Perfect for those with sensitive skin, this homemade glycerin soap recipe makes a hard bar of soap that lathers nicely while gently cleansing and moisturizing your skin.
What is glycerin soap?
It sounds like an easy question, but there is really a bit of confusion about what should be called glycerin soap.
When most people think of glycerin soap, they think of translucent soaps. Many think of the translucent melt and pour soaps that can be melted down to make easy, customizable soaps. (Although not all melt and pour soaps are translucent, of course).
What most people don’t know is that there is glycerin in all soap because it is a byproduct of the soap making process.
The difference between translucent “glycerin” soaps and other more opaque soaps with glycerin in them, is that the glycerin soaps have been cooked with certain solvents like sugar, alcohol, and, well, more glycerin, to help make the soap crystals small so that light can pass through. (It’s the soap crystals that reflect light back at our eyes, making soap opaque).
Glycerin soap benefits
Glycerin is a humectant, meaning that it helps retain, or reduce the loss of, moisture.
What’s special about glycerin, though, compared to some other humectants, is that it is an endogenous humectant, meaning we have it naturally in our skin. Glycerin has been shown to help restore moisture and elasticity in the stratum corneum layer of our skin, helping to restore the barrier that protects us.
Interestingly enough, even after you stop using glycerin topically, it can continue to help form a barrier to help prevent moisture loss for up to 2 weeks.
Glycerin soaps are thought to be milder and gentler on the skin. While that probably depends on each particular recipe or soap, I’ve found that this soap has worked well on my son who has sensitive skin with atopic dermatitis. (That said, I still use soaps, or other washing products like gels, sparingly on his skin, and most days only rinse the majority of his skin with water.)
I find this to be a great overall soap for face and body, and I like how it helps reduce acne on my skin.
Watch how I make glycerin soap
The Glycerin Soap Making Process
Making a translucent glycerin soap is really a two part process.
First, you have to make the soap, using a hot process method. (I use my slow cooker which works perfectly for both parts of the process.)
After you have made your soap, you need to dissolve the soap crystals to help allow the light to pass through the soap, making it translucent. To do that, you will use a combination of several different “solvents.”
On my first two attempts, I didn’t spend a lot of time trying to dissolve the crystals. I wasn’t careful to keep the slow cooker well sealed, and I didn’t leave the solvents to work longer, or add more of them, to try to get a more translucent soap.
If getting a more translucent soap is important to you, I’ve given you a range of different solvent values for you to experiment with. I chose to add an amount somewhere in the middle of the given range of each particular solvent. You may want to try adding a smaller amount, and increase, as needed, until your soap gets more translucent. Using a stronger alcohol will also probably help you get a clearer soap.
If you’re really picky about getting translucent soap, I’d suggest reading the book, Making Transparent Soap: The Art Of Crafting, Molding, Scenting & Coloring by Catherine Failor. Her techniques are the ones that most people follow when making both translucent solid soaps and translucent liquid soaps. She has another book about Making Natural Liquid Soaps. If you’re interested in making liquid soaps, I have a couple of liquid soap recipes up on the blog. (You can choose to make a liquid castile soap, or a liquid coconut oil soap, or make both and combine them to get the best of both worlds.)
Choosing oils for a glycerin soap recipe
Because we are going to be using solvents to dissolve some of the soap crystals, it’s best to use oils that make a harder bar of soap. This will help ensure you’ll still end up with a hard, long lasting bar of soap despite the solvent process.
In general, oils that are solid at room temperature tend to make harder bars of soap. (Olive oil can also make a hard bar of soap, but it usually requires a long curing process to get it to harden.) Tallow and coconut oil are great oils for this type of recipe; not only because they make a nice hard bar of soap, but they are also said to be good for making a translucent, rather than cloudy, glycerin soap.
Castor oil is another common oil used in translucent soap making, not because it’s a solid oil that makes a hard bar of soap (because it isn’t, of course), but because castor oil is said to be somewhat of a solvent on its own.
