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This homemade baby soap bar is gentle enough for delicate skin and made with natural ingredients you can feel good about. With cocoa butter, coconut oil, mango butter, and jojoba oil, this cold-process soap creates a soft, creamy lather perfect for everyday use.

DIY baby soap bars on wooden board with lavender buds sprinkled around.
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Making soap is actually quite simple and can be made for a relatively low cost. My soap-making days started with melt and pour bases, which I would use in DIYs like my oatmeal soap recipe, solely due to the fact that I was very nervous about the lye. But as with most things, after I made it once, I realized it was much easier than I thought and could be done safely.

This baby soap recipe is perfect for baby’s skin; it is gentle, cleansing and leaves the skin soft and smooth. This soap is made with all-natural ingredients and scented with pure lavender essential oil.

How to Make the Best Homemade Baby Soap Bar?

In order to make cold-process soap bars, you will need lye, a liquid and either a fat or oil. The oil, when mixed with the lye, is what allows for the saponification process, making the lye safe. Choosing different oils or fats, for example, allows you to make different styles of soap, such as a moisturizing soap bar for dry skin, while others will make the perfect bar for oily skin.

For this baby soap recipe, I am choosing gentle and moisturizing ingredients that are perfect for sensitive skin.

Baby Soap Ingredients

  • Mango Butter: Mango butter comes from the seed of the mango fruit and is one of my favorite butters to use in baby care recipes. It’s similar to shea and cocoa butter, offering a smooth, non-greasy feel while helping lock in moisture.
  • Cocoa Butter: Cocoa butter adds a creamy texture and firmness to the soap bar, helping it hold its shape and last longer. It also gives the soap a rich, velvety feel that makes lathering extra smooth.
  • Coconut Oil: Coconut oil is a great addition to baby soap thanks to its gentle nature and creamy lather. It’s commonly used in natural soaps and body care products, and it helps give the bar a nice balance of cleansing and moisture.
  • Jojoba Oil: Jojoba oil is a lightweight carrier oil and is a popular choice in natural skincare because it absorbs easily and leaves skin feeling soft, not greasy. I like using it in baby soap for its gentle, moisturizing feel.
  • Lavender Essential Oil: Lavender is a very gentle oil. I use it to scent my lavender soap recipe and it is a great choice for this soap recipe.

Essential Oil Variations

  • Roman Chamomile
  • Frankincense
  • Rose
  • Jasmine
  • Copaiba

What do You Need to Make Cold-Process Soap Bar?

Cold-process soap bars on wooden board with lavender buds.
White bowl full of lavender soap bars.

Natural Baby Soap Recipe

I used a soap calculator to get these exact measurements. If you want to change up the recipe at all, you will need to get new measurements. Having the right proportions is a crucial step in soap making. 

Safety Note: When working with lye, be sure to work in a well-ventilated area and wear safety goggles, a mask, long sleeves, and rubber gloves. If lye gets on the skin or in the eyes, it can be very harmful. Be sure to read the tips below before starting.

  1. Using a digital scale, measure out your water and pour it into a heat-resistant container that can handle the rapid temperature increase. 
  2. Measure out the lye, then slowly add it to the water a little at a time, stirring as you go and letting it dissolve before adding more. Note, the chemical reaction will cause it to heat up quickly.
  3. Using the digital scale, measure out the mango butter, cocoa butter, coconut oil and jojoba oil. Pour into a medium-size saucepan and melt over medium heat. 
  4. Once the oils and butters are melted, remove them from the heat. 
  5. When the oils cool to around 100°F, slowly add the lye and water mixture to the oil, and mix with an immersion blender. This will take a couple of minutes. You will know it is the right consistency when the soap from the blender drips and pools up on top of the soap in the saucepan. This is known as the trace. 
  6. Add in the lavender essential oil and mix briefly with the immersion blender.
  7. Pour the soap into a soap mold. If using silicone soap molds, no prep is required. Other molds may require parchment paper. 
  8. Allow the soap to harden in the molds for a minimum of 24 hours or up to 3 days. 
  9. Remove the soap from the molds and allow to cure for an additional 5-6 weeks before using.

Expert Tips

  • Always add lye to water. Never add water to lye.
  • When making cold process soap, you must work in a well-ventilated area away from kids and pets.
  • Do not add all the lye at once to the water. Just add a little at a time and stir until dissolved.

How to Use Natural Baby Soap

Use the homemade baby soap bar like normal, staying clear of your child’s eyes. This soap bar will work great for both the hair and body. Allow the soap to soak in for a couple of minutes before rinsing off with warm water.

