Homemade DIY dish soap is easy to make. It also saves you money, eliminates toxins from your home, and is a fun project to do with the kids!
Are you looking to save money on cleaning products and work toward a more natural lifestyle, eliminating chemicals and toxins from your everyday products? Do you love the challenge of making your own cleaners?
If so, try this simple homemade DIY dish soap recipe. It’s not for the dishwasher, it’s for hand-washing the dishes the old-fashioned way. (I say yuck, Matt actually likes doing it that way.)
Even though we wrote a book on how to make all your own household cleaners, we continue to create new recipes and improve the old ones. This recipe (not featured in the book) is simple, natural, cheap to make, and cleans dishes to a sparkling shine.

Homemade Dish Soap: A Natural Recipe
Homemade DIY dish soap is easy to make. It also saves you money, eliminates toxins from your home, and is a fun project to do with the kids!
- Prep Time
- 5 minutes
- Active Time
- 11 minutes
- Cooling Time
- 7 hours
- Total Time
- 7 hours 16 minutes
- Servings
- 8 ounces
- Estimated Cost
- $2
Ingredients
- 1 ¾ cups boiling water
- 1 Tbsp borax
- 1 Tablespoon grated bar soap (use homemade soap, bar Castile soap, Ivory, or whichever natural bar you prefer)
- 15-20 drops essential oils (for scent and more)
Instructions
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Heat water to boiling.
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Combine borax and grated bar soap in a medium bowl. Pour hot water over the mixture. Whisk until the grated soap is completely melted.
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Allow mixture to cool on the countertop for 6-8 hours, stirring occasionally. Dish soap will gel upon standing.
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Transfer to a squirt bottle, and add essential oils (if using). Shake well to combine.
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Now you’re ready to use your liquid dish soap just as you would use any commercial brand!
Recipe Video
Notes
We typically make a double batch.
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Essential Oils Make Your Soap More Effective
Antibacterial essential oils can be used in this homemade dish soap recipe to naturally increase the cleaning power. Oils such as lemon, eucalyptus, sweet orange, geranium, or lavender have antibacterial properties. Using citrus oil will also help with cutting grease. I personally prefer eucalyptus lemon dish soap, with about 10 drops of lemon and 6 drops of eucalyptus essential oil. The aromatherapy makes the chore of washing dishes a little more enjoyable. Other great essential oils to use are peppermint, grapefruit, lime, and even a few drops lemon.
Using your Homemade Liquid Dish Soap
If you use commercial dish soap that foams and bubbles, it will take time to normalize yourself to homemade alternatives. Commercial dish soaps have added harmful chemical surfactants (like sodium lauryl sulfate) to create suds – more for the visual effect, not necessarily more cleaning power. Suds are actually not necessary to get things clean, but we’ve been conditioned to think that bubbles have to be present for cleaning. This is not so.
When you squirt your homemade dish soap into the sink, you’ll notice a little bubbling at first, but then the water will just look a little cloudy. This is normal. Your dishes will still come out clean. I always wash silverware first, then dishes and glasses, and save pots, pans, and really greasy dishes for last.
Note: If your homemade dish soap ever gels up too much in the bottle just give it a shake and it’ll be ready for use again. You can also dump it all in your blender and blend for about 10 seconds. This should prevent future gelling and/or separation.
A Word On Borax
There are all sorts of concerns about the toxicity of borax swirling around on the Internet. Many readers have expressed concern about the inclusion of borax in our dishwasher detergent recipe and laundry detergent recipe. We have done tons of research on it, and feel it is a safe, effective addition to homemade cleaners. You may be interested in reading this article on the subject, or this article, or doing more research to help make your own determination.
Bonus Tip!
Like this recipe? Learn how to make liquid soap for hands, body, and more! And check out all our other soap making articles.
Happy dishwashing! Let us know what you think of this homemade dish soap recipe.
