DIY Foaming Hand Soap

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I started making my own foaming hand soap early in my switch to a more natural lifestyle. With concerns over antibacterial soap and potty-training little ones who found the need to wash their hands/arms/the counter with soap a thousand times a day, I needed a healthy and frugal option.

Now that the kids are older (and not quite as messy), we still go through plenty of hand wash! Thankfully, there’s a homemade and incredibly simple option that works just as well. It also costs hardly anything to make per bottle, and it’s made with clean ingredients.

Simple DIY Foaming Hand Soap

The recipe itself is literally so simple that at one point, my then six year old was in charge of refilling the homemade foaming hand soap containers. I keep the few simple ingredients on hand, and we never have to buy hand soap or worry about running out. Surprisingly, this foamy natural soap also makes a decent shaving cream and body wash in the shower…

Before you begin, you’ll need a foaming hand soap bottle. I originally ordered this pretty foaming hand soap dispenser online. You can also just reuse the pump bottle of your favorite foaming hand soap.

Why Use Foaming Hand Soap?

Years ago, I got addicted to soap making, and we were always fully stocked with different bar soaps. Now that life is busier in different ways, I rely more on natural liquid soap and foaming hand soap to suds up. The foaming pump creates a nice lather but overall uses less soap than regular liquid hand soap.

This is great for little kids who think it’s fun to keep pumping the soap container over and over! And of course it’s much healthier (and cheaper!) than popular versions at places like Bath and Body Works.

Ingredients Used in Homemade Soap

The basic recipe is soap, oil, and distilled water. You can keep it unscented or add a few drops of essential oils. These not only help it smell nice but also add natural antimicrobial properties to tackle unwanted germs, without using synthetic antibacterial chemicals. I use Dr. Bronner’s castile soap, which comes in an unscented version as well as peppermint, lavender, citrus, and other essential oil scented versions.

I use olive oil in this recipe since it’s deeply moisturizing, but jojoba, sweet almond, or any liquid carrier oil will work. Just avoid using something solid like coconut oil. For extra glide, you can also add 1/2 tsp of glycerin.

Because this recipe uses water and does not have a preservative, it should be used within about a week. If you don’t go through it that quickly, you can cut the recipe in half. In our house, that’s not a problem though! The base recipe is 1 part soap to 12 parts water, so you can scale it up or down.

Here’s the (super simple) tutorial for how to make your own homemade foaming hand soap!

foaming hand soap
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4.11 from 67 votes

DIY Foaming Hand Soap Recipe

This easy foaming hand soap contains only water, liquid castile soap, moisturizing oil, and optional essential oils for a simple and frugal homemade soap.
Prep Time5 minutes
Total Time5 minutes
Yield: 13 ounces
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Instructions

  • Fill the soap dispenser with water to within about 1 inch of the top. Be sure to leave room for the soap pump foamer.
  • Add at least 2 tablespoons of liquid castile soap to the water mixture. NOTE: do not add the soap first or it will create bubbles when the water is added.
  • Add the oil and any essential oils if you’re using them.
  • Close and lightly swish to mix.
  • Use as you would regular foaming hand soap.

Notes

  • You’ll need a foaming soap dispenser for this soap. Either buy one online or reuse the bottle from a store-bought foaming soap.
  • If you don’t have distilled water, you can also use filtered water that’s been boiled then cooled.

Caution About Essential Oils

A 1/2 teaspoon of essential oils is still less than a 1% dilution, which is well below the general maximum amount for a wash-off product. However, more irritating oils like cinnamon, clove, oregano, and lemongrass should be used in a much smaller amount or avoided. Oils that have natural antimicrobial properties but are gentler on skin include lavender, orange, lemon, and tea tree essential oil.

If you’re using soap that already has essential oils in it, then you wouldn’t need to add more.

Do you make your own soap already? If not… will you start now? Share below!

This easy foaming hand soap contains only water, organic liquid castile soap, a moisturizing oil and optional essential oils for a simple and frugal homemade soap.

