Make Your Own Soap Without Lye (You’ll See What I Mean)

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If you've always wanted to make soap but are worried about working with lye, here's your answer. This homemade lye-free soap is truly the “I'm scared to work with lye” version of How to Make Homemade Soap.

homemade melt and pour soap without lye molded in flower shapes.

Homemade soap is great for many reasons, but it can be a bit daunting to make. One of the reasons is the need to work with lye. It's definitely not something you want to be working with when you have little ones running around.

Thankfully there's an answer for that and I'm sure you'll be surprised at how easy it is and how gorgeous the results can be.

I Was a Lye Scaredy Cat

For years, I've wanted to make my own soap, but I've never done it.

I've drooled over others' homemade soap creations and felt deficient in my thriftiness, craftiness, and domestic skills, simply because I'd never. made. soap. 

I have fond memories of a dear friend in the Chicago area who made HUGE batches of olive oil soap that was TO DIE FOR.  She had enough money to buy whatever soap she wanted, but she just LOVED making soap and well, her soap was skin nourishing gorgeous.  

She gifted me this soap when I was pregnant with our first child, but I wrote off making it because no way was I going to use lye in a kitchen where I'd have to time things so I didn't have a busy and inquisitive infant or toddler underfoot.  

So I basically gave up all the soap-making dreams, and they never really came to be.

I even found the very book that my friend's soap recipe came from at a second hand store (and bought it), but I STILL never made soap.

So when a friend approached me about sharing a recipe for melt and pour soap that was easily made into “homemade soap” style, I was thrilled.

I assumed many other busy “lye scaredy cat” moms would love the chance to be crafty without being around something that might be a problem for their children's safety.

Lye-free Soap. Is It Possible?

Would you like to create an all natural product, free of harsh chemicals, that radiates your personality and taste? Consider hand-milled soap!

Also known as melt and pour soap, this method allows you to forgo the hazards of working with caustic lye, while enjoying the creativity of soap making.

This is why the title of the post includes the words “you'll see what I mean.”  The lye work has been done for you already in making the melt and pour soap base.

Why You'll Love This Soap

There are simply so many reasons to love this soap. Let's count the ways, shall we?

No Toxic Additives

So many soaps on the market are loaded with artificial colors, artificial fragrances, and preservatives. If you make your own melt-and-pour soaps, you can use quality ingredients without the toxins.

Saves Lots of Money

Of course, if you make your own melt and pour soap, you will save a bunch of money over store-bought fancy soaps. With all the great melt-and-pour bases, you can make exquisite soaps to rival any “artisan” type of homemade soap.

Avoids Allergens

More and more people have sensitivities these days. Making your own soap allows you to customize ingredients to your needs.

Directions

Grate the soap base.

grated soap in pot.

Add oil to soap, if desired.

Heat on low setting in a double boiler or crock pot. Stir frequently.

melted melt and pour soap in bowl with spatula.

When liquefied, remove from heat.

Add desired ingredients.

Stir to desired consistency. Pour (or spoon) the soap mixture into molds.  I placed some dried rose petals on the bottom of this flower mold.

making homemade soap without lye in flower molds.

Cool and remove from the mold. Cut into desired sizes and shapes using a soap cutter or a food scraper/shovel if needed.

Allow soap to dry.

easy homemade soap without lye with dried herbs on top.

Important Ingredient Information

1. Soap Bases, Including One That Really Stands Out

First of all, look for soap that is free of chemicals and fragrances. The simpler the better when it comes to hand milling. White or cream-colored work best.

Some of the more trusted online sources include:

  • Brambleberry
  • Bulk Apothecary
  • Amazon

Here are some options for melt-and-pour soap bases with my favorite highlighted at the end.

I Recommend

Shea Butter - 2 Pound Melt and Pour Soap Base

This Shea Butter Melt and Pour Soap Base is one of the cleanest soap bases out there. Plus it helps you create soaps that look very close to artisan soaps -- all without handling lye!

It's made from 5% refined shea butter, and is soy free, lathers well and is made in the USA.

2. Molds

A simple bread loaf pan will work depending on how much soap you're melting. Line the mold with parchment paper for easy removal.

Silicone molds work really well too. These come in fun shapes and sizes like this flower mold (similar to the one used for the soaps in this post).

Note that you'll need parchment paper if you choose the bread mold pan option.

3. Herbs and Plants

Do you love lavender? Dried lavender or fresh lavender makes a perfect addition.

Roses? Dried rose petals or even fresh rose petals work beautifully.

Plant powders can add not only skin benefits but double as natural colorants. Turmeric, for example, turns the soap a lovely orange while adding nourishing anti-inflammatory qualities. Spirulina powder makes a lovely green. Beet powder adds a nice pink color.

4. Pure Fragrances

Forgo the petroleum-based fragrances and add scent using 100% natural essential oils. Essential oils carry through the hand milling process quite well –  so pick a scent you enjoy and have fun!