Even after using the solvents, this recipe made very hard bars of soap, and I really love the way it lathers. The coconut oil adds to the cleaning factor of the soap and helps make a bubbly lather. The castor oil helps stabilize that lather. This was the first time I used tallow for making soap because it’s not very easy to find here. (I wanted to make my own, but couldn’t get any butchers to save beef fat for me for rendering tallow.) I have to say that I really love it, and plan on using it more often.
Choosing an alcohol as a solvent
I would have loved to use a consumable alcohol without any added scents or ingredients like Everclear, but I wasn’t able to find anything like that here.
Funny story…
I actually went to the supermarket with my mother-in-law and bought some 70% absinthe because it was the only drinkable alcohol I could find over 50% here in Spain. I was slightly embarrassed buying it, and felt the need to say that it was for making soap. In the end, I felt bad about using an expensive alcohol in my experiments with making a translucent soap, and wasn’t sure how the green coloring would affect the color of my final soap. (I wanted to see what I’d end up with without adding anything at all to it.)
I decided to use some 70% denatured alcohol instead. I was worried about it leaving an unusual scent to my soap, but honestly I don’t notice any off putting fragrances from the alcohol, despite my having forgotten to add any essential oils in the end for fragrance.
I think next time I’d try with a stronger alcohol to see if my soap turns out more translucent. If anybody gives a 96% alcohol, or something similar, a try, I’d love to hear how it goes!
I now have been left with a completely full bottle of absinthe at my house, if anybody wants to come for a party. (Just kidding about the second part.)
Superfatting glycerin soaps
Because excess oils can make for a cloudy soap, I chose not to superfat this soap. (Superfatting is when you add more oils to the soap than what are needed to react with the amount of lye used. Some unreacted oils remain in the soap, and can leave a hydrating film on your skin when you use the soap.)
The excess glycerin in this soap helps compensate and acts as the leftover emollient that helps make a moisturizing soap. I used the same thought process when making my liquid castile soap and liquid coconut oil soap, and find that both are very mild for use on face and body.
Now that I’ve been using this glycerin soap for awhile, I definitely don’t think it’s missing anything, and love it just the way it is. That said, you could always try adding slightly more oil if you prefer to superfat the soap.
Glycerin soap recipe
Homemade Glycerin Soap Recipe (From Scratch)
Makes around 8 bars of soap.
Materials
For the soap
- 304 g distilled water
- 117.7 g lye NaOH
- 440 g tallow
- 200 g castor oil
- 160 g coconut oil
Solvents
- 120 g glycerin Between 98g and 147g
- 300 g 70º alcohol Between 275g and 321g
- 90 g sugar Between 73g and 110g
- 180 g distilled water Between 147g and 244g
Instructions
Make the soap.
- Weigh out the lye in a small, non-metal bowl.
- Weigh out the distilled water in another, larger, non metal bowl.
- In a well ventilated area, carefully pout the lye into the container with the distilled water. You should wear gloves and goggles to protect your eyes and hands. Stir the lye into the water until it is dissolved. The mixture will heat up and get cloudy at first, but will clear up and cool down with time.
- Leave the lye mixture to cool while you weigh out the oils. I find that the easiest way is to place the bowl on a digital scale, tare it, add an oil to the bowl until you reach the right weight. You then tare again before carefully adding the next oil, and between each addition.
- Add the oils to a slow cooker on low heat, and stir them together well. Allow any solid oils like the tallow to melt.
- Carefully add the lye mixture to the melted oils, and gently stir them together. Once the lye solution is fully incorporated into the oils, you can begin to blend them together with an immersion blender.
- Blend with the immersion blender until the mixture thickens to trace. Once the mixture has reached trace, place the lid on the slow cooker and allow the soap mixture to cook for several hours (around 3) until it starts to get transparent.
- You have now made a hot process soap.
Use the solvents to make it translucent.
- Weigh out the alcohol and the glycerin. You will be mixing them together and adding them to your soap. I would have liked to use a high proof alcohol like Everclear, but couldn’t find anything like that here in Spain. I ended up using a 70º denatured alcohol. they say that if you use a higher concentration of alcohol, that it will do a better job of making the soap more transparent. (Perhaps next time I’ll try with a 90+% denatured alcohol. Rubbing alcohol is said to leave an unpleasant scent behind, but I haven’t tried it to verify the difference.)
