Making this honey lip balm recipe has saved me from dry and chapped lips during winter. Honey is antibacterial, anti-fungal, and antiseptic which helps moisturize chapped lips and promotes healing. Truly a miracle of nature for your lips!
This honey lip balm recipe requires few ingredients and it very easy to make at home. In this recipe, I use coconut oil, sunflower oil, beeswax and of course honey. I recommend using a liquid organic honey as it will be easier to mix with the oils and beeswax than creamed honey.
You will also need lip balm containers that you can buy on amazon here.
The most important ingredient in this lip balm is the beeswax; it is a natural emulsifier that combines oils and water. It is also the culprit that hardens the oils and butter so you can apply it on your lips easily.
Beeswax also forms a natural protective barrier to prevent chapped lips.
This honey lip balm recipe is very similar to burt’s bees lip balm. The only difference is that my honey lip balm recipe does not contain lanolin. (and for a good reason!)
You may ask what is lanolin?
Lanolin is an animal by-product, basically wool grease or wax extracted by washing sheep wool in hot water with a detergent. The main problem with using lanolin is that is it full of pesticides. According to Leslie from Mamavation, “Lanolin can legally contain up to 40 parts per million (ppm) of pesticides to be FDA-compliant. Lanolin that is reserved for hospital use on open wounds is regulated to no more than 3 ppm of pesticides.”
Interesting isn’t it?
Back to our recipe, instead of spending $5 per lip balm like Burt’s bees, making lip balm at home will cost you about $0.75c per lip balm. This honey lip balm recipe is pretty cost efficient and It also makes great gifts to friends and family.
Now if you have a really bad case of chapped lips and that it is not related to the lack of humidity in the air, ensure that you are well hydrated and also look at your diet. Chapped lips may be a sign of unbalance of good bacteria in your colon. Look at the problem inside out in case you have an extreme case of chapped lips.
Please comment below if you have any questions, and don’t forget to rate this recipe!
Improve your under-eye skin area with this DIY eye cream I made using only 3… Read More
I'll share how to make DIY Shea butter soap recipes 2 different ways: the melt… Read More
We’ve all had those moments when we’re in a hurry to head out the door… Read More
I'm sharing with you an easy version of my favorite DIY perfume creations – Firefly.… Read More
I'm sharing 3 of my favourite DIY face masks with honey, simple, easy, inexpensive and… Read More
Made without beeswax, this vegan, creamy lip butter recipe with shea butter is the stuff… Read More
View Comments
Do I need to change any ratios with the other ingredients if I am omitting the honey?
Oh ... and what if I replaced some of the beeswax with organic hemp seed oil (not Shea butter)? What would the correct ratio be? Would I have to use more peppermint oil to cover the strong hemp smell? Would it still be a stick formulation, which is what I want?
If I want a recipe that is a little softer, with less beeswax, what substitute oils do you recommend as a partial replacement for the beeswax?
Very sweet. The honey makes a great lip balm!
1) if I wanted to replace some of the beeswax with Shea butter, how would I do that? (The correct ratio, I mean)
2) how do I get a stick formulation in which the honey is evenly distributed when solidified?
I love this recipe I have used it as a base for 2 years now I often change out the oils to hemp seed as coconut drys me out which defeats the point for me. That being said this is a great base to adjust and make your own recipe and one of the few genuine recipes that ive found that makes a stick rather than a balm. Ive never stored it in the fridge even in the summer it stays solid.
I love this recipe and make it often. I use a little less beeswax and usually skip the essential oils. Everyone loves it! Thank you.
thanks natalie, really happy you like my recipe :-)
Hi. Thank you so much for this recipe. I have been wanting to try to make my own lip balm and am finally taking the plunge.
I have an allergy to coconut oil. What can I use in place of it?
Thank you
Hi,
Can you pour this mixture into the chapstick tubes before it cools? I see you have to whip it but I was hoping it would still pour.
There's no such thing as "liquid organic honey" .. not really. .. That means the honey has gone through a pasteurization process to heat it at high temperatures, which destroys (kills) the enzymes and other good stuff. .. Most people are confused about honey and it is unfortunately mainstream consumers who think they want their honey to be liquid because it's more appealing to them. that heating process basically kills the life out of it. .. .. Raw honey is actually a "shapeshifter". .. as it will crystalize and shift it's properties depending on the season and temperature. .. It's very easy to warm it slightly (put jar in warm water) to liquify it. .. Don't put in the microwave because that is cruel. .........the best quality honey will crystalize over time, but you can wake it up again. (or it may naturally do that in the warmer season on it's own). ...
Hi I'm trying to put this into an eos container and no matter how I do the recipe the honey always separates, I'm even using a stick blender to mix it. Do you have any advice? I'm using honey from my beekeeper friend.
Its best to use liquid honey as it is easier to blend. If you are still having trouble, try warming the honey gently in a separate container before incorporating it in the mixture.
If I was to use these from a tin, do you have a rough estimate of how I would change the oil ratio? Do you think that 30% more oil would be about right? (that's just a random number, I really have no idea). Should I try something like 4tsp of wax, 4tsp of coconut oil, 1.25tsp of sunflower seed oil?
And if things aren't right, can I just warm it up and mix in more? I want to do a fairly big batch (about 50 x 15g containers)
Hi Luke, this would be a different recipe. Yes you would have to put more oil and adjust the recipe to put into tins. I am not able to confirm until I actually try myself. You could warm up again and mix more oil but make sure you keep a tab on your recipe ratio! I suggest you do a small batch first to get the right consistency.
I just made a batch of these - it is AMAZING!! I’m wearing some of it right now at the taste is lovely. The peppermint smells so good and the beeswax is forming a thin layer, smoothing and moisturizing my lips.
I doubled the recipe and changed the values to milliliter, then poured them in 28ml glass jars. The doubled recipe gave me 6 jars.
So easy and successful! Big thanks!
Thanks for your comment Christelle :-)