Herb/essential oil combinations that work well include:

How Much Essential Oil Should You Add to Soap?

How much essential oils you use in homemade soap depends on several things including how strong of a scent you would like, and the oil you are using.

For a strong scent, 0.7 ounces of essential oil per pound of cold process soap is a good amount. For melt and pour, you can typically add 0.3 ounces per pound.

Cold process soap is more of a harsh process and there are a number of chemical changes that occur when making the soap, so you can use more oils.

To avoid skin irritation it's important to not use too much of an essential oil in your soap. This fragrance calculator can help you choose the right amount of essential oils to use.

5. Liquids

You'll need to add a slight amount of liquid to keep the soap from burning during the melting process.  While water works fine, possible liquids that add some nice benefits and make your soap special include coffee, green tea, kombucha, infused herbs, coconut milk, and floral hydrosol.

6. Fun Add-Ins

Besides things like herbs and plants, there are so many other fun add-ins. The sky is truly the limit!

How about:

  • coffee beans
  • cacao nibs
  • coffee grounds—smell great and are great for exfoliating too
  • citrus peels
  • seeds (chia, poppy, apricot, flax)
  • matcha powder—adds a lovely green color
  • Himalayan salt—adds a nice pink hue
  • tea leaves
flower-shaped soap without lye

How to Make Homemade Soap Without Lye

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Ingredients

Instructions

  • Grate 8 ounces of the soap base (two regular size bars.) A cheese grater works well, as does a salad shooter. A food processor also works.
  • Add the oil, if desired, to thin the soap.
  • Heat on low in a double boiler or crock pot. You can also place in oven-safe pot and heat in the oven at lowest setting. Stir frequently to avoid burning. This can take anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour.
  • When soap is liquefied, remove from heat. It will be somewhat lumpy and translucent.
  • Add desired ingredients.
    (For the main photos here, I used Pink Himalayan salt and dried rose petals from my daughter's wedding. I added Rose Geranium essential oil which created a lovely rose scent.)
  • Stir to desired consistency. Pour (or spoon) soap mixture into molds.  I placed some dried rose petals on the bottom of this flower mold.
  • Cool the soap and remove from mold (place mold into freezer for up to 1 hour to make this easier). Cut into desired sizes and shapes using a soap cutter or a food scraper/shovel.
  • Allow soap to dry for several days or more.
  • Dry the soap thoroughly between uses to extend its life.
Tried this recipe?Mention @wholenewmom or tag #wholenewmom!

More Easy DIY Personal Care Products You'll Love

How about trying out the following DIY Personal Care Products too? These are great ways to take more steps towards clean living.

I'd love to hear how this goes for you!

Andrea Fabry

Andrea is a former journalist and the mother of nine children ranging in age from 28 to 12. Following a toxic mold exposure, Andrea and her family discovered the wonders of natural living. Andrea is the founder and president of momsAWARE, an educational organization designed to empower others to live healthy in a toxic world. You can follow her family’s journey at It Takes Time.

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310 Comments

  1. Reading the comments was a little annoying cause I think anyone with any interest in soap making get that it involves lye they just have no interest in handling it. My question is had anybody on this blog ever did the melt and pour method with black soap?

    1. I’m a soap maker, traditional and I do melt and pour. If you are looking for the African Black soap, BrambleBerry has a Black Soap Melt and Pour Base, made by Stephenson. I haven’t tried it, but just happened to notice it.
      They also carry the best M&P bases I’ve found, the low sweat, Like Cold Process bases are the best. I live n Florida and they all sweat here. Good Luck and Happy Soaping!

  2. Do you think Fractionated coconut oil could be used as the liquid or even melted normal coconut oil? I already buy bars of natural soap to make my washing powder, but didn’t think of using it to make my own soaps.

    1. I would stick w/ the water based liquids as outlined, but you could try it…..hope it works for you!

  3. I was so excited to stumble across this recipe online. I have a very small space to work with and multiple ingredients is not ideal! Getting a recipe like this for homemade or semi homemade soap, that can save both time and money for a full time working mom who is health contentious and trying to pinch pennies is both ideal and greatly appreciated 🙂 Thank you

  4. Thank you so much for this great and very helpful article. I did not want to have to handle lye around my little ones.The perfect step by step tutorial. Thanks again!

  5. Hello! I saw people here being upset, also I got your point. Maybe you were not bad intentionaly, but maybe the title should be something like: ”How to make your own soap without working with lye yourslef…” (something like that….) (otherwise people misunderstand and they get upset because they have different expectations…) Other than that, the recipe is good and easy to use! I make my own soap with lye, but I think this is also a good way to fix some failed soaps 🙂

    1. Thanks, Angela. I think maybe it’s the folks coming from Pinterest. I’m working on redoing all kinds of images and haven’t gotten to all of them :). Great idea on the failed soaps.