- Pour the alcohol and glycerin mixture into the soap. You’ll probably end up with chunks of soap floating in the liquid. Try to break them up as best as you can. (I used my immersion blender to break up the chunks and fully incorporate the alcohol and glycerin into the soap. Work in a well-ventilated area for this step and be careful not to have any open flames in the area. (You should always be careful when heating high percentages of alcohol.)
- Cover the crock pot, sealing it as best you can so that the alcohol doesn’t evaporate. (If it evaporates too quickly, it won’t be able to work its magic on the soap.)
If you really have your heart set on making a translucent soap, you should seal your crock pot with some sort of plastic wrap before placing the lid on top. I didn’t have any on hand, and wasn’t really too concerned about making a fully transparent soap, so I just used the regular lid of my crock pot. - Allow the soap to cook, covered and sealed, for around 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile, make your sugar syrup. Weigh out the sugar and water and mix them together in a saucepan over low to medium heat until the sugar has completely dissolved. Remove it from the heat.
- Once the 30 minutes has passed, you can begin to add the sugar solution to the soap. Gently mix it in, trying not to move the soap too much so as not to form a lot of foam or bubbles.
- At this point, you can begin to test the soap for translucence. It will look translucent to the eye, but as it cools, it will become more opaque. The way most people check is by freezing a glass, and adding a small amount of soap to the bottom of the glass to cool it. Keep in mind that you are using a very thin layer of soap, and that when you have a thicker layer it won’t be as translucent.
- To try to get a more translucent soap, you can continue to cook the soap, adding in small amounts of the various solvents and checking the translucence with the frozen glass. (To be honest, I didn’t bother, and just added the sugar, and went right to pouring the soap into the mold. Perhaps next time I’ll try for a more translucent soap, and will give you my tips for what works best.)
- At this point, you can add in any fragrances or colorings. The nice thing about this soap is that because it has been cooking for so long, and has completed the saponification (soap making) phase, you can even use food coloring to color your soaps. You won’t have to worry about the lye reacting with the colorants and changing them as often happens when adding things to cold process soaps.
- Clear the foam off the soap, and carefully pour the soap into your soap molds. Try to be gentle at this stage as any movement can cause foaming of the soap, which will lead to a more opaque soap. (I wasn’t very careful, and my soaps have a more transparent layer on the bottom, with a thin layer that is more opaque at the top, where the bubbly soap settled before hardening.)
- You can skim the foam off and pour it into small soap molds. They will make a more opaque soap that will work just as well as the rest of the soap.
- Allow the soap to set undisturbed overnight.
- The next morning, check the soap for hardness. If it is hard enough, unmold the soap and cut it into bars as needed.
- Allow your soap to cure and dry for several weeks. This is best done by separating the soaps to allow for air flow over them. It’s a good idea to rotate the soaps occasionally so that all sides dry at the same rate. The curing process will allow it to harden and finish any remaining chemical processes to make for a better soap.
My first experience making glycerin soap
The first time I tried to make a glycerin soap, I decided to try using a new wooden soap mold for my newly made soap. I should have experimented with a soap that was easier and quicker to make like my easy, beginner soap.
What happened?
The mold began to leak, and I ended up with my soap solution all over the counter. I scraped up some of it, and tried pouring it into another mold, but by that point I had a lot of parts that were hardening up and floating in the melted soap mixture. I decided that I was going to use my immersion blender to smooth out the mixture before pouring it back into the other mold.
The result?
Because I didn’t let the mixture settle again, I ended up with a more cloudy soap. The soap started to settle on its own leaving a clearer, harder bar of soap on the bottom, and a foamier, opaque soap on top.
What did I learn?
It’s just as important to be careful how you handle the soap when pouring into the molds. You want to be gentle and not incorporate a lot of air into the mixture. That is, unless you are going for this lemon merengue pie look to your soap! (I have to admit that it is kind of cool. The foamy layer is very soft, and almost like a marshmallow.)