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I will definitely try this one the next time I need more dish soap. I made the dish soap recipe in your book but it came out solid, I added a heap more water and now it looks like mucus… a bit off-putting washing your dishes in it. It does work though.
Yeah, I will say these recipes can be a bit problematic at times. I have found temperature plays a role in how they “set up,” and the type of soap definitely plays into the quality of the finished product. Ahhh, the joys of DIY products. 🙂
what can I use instead of borax in the recipe
can i use baking soda instead of borax
thankyou for your time
Go ahead and try it! I’m not sure if you will end up with the same gel consistency as the borax gives. I experimented a bunch with washing soda, and it gave me lots of problems (separated from the mixture after curing). However, you may want to try substituting washing soda or baking soda for yourself…you may end up with good results. 🙂
do you have to use the essential oils? i already have the other stuff from making the homemade laundry soap. i would love to make this tonight, but if i really DO need the oils, i will have to wait.
Essential oils are optional. Go ahead and get started making your soap without them. 🙂
For the recipe you need castile soap and you said for essential oils you can use eucalyptus oil, so I’m just curious do you think I could use Dr.Bronner’s eucalyptus hemp pure castile soap for this recipe? It says it has eucalyptus globulus oil.
Definitely! Feel free to omit the extra essential oils if you’re using a bar soap that already contains them.
How well does this dish soap work with hard water?
We have very soft water where we live now, so I haven’t used it in hard water yet. If you decide to experiment with it, be sure to return and let us know what you find out!
Is the essential oil ‘essential’ or optional?
The essential oils are optional. 🙂 They boost the natural cleaning power of your dish soap, but the soap will still work without them.
The only bar soap we have in our small town is Sunlight – works for laundry just fine, even in our very sensitive skin household. Would it work for this recipe though? I admit to being pretty new to all this and I don’t know the differences between the natural soaps yet. Why isn’t Fels Naptha ok, for example?
Fels Naptha would probably work, but it’s designed as kind of a heavy duty laundry soap. However, I know folks who use laundry soaps for dish soap…so it’s really just a matter of preference. I’m not familiar with Sunlight, but if it’s gentle enough for your family’s skin then you could certainly try it.
I wouldn’t want this anywhere near my dishes… how about you?
Fels NNaptha Ingredients:
Soap (sodium tallowate*, sodium cocoate* (or) sodium palmate kernelate*, and sodium palmate*), water, talc, cocnut acid*, palm acid*, tallow acid*, PEG-6 methyl ether, glycerin, sorbitol, sodium chloride, pentasodium pentetate and/or tetrasodium etidronate, titatium dioxide, fragrance, Acid Orange (CI 20170), Acid yellow 73 (ci43350)
*contains one or more of these ingredients
All soap has these things unless you make your own. Even Ivory. As for these ingredients, Fels-Naptha contains soap consisting of sodium tallowate and sodium cocoate or sodium palmate kernelate and sodium palmate. The word “sodium” refers to sodium hydroxide, the lye used to make soap, in this case with tallow, coconut oil, palm oil or palm kernel oil. It also contains water and talc. Coconut acid, palm acid and tallow acid are fatty acids derived from plants and animals. They are emollients and surfactants, cleaning agents in other words. PEG-6 methyl ether is an extract of juniper. Fels-Naptha also contains glycerin, an emollient; sorbitol, a sugar alcohol derived from fruits, corn and seaweed, a moisturizer; and sodium chloride, ordinary table salt. Pentasodium pentetate and/or tetrasodium etidronate are inorganic salts used as emulsifiers and dispersing agents. Titatium dioxide is an opaque white pigment. The soap also contains fragrance, source not specified and acid orange and acid yellow colors.
Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/176905-information-on-fels-naptha-soap/#ixzz2LSx9NBwT
Love the sound of this, will have to try it out soon. I do want to say that when we bought our new stainless steel pans the sales person reccomened (as well as the manufacturer) not to use anything with lemon as it will damage the pans, so be careful with the lemon oils.