More of my favorite soap bars

5 from 16 votes

Gentle Baby Soap Bar Recipe

Prep: 10 minutes
Active: 30 minutes
Additional Time: 1 day
Total: 1 day 40 minutes
Yield: 6 bars
This homemade baby soap bar is made with simple, natural ingredients and has a gentle feel that's great for little ones.

Equipment

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Ingredients 

Instructions 

  • Use a digital scale to measure the water, then pour it into a heat-resistant container that can handle sudden temperature changes.
  • Measure out the lye, then slowly add it to the water a little at a time, stirring as you go and letting it dissolve before adding more. The chemical reaction will cause it to heat up quickly. Set aside. (see notes below)
  • Melt mango butter, cocoa butter, coconut oil and jojoba oil in a medium-size saucepan over medium heat.
  • Once the butter and oils are melted, remove from heat.
  • When the oils cool to around 100°F, add the lye water in and *mix with an immersion blender. This will take a couple of minutes. You will know it is the right consistency when the soap from the blender drips and pools up on top of the soap in the saucepan. This is known as the trace.
  • Add in the lavender essential oil, mix in with the immersion blender.
  • Pour the soap directly into the silicone soap molds. If using another type of mold, it may require parchment paper.
  • Allow the soap to harden for at least 24 hours or up to 3 days. Remove the soap from the molds and allow bars to cure for 5-6 weeks before using.

Notes

*Always add lye to water. Never add water to lye.
Use a tall mixing bowl when mixing with an immersion blender. This helps keep everything contained and prevents any splashes from escaping over the sides.
I always recommend keeping a separate set of tools just for soap making, things like bowls, spatulas, and thermometers. It just keeps everything cleaner and safer, and that way, you’re not mixing your DIYs with your kitchen gear.
Make sure you work in a well-ventilated area away from kids and pets. 
When working with lye, be sure to work in a well-ventilated area and wear safety goggles, mask and rubber gloves. If lye gets on the skin or in the eyes, it can be very harmful.
Check out the video instructions in the post above!
Tried this recipe?Mention @our_oily_house or tag #ouroilyhouse!
This recipe is for your own viewing pleasure and is not meant for healing purposes. Readers must perform their own research and tests before making any recipe.

About Laura

Welcome to Our Oily House, I’m so glad you’re here! Explore DIY cleaners, homemade soaps, skincare and hair care recipes, fragrance-free solutions, and sustainable laundry tips for a naturally inspired home.

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5 from 16 votes (13 ratings without comment)

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35 Comments

  1. Tricia says:

    Hi first time using your recipe and I must say once you follow the instructions soap came out beautiful.I’m new to soap making and the this is a great help. Thanks LAura

    1. Laura says:

      I am so glad! Thanks for sharing!

  2. Emily says:

    Hi Laura ! Can I divide the ingredients per two ? I don’t want to make too much of it, and the video shows that the recipe’s for a huge pile of soap bars. Also, do you think it is possible to use Shea butter instead of mango butter 🧼 ? I’d like to keep my product’s comedogenic rating close to 0…

    Thanks for everything you’re doing. I am a newbie in aromatherapy, and because of people like you, I feel confident when diying ! 🙂

    1. Laura says:

      Yes, you can half the recipe. Also, to change out ingredients you can use a soap calculater to get the correct measurements.

  3. Stacey T. says:

    I’m super excited about this recipe! My niece is having a baby shower pretty soon and I will have plenty of time to get this done for her. They all know me as the hippie aunt and have been getting natural goodies for Christmas for several years now. I’m hoping you might also have of know of a recipe for baby powder. The ingredients seem to vary so much and I trust your recipes. Thank you for sharing your wonderful knowledge with us.

    1. Laura says:

      Aww, that is a great idea! I have made this for all my babies and I love it!

  4. Alison says:

    I love this! I’m having a grand baby soon and would love to make some for her. Would this be considered tear free?

    1. Laura says:

      I have not fully tested this, so I can’t say for sure. We use it on our kids and they have never complained but I do not try to get it in their eyes.

  5. Sibongile says:

    Hi may God bless you for sharing with us your information about soap recipes I would like to know if you have recipes for lotion making and what preservatives do I need to make lotion

  6. Deborah Billman says:

    Hi,
    Can you list a recipe for a nice soft bar of soap like the baby bar except without lye? is there a way to make a bar softer without using lye? the bar you made looked so nice and gentle, loved it.

    thank you

    1. Laura says:

      No, you have to have lye to make soap.

  7. Kathleen-Patricia: says:

    Hi Laura,

    Thank you so much for sharing your beautiful natural recipes with us!

    I always look forward to seeing what new product you’ve created and trying out your recipes as they are all fabulous and great to use!

    Thanks again Laura, you and your recipes are appreciated ;-D

    God Bless you and your family xox

    1. Laura says:

      Thank you so much!