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. Sarah H. Avatar
    Sarah H.

    Thanks so much for creating this simple yet effective recipe! Stores are selling out of hand soaps quickly due to the Covid 19 outbreak. I look forward to using your recipe to make our own.
    We’ll be using boiled water, liquid Castile soap (from plant therapy), olive oil & lavender EO. I’m thinking of adding a little vegetable glycerin oil to help with moisturizing because that’s what I have on hand.
    Do you foresee any issues with this? Thoughts on how much I should add?

      1. Sarah Hall Avatar
        Sarah Hall

        5 stars
        The soap came out perfect & so easy to do! I’m about to make it for a third time. My 7 yr helped me make the last batch. He requested peppermint oil for his bathroom – it’s very refreshing!
        The 1/2 tsp of glycerin did the trick for moisturizing. My hands had been so dry, cracked from all the extra cleaning lately but they’d now healed.
        Thank you!!

  2. Elise Avatar

    Thank you, so much, for the recipe. I bought the Lavender Castile soap at our supermarket for $14. That seems expensive, but for the amount of stuff I can do with it, it’s worth it. If you want a good, clean glass container that is easy to wash, use a mason jar. You’ll need to make a hole in the lid for the foaming pump to go into. You can either hot glue the pump into the hole or just leave it loose. The mason jar is easy to fill and clean and you can boil them to disinfect them if you want. You can usually find a pack of canning jars for cheaper than a glass soap dispenser and then you have several to use around your house. Hope this helps with the sterile dispenser dilemma. 🙂

  3. Roberta Avatar

    I think this is my 3rd hand soap mix. Today I used olive oil with 3-4 drops each of: Frankincense, ylang-ylang, clary sage and rose hip oil. Perfect! The scent is light and it feels healthy on my aging skin. I am 61 and I have been really rough on my hands, over washing due to working in the medical and/or health and human services side of things for many years.

  4. Marissa Avatar

    Thank you for all the links to other foam pump bottles. I am looking for glass ones but cannot find them! Do they not exist? I don’t like the look of the plastic, even if they’re clear. Mine stain over time and look cheaper to me. Anyone know of a vendor?

  5. Theresa Avatar

    I am making liquid foaming hand soap and having trouble getting my oils to bind well in the globe. The oil seem to have sellted at the top in the container. Am using natural Castile!

  6. Donna Avatar

    Is there a way for this to turn out clear or at least not separate? Am I doing something wrong. I don’t think I have seen other comments about this. Thanks for any tips!

  7. Amy Avatar

    Castille soap dries out my hands, even the baby stuff. I added jojoba oil but still the same problem. Need an alternative.

  8. Karen Avatar

    Hi there,

    Just wondering how long the soap will keep for? If I were to make in bulk, would it last for several months?

    Thank you in advance!

  9. Angela Avatar

    Do you have any concerns about Dr. Bronner’s Castile Soap using Hemp? The wording on the packages and the blog is a bit concerning as well….just wondered if there is another option besides Dr. Bronner’s.

  10. Karen Avatar

    I made the foaming soap with my little one yesterday. It was easy, fun, and feels so much better than the store-bought stuff! Thank you so much!

  11. Suzy Avatar

    I am new to using liquid castile soap and was wondering if you need to use a preservative once you add water or aloe gel?

  12. PJ Avatar

    I’ve just made my first ‘batch’ of your homemade foaming soap and can I say – you’ve created a monster. I’m in LOVE with this. I used Magnolia essential oil and it’s absolutely the best smell in the world. I did use a little Argan Oil as well. I saw a bottle of Magnolia Foaming Soap at a local Hallmark store and they were charging $12.99 for their bottle. I think I made 4 bottles for that price. And to me, the fragrance is identical! I don’t know how much soap I, myself, can actually use but I’m going to have enough to last me the rest of my life. My next batch is going to be Plumeria. There’s no stopping me now. I now have gifts for people too hard to shop for. Thank you so much for sharing your ‘recipe’.

  13. Lindsy Avatar

    Does anyone have a recommendation to make this recipe more moisturizing? I made it today but it makes my hands feel a little dry after. More olive oil maybe?

  14. Lindsy Avatar

    Hi! I wanted to recommend the book The Cheese Trap by Dr Neal Barnard and Eat for Health by Dr Joel Fuhrman! Love this post, thank you!

  15. Christine Avatar

    Hi! I have been making your recipe for about 18 months and I love it! It has helped the eczema I struggle with on my hands significantly. Here is my question… I made soap and realized it had white “funky stuff” growing in the bottom. I assumed I needed to clean my dispenser out and start over. I did that a week ago and that funky white stuff is back!! Any ideas? Thanks!

  16. Dave Avatar

    Anyone else have issues with this separating? After a day or two, the bottom of the soap dispenser has about an eighth of an inch of cloudy white liquid at the bottom with the rest of it clear.

    1. Dave Avatar

      For some reason when I originally posted a week ago, only two of over 100 comments were showing up (both along the lines of, “this stuff is great”). Now all the comments are showing and obviously everyone is experiencing the soap separating. Sadly it looks like this is unavoidable.

  17. Dedra Avatar

    I love this recipe as is. I split it into two, one with grapefruit and the other with peppermint. Thank you!

  18. Nadine Avatar

    I made the foaming hand soap. My problem is the Pure 100% almond oil will not mix no matter what I do. It floats on the top. Is there anything I can do to make it mix with the water and castile soap?

  19. Jackie Avatar

    My soap only separates after sitting for a couple of days. Typically, we’ve gone through our small bottle by then, and I’ll just give my refill bottle a quick shake before refilling the smaller one. If for some reason we still have leftovers in the pump, a quick shake of that easily rights any separation. Dr Bronner’s castile works great!

4.11 from 67 votes (40 ratings without comment)

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