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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. barbaraoneill.online 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

293 responses to “DIY Foaming Hand Soap”

  1. anita Avatar

    Can Dr. Bronner’s Lavender Castile Soap be used? Is that the same thing as “liquid castile soap”?

  2. Mary Avatar

    I was going to use Lemon Essential Oil (thought it would be a good hand soap in the kitchen), but in the description it states do not use on skin…
    Are there certain essential oils to use for this? I also make lotions and would like to use them for either…Thanks-

  3. Claudine Avatar
    Claudine

    I have tried different recipes for hand soap and dish soap. All contained Dr.Broone’s soaps and all leave a greasy layer on the bathroom sink or kitchen sink. Do you have an idea to avoid this?
    Thanks Claudine

  4. Jennifer Avatar

    Has anyone had any problems with their pump wheezing? I’ve been using watered down liquid soap from walmart, but just switched today to castile instead and now they’re not working- the pump isn’t stuck, it’s just shooting air out with almost no foam. I took all the parts apart and cleaned them all out- wow- there was mold and gross stuff in there. But now they won’t work. Argh! 🙂

  5. Krystal Avatar

    5 stars
    Hi,
    Love reading your blog !!!!
    I reposted this piece on my blog as well
    I am in love with Dr. Bronnners!

  6. Cindy Avatar

    I have tried and tried and tried to make this and many of your other recipes with little luck. The Dr. Bronners liquid makes me itch, badly. I actually prefer Kirk’s Coco Castile ( I just wish it was organic!!). I found a recipe somewhere in the internet explaining how to turn the bar to liquid (which is actually gel-like). 13 ounces of water per ounce of bar soap. Melt the soap. Let sit for 12-24 hours and then use it. I prefer this soap, BUT it just doesn’t always work right…. I really want to be able to make my own everything. I will be trying your recipe for handmade soap. I am hoping that you can please tell me how to turn your bar (and any other bar) to liquid and then figure out how to replace that liquid (watered down bar soap) with the liquid called for in your recipes so that I get a good result. Thank you so much! I love, love, LOVE your site!!!

  7. Minh Avatar

    I’m in college and live in a suite with three other girls and we go through a lot of hand soap. I’m really glad that I found this recipe because it looks super easy and affordable to make. I’m just curious if I could add coconut oil to it to make it a moisturizing soap?

  8. Leah Avatar

    I love this easy recipe. We just switched to it about a month ago. We go through it quickly in our bathroom (probably because we cloth diaper 2 babies, so with each diaper change= hand wash with soap). I have not added essential oils for scent, but was curious what your thoughts are on adding essential oils to this in a plastic foaming dispenser or if it should actually be in a glass dispenser to prevent leaching of the oils? Any feedback would be appreciated:)

  9. Michelle DeVore Avatar
    Michelle DeVore

    Does anyone know where I can find more decorative of plain Glass foaming soap dispensers? The Mason Jar option doesn’t really go with my home décor.

    I can’t seem to find glass dispensers anywhere?

  10. Carey Avatar

    Just curious if this HAS to be used with a foaming dispenser? I just want to make a liquid soap to refill the regular dispensers I already have. Thank you!

  11. Kate Avatar

    I would like to make a big container of this stuff so that we can just refill the dispensers easily….can you recommend any proportions for water/soap/ essential oils?

  12. Becca Avatar

    For this recipe, can you use an ordinary soap dispenser?
    Love this website – it’s life changing!

  13. christine Avatar
    christine

    4 stars
    Thanks! Our soap dispenser has been empty for a week (we had to resort to bar soap which just makes things a mess) because neither my husband nor myself wanted to spend $8 for the bottle that refills our dispenser 2+ times. We already had castille soap and olive oil around. Simple and so much more affordable!

  14. Kanue Avatar

    I’ve tried making foaming hand soap and used a foaming dispenser, but I feel my product is to thin, any suggestions on how to thicken it up?

  15. Lisa Avatar

    I made the hand soap using grated Castile bar soap. It seems to clog the foaming pump cause after a day I can’t press it down. Any suggestions?

4.11 from 67 votes (40 ratings without comment)

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