Making a loofah soap
I decided to use the translucency of this soap to my advantage, and made loofah soaps. The loofah serves as a gentle, natural exfoliant for bathing.
To make a loofah soap, you can use PVC piping as your soap mold. If you have a PVC pipe cap, you can seal off one end with one of those. If not, you can seal off the end with some heavy plastic and rubber bands.
Add the loofah to the pvc pipe and weigh it down with something. (I used a spoon.)
Once in place, gently pour the soap into the pipe over the loofah.
When the soap has hardened, the easiest way to pull the soap from the mold is to put the pipe into the freezer for at least half an hour. Not only will this help solidify the soap, but it will slightly reduce its size long enough to help you push the soap out of the mold.
Carefully cut the soap into round bars and allow them to cure like you would any other bar of soap.
I’m sure somebody will ask me why the loofah soaps stayed white, while the other soaps turned yellow after during the curing process…
I wish I had an answer. I will say that they were from the same batch, and I didn’t add any colorants or any different ingredients to one versus the other. I poured the bar soaps first, and then filled up the pvc mold for the loofah soaps. If anybody has any ideas about why they aren’t the same color, I’d love to hear them!
Maggie
Tracy, I don’t use Tallow. What can be substituted?
Thanks, Maggie
Tracy Ariza, DDS
There is a vegan glycerin soap recipe for those avoiding animal fats.
Barb Osselburn
Hi Tracy,
If I understand correctly, we do not need to do the solvent part of the soap process if we do not care about translucency. Is that correct? Just the hot process and then pour into molds.
Tracy Ariza, DDS
Hi Barb…
Yes, kind of…
It will be very opaque a white like a normal bar of soap if you don’t use the solvents. It should be a hard, white bar.
If you want it to look more like a glycerin soap that you would buy, you’ll at least need to use some/one of the solvents. If you don’t care about trying to get it transparent, you don’t need to worry too much about adjusting the solvent amounts, etc.
Magda
Witam, dziekuje za tak madry artykul..
Trafilam na niego przypadkiem szukajac odpowiedzi na nurtujace mnie pytanie-czy wszystkie glicerynowe mydelka Maja brzydsza ,,gore” ??dol jest ladny I blyszczcy a gora juz nie I wyglada jak zdjecie dodane powyzej..nie rozumiem tez dlaczego na krawedziach mydelka wystepuja babelki mimo wczesniejszego spryskania alkohol… Dziekuje za odpowiedz
Tracy Ariza, DDS
Hello Magda,
I was going to suggest spraying with alcohol to help that, but it sounds like you already have tried that. Other than that, the only thing that can help avoid bubbles is to just try to keep handle the final liquid soap as gently as possible. Any movement will contribute to bubbles and cloudiness that will eventually float to the top. I’m not sure how feasible it is to be able to completely eliminate that when making at home.
Minerva
I’m sorry for my earlier question–just reread your article and realized you already answered the Castor Oil question! I’m curious: would you reduce the amount of alcohol if you used 190 proof Everclear instead? 221g of 95% alcohol liquid has the same amount of alcohol as 300g of 70% alcohol, if I crunched numbers right… or should I just use the same weight no matter what? (221g is definitely cheaper… this stuff isn’t cheap!)
Tracy Ariza, DDS
Hi Minerva, I’d think either way would work fine. A higher concentration may make a slightly clearer soap, but, ad you say, it also makes a more expensive soap.
I don’t care so much about transparency, so I’d personally probably dilute it. Other people may prefer to experiment to try to get it as clear as possible, though, so they may choose to use it full strength. In the end, it’s really up to you and your priorities.
Minerva
I’m curious–when I make HP soap, it normally only takes an hour or less to reach that translucent stage, but you and DIY Natural both recommend cooking Glycerin soap’s Hot Process stage for 3+ hours. Is it important to cook it beyond the point where HP soap is done, or can I stop after an hour and move onto the next stage?
I’m also curious: every M&P recipe I’ve seen uses a lot more castor oil than the 5% I usually see in hot and cold process recipes. Do you know why?
