotion bars work wonderful for baby massage before bed.

  • 1/4 cup Beeswax
  • 1 Tbs. Shea Butter
  • 2 Tbs. Cocoa Butter
  • 2 Tbs. Avocado Oil
  • 1 Tbs. Jojoba Oil
  • 1/2 tsp vitamin e oil (optional)

Customize your own Lotion Bars

There are really endless possibilities for lotion bars. You can use the basic lotion bar recipe above and customize with your favorite scents and oils.

You can also customize the base oils you use in this recipe if you do not have all of the ingredients, or to suite your own preferences. The proportions for this recipe are 34% beeswax, 32% plant butter (cocoa, shea or even mango!) and 34% liquid oil.

I have had success using avocado oil, coconut oil, olive oil and grapeseed oil. The results will be slightly different based on the properties of these oils, but you will still have a solid lotion bar that is wonderful for your skin. I encourage you to play around with your favorite oils to see what works best for you!

How do I Store Lotion Bars?

To maximize their shelf life, lotion bars should be kept in a closed container when not in use. My favorite way to store lotion bars is in these small, metal tins. They are easy to transport in these and they very giftable in these reusable metal tins.

Lotion Bars Make Great Gifts!

These little bars of oily goodness are perfect stocking as stuffers, teacher gifts and shower favors. My personal favorite way to gift lotion bars is paired with my homemade cuticle oil in a gift bag as a ‘Mini Mani’ gift set.

Let me know how these turn out if you make them! I love hearing what scents you choose!

What is a Lotion Bar? + A Basic Lotion Bar Recipe, 5 Ways (2024)

FAQs

What is a lotion bar? ›

A lotion bar is a solid block of lotion, used for moisturizing skin as part of your personal care routine. Lotion bars are typically made with natural ingredients that stay solid at room temperature, but melt a little from body heat, making it easy to apply the lotion bar as needed and store in a reusable container.

How do you make basic lotion? ›

Ingredients
  1. 3/4 cup aloe vera gel.
  2. 1/4 cup filtered water.
  3. 1/2 cup beeswax (grated or pellets)
  4. 1/2 cup jojoba oil (or sweet almond or grapeseed oils)
  5. 1 tsp vitamin E oil.
  6. 18 drops essential oils (optional)

What are the steps involved in making lotion? ›

How to Make Lotion
  1. Step 1: Tools and Ingredients. Tools: ...
  2. Step 2: Water Bath. Fill a small saucepan with water and set it on medium low to use as a water bath.
  3. Step 3: Melt Oil and Wax. ...
  4. Step 4: Heat Water. ...
  5. Step 5: Combine. ...
  6. Step 6: Cool Slightly and Pour/Package. ...
  7. Step 7: Shake Well. ...
  8. Step 8: Ways to Customize.

How do you make a solid body lotion bar? ›

Let's Get Started!
  1. First measure your ingredients– beeswax, jojoba oil, coconut oil and mango butter— and scoop into a glass, wide-mouth mason jar.
  2. When everything is melted, carefully remove the jar from the pot using an oven mitt, add in your essential oil(s) and mix well.

Do lotion bars melt? ›

Keep it at room temperature. Lotion bars are made to melt on your skin, so they will melt if they get much warmer than body temp. Stick it in the fridge for safe keeping on especially hot days if your house warms up.

Can I add water to a lotion bar? ›

Be mindful that you do not contaminate your lotion bars with water since even a few drops will mess up the results and possibly cause surface mold to appear over time.

How do you make 3 ingredient lotion? ›

Moisturizing Body Lotion
  1. 1 cup water.
  2. 3/4 cup olive oil.
  3. 3 tablespoons grated beeswax.

How to make lotion thicker? ›

Including a fatty thickener is definitely my favourite way to thicken a lotion. Examples include cetearyl alcohol, cetyl alcohol, stearic acid and C10-18 Triglycerides (aka “Butter Pearls”).

Is lotion a mixture? ›

The key components of a skin care lotion, cream or gel emulsion (that is mixtures of oil and water) are the aqueous and oily phases, an emulsifier to prevent separation of these two phases, and, if used, the drug substance or substances.

Can I add water to my lotion? ›

In fact, it's anything but: Watering it down can mess with the ingredient proportions and concentrations of a given formula, for one, and could potentially introduce bacteria.

How to make spray lotion? ›

In a microwave-safe bowl, heat almond and apricot kernel oils, e-wax and stearic until melted. Stir in grapeseed oil. In a separate bowl, mix water and citric acid and heat in microwave. Add oil mixture to water mixture and blend with a stick blender to ensure complete emulsification.

How to make lotion bars harder? ›

Modifying a Recipe

If you want a harder lotion bar with a higher melt point, use more wax or a wax with a higher melt point. If you want a softer lotion bar that melts quicker on the skin, use more liquid oil or a wax with a lower melt point.

Can you make homemade lotion? ›

Materials
  1. 1/2 cup shea butter.
  2. 2 tablespoons grapeseed oil (or another light liquid oil, like sweet almond or jojoba)
  3. 1/4 cup aloe vera gel (plus 1-2 tablespoons depending on preference)
  4. Optional: 10-20 drops essential oils of choice (lavender, vanilla, tea tree, and frankincense are some beneficial options)

Is a lotion bar soap? ›

What is a lotion bar? Lotion bars are essentially a solid form of lotion made with non-greasy, moisturizing ingredients. Although they're solid like a bar of soap, they soften slightly when they get warm.

Are lotion bars better than lotion? ›

Lotion bars are slow to absorb, and can leave the skin feeling greasy. Lotion bars won't hydrate the skin (remember, they contain no water) so they don't feel as moisturizing as “regular” lotion.

How long does a lotion bar last? ›

A small (1 oz)bar can last about 2 weeks if used daily. One big benefit is that as you continually use it, your skin will become so soft, you rarely need to re-apply. As far as shelf life goes, the lotion has a 1-2 year shelf life, although it may experience some ingredient separation if left out in the heat.

Are lotion bars greasy? ›

Solid lotion recipes can be made with as little as 2 ingredients: an oil and a wax. But with this method, they tend to be quite oily or sticky.

Can you use lotion bars in the shower? ›

If you've never made DIY Lotion Bars, you have to try this simple shea butter and essential oil lotion bar recipe! You can use them right in the shower for instant and lasting hydration.

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