  6. hello, I have a question, doesn’t the “natural soap base” have Lye in it?…if so, then is it really “making soap without lye? Just because you didn’t place lye in it yourself doesn’t mean it is “without lye”
    “Ingredients:
    Common Name: Coconut Oil, Palm Oil, Safflower Oil, Glycerin (kosher, of vegetable origin), Aqua/Water/Eau, Sodium Hydroxide (saponifying agent), Sorbitol (moisturizer), Sorbitan oleate (emulsifier), Oat protein (conditioner), Titanium Dioxide
    Botanical Name: Cocos Nucifera Oil, Elaeis Guineensis Oil, Carthamus Tinctorius Oil, Glycerin, Aqua/Water/Eau, Sodium Hydroxide, Sorbitol, Sobitan Oleate, Avena Sativa Protein Extract, Titanium Dioxide” is the ingredients from the company Brambleberry you listed. “Sodium Hydroxide”, or “Sodium Hydroxide (saponifying agent)” is lye, is it not? I am not trying to be mean, it is just I am just very tired of people not being truthful

    1. Hello there. We wrote the title the way we did to make that point – that the soap base used lye, but you didn’t have to use it to make the product in your home. So we weren’t being misleading at all. Hope that helps. It’s an easy way to do a crafty project w/ soap without having to use lye.

      1. I think that the title is a great idea, especially as there’s not any soap making classes in my area. I desire to make my own soap for shampoo bar (still not sure what to do to achieve that), however I like the castile soap recipe and think it “might” be a good start. I’m so sick and tired of chemicals that I cannot recognize or read names of on commercial products.
        Thank you so much.

    2. Did you even read the article in its entirety or just a few sentences here and there then leav a ridiculous and embarrassing comment to the author?! You hate when people lie, WE hate people who leave stupid and uneducated comments.

    3. Saponification is a chemical process that turns fats+lye into soap. Lye is an ingredient in the soap, but it does not exist in the soap anymore. If it did, it would burn you when you tried to wash with it.

    1. Yes you can. I have done that. The amount of lather depends on the amount of castile soap you use. I used a cheese grader, my soap was more of a cream though. My mother loved it; add sugar ir Epsom salt for exfoliating affect.

  7. I really do not understand the superior and condescending attitudes of the ” it’s not REALLY soap making ” crowd. I think everyone understands that this is a shortcut method of achieving a CUSTOMIZED batch of soap without really “making” soap from scratch. What’s the big deal? I for one, am happy to have the option of combining a natural soap base-yes there are plenty out there that are organic/ natural/no icky stuff- with other natural ingredients that are good for my skin needs and scented naturally with scents that I enjoy! I see no reason to act all judgy toward someone who is happy to do that, or the person sharing with others how to do that. I make my own pie crust… If someone else wants to buy the refrigerated kind, I COULDNT CARE LESS…. nor am I offended or threatened in any way if they happen to say they “made” the pie! Thanks for a good starter recipe! Going to go “make” some citrus/ coconut milk soap now:)

    1. Thanks so much, Cindy :). I was a little shocked too, particularly since I gave a hint in the title that it wasn’t really making soap. Thanks and I would love to try your soap!

      1. Well, it’s done and it smells amazing! Started with organic castille soap base, added coconut milk as the liquid, some pink sea salt and used lemon, orange, grapefruit and clary-sage essential oils. Can’t wait to use it!

        1. Wonderful. I haven’t done anything w/ Clary Sage – need to try as it’s one oil of the oils I haven’t used much. Thanks for taking the time to respond.

    2. Totally agree with Cindy. This is great. Having a lot oc young children around crying, laughing, running etc. I want something like this to let them make a mess and be totally fine getting it all over thier bodies. (We should ake it near the pool or at the beach) lol I too will start with Casitle Soap as it is the cheapest and easiet for me to find. Thank you o much for this!!!!!!! I cannot wait to get messy and creative. LOVE IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    3. “Update 4/16: Please note – I have gotten a lot of comments from angry readers insinuating that I made this post in a deceptive manner. I wrote the title as I did so that it wouldn’t seem to be something that it wasn’t so please take that into consideration before making any more accusations. Thank you!”
      Hope you see this

    4. It’s more like buying an undecorated cake at the store, decorating it and calling it baking. The person who buys a frozen pie crust is still doing the baking, but with M&P you are not doing the soapmaking (saponification).

      The motivations of people who want to do M&P soap for themselves are different from the motivations of people who want to make homemade soap for themselves. One is decorative and the other is functional. If you want to make your own soap then finding articles about rebatching existing soap would be really frustrating. But yeah, if you want to “really” make your own soap you need to use lye.

  8. I have a lot of leftover soap flakes of different bath soaps , I used to store them in container, now I can use them as a base.

  9. No lye, no soap, no lie 🙂
    MP soap bases are just premixed so YOU don’t have to use the actual lye, but it’s still there! 😉