Thanks for this tip Cheri! I hadn’t heard that before. Good thing there are lots of other antibacterial oils to choose from.
I have liquid castille soap … could I use this instead of a bar? Thanks for all of the great recipes!!
It should work fine, but you’ll want to add a little less water. Try it and let us know how it goes.
I have been wanting a homemade dish washing liquid! And here it is,Thanks guys.
Borax is natural, but so are alot of other things I wouldn’t ever use in my home.It has long and short term side effects on your health, some of which can be lasting. I have throughly researched and also know the difference between the 2 products.
Would Fels Naptha be a suitable bar soap for this recipe or is that a bit too much for dishes? I keep it on hand for the Laundry Detergent recipe (thanks so much for that!). Also, if I just absolutely have to have some bubbles, can glycerin be added to this recipe with no problems? Thanks for all that you do.
Glycerin wouldn’t hurt anything so give it a shot and let us know how it goes. I wouldn’t do Fels Naptha if you can help it, as you suspected it’s not made for this type of use. Grab a bar of Dr. Bronners, Kirks Castile, or Ivory.
Will this work in a dishwasher since there are no suds?
Yes, but you’d also want to add some citric acid to provide that “sheeting action” we all love, or you could just use our homemade dishwasher detergent recipe.
I tried this in the dishwasher, using about 2 drops, 1/2 tsp. It worked beautifully! Love it!
I think the issues with toxicity of borax is mostly coming from those who have confused it with boric acid. I’ve run into this frequently.
Yep, precisely.
I live in Asia and have been unsuccessful in finding borax. Is there a good alternative for it?
There isn’t a replacement that does the same exact thing but you could substitute washing soda (a.k.a. soda ash).
and may I add …. I’ve kept my (store-bought) dish soap in an olive oil bottle – the kind with a pourer spout – for years now. looks nice on the counter and there’s no need for plastic 🙂 eager to fill it with my homemade batch today.
blessings!
Great idea Cristin, and you’re welcome for reading your mind. 😉
I do the same thing. I saw a friend of mine doing it. It works and looks great.
I literally was looking for a dish soap recipe on your site just yesterday! you are oh-so thoughtful to have read my mind 😉
THANKS!
I’ve been waiting for a recipe like this! Once my 7th Generation gets low, I’ll have to try this out! Thanks so much!
I use Dawn dishwashing liquid not only to wash dishes but to also remove food and grease stains from clothes. Will this also work in this capacity?
We haven’t tested it on clothes, for that we pretreat and wash with our homemade laundry detergent.
How do you pretreat with that laundry detergent? Any suggestions on how to leave your clothes with a scent using it? Also, I looked at the recipe for cloth baby wipes. As I do not use cloth diapers, do y’all have a recipe suggestion for the type of homemade baby wipes that use paper towels? Loving your site! Love the laundry detergent’s cleaning power and looking forward to trying the dish soap and dish detergent!
We pretreat with our powdered laundry detergent by rubbing a little of it on stains with a wet toothbrush (designated only for this purpose). See our homemade fabric softener and dryer sheets article for tips on scenting your laundry: https://www.diynatural.com/homemade-fabric-softener-dryer-sheets/
For homemade baby wipes made with paper towels you can use the diaper wipe solution from our article as the liquid. (https://www.diynatural.com/homemade-baby-wipes/)
Just cut a paper towel roll in half, and pour the diaper wipe solution over top. I would recommend doubling the recipe for the liquid and pouring it over one half of the paper towel roll. (If you’re using both halves of the paper towel, just quadruple our recipe for wipe solution.) Hope this helps!
Thank you so much, Betsy! That is really helpful! Is it ok to pretreat stains that way and wait to wash them for 3 days or so?
Thanks! Going shopping today for all sorts of supplies…will include these. I think I’ll get some orange and lemon essential oils. I’m particularly fond of citrus…the scent as well as the grease-cutting ability! Awesome! Thanks! Happy New Year!