Asking questions before I start, but I’ll come back and rate the recipe as soon as I try it! I so appreciate your precise, analytical approach.
Tracy Ariza, DDS
Hi Minerva,
Mine has never gotten transparent earlier, so I keep cooking. If yours gets to the right stage earlier, though, no need to continue to cook it in my opinion.
In any case, I did a not fully cooked batch as an experiment once and it eventually went transparent with time on its own. So, even if yours doesn’t cook fully at first, I imagine it would turn out well with time anyway.
As for the castor oil. It’s often considered a “solvent” in hot processed soap recipes like glycerin soaps. It may help achieve transparency in some soaps.
Some people also like the type of lather it adds, etc.
I occasionally use it, depending on the recipe or type of soap, but don’t feel all soaps need it.
Too much can make the soap sticky.
Candy
Hi, I’d like to try making this, but a few questions first: can I sub in anything for the tallow, and if so, will it still turn out translucent? My other question is, can I sub in honey for the sugar? If I do sub in honey, is hardened honey okay, or does it have to be liquid honey?
Tracy Ariza, DDS
I have a vegan glycerin soap recipe for those not wanting to use tallow.
I have no idea how it would turn out using honey instead of the sugar.
Carol McLaughlin
I ended up with 1/2 cup of clear and the rest had to spoon into my molds
Алексей
Привет. А чем сало можно заменить?
Tracy Ariza, DDS
It’s impossible to make a soap without fat and lye. (More on that in my post about what is lye.)
Kelly
Hello,
Thank you for all of your helpful information on homemade natural products. I usually make soap with tallow, coconut oil and olive oil. But, I am researching how to make a soap for sensitive skin that is acne prone. It needs to be coconut free, nut free (shae free), dairy free, gluten free, and vegan (tallow is “out”). It has proven to been a challenge. I haven’t made glycerin soap before. I am interested in olive oil castille soap. Honestly if I could make a laundry soap that is free of all of those ingredients that would be wonderful too. Have you ever used mango butter or cocoa butter instead of coconut oil? I would love to hear any recommendations you might have. Keeping every ingredient as naturally derived as possible. Thank you!
Tracy Ariza, DDS
Hi Kelly,
Wow, that does sound difficult.
I normally sub coconut with animal fats (and the other way around), so making a vegan non-coconut soap sounds complicated.
I have made a shave soap with kokum butter. It turned out quite well, and I need to get around to sharing that recipe. (I just need to find what I did with the recipes. Sigh.)
I made 3 different dual-lye shave soaps for the blog and lost the recipes while I was allowing them to cure.
Once my son has full days again (starting next week), I plan to look for them so I can post those recipes soon.
In that case, I chose kokum because I was looking for a way to get a high amount of stearic acid needed in a shave soap without using soy wax or pure stearic acid. (The other recipes did use those.)
Anyway, I would think that the cocoa butter could work, but I don’t really know how high you can go with it. Have you run the various possible formulations through a lye calculator to see what they predict. (Not that it’s always failproof to use their predictions.)
I wish I could be of more help. I haven’t tried that yet.
For a glycerin soap, you want a really hard bar, so that makes it even trickier.
Simply
Thanks for sharing your recipe soon I will try it! Idk why the variance in color you got, MAYBE from placing the pipe in the freezer??
Merima
Hi Tracy,
Thank you so much for the recipe. I just made it, it hasn’t cooled off yet but it looks great. I did use 96% ethanol it appears to be clear and also I sprayed the top of the molds and it got rid of all of the bubbles from the soap as well. Just one question, since this soap is glycerin will it need to be wrapped straight away once taken out of the mold so that it doesn’t “sweat”?
Have a great day,
Tracy Ariza, DDS
Hi Merima,
Thanks so much! I’m happy it worked well for you.
I personally like to allow my glycerin soaps to cure without wrapping them. Yes, they may sweat, but that can be cleaned off later and then they can be wrapped after they’ve dried and hardened. I talk more about it in my post about how and why to cure soaps.