Homemade Laundry Detergent Recipe

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Backyard chickens are all the rage right now and laundry detergent is totally next on he list, in my opinion.  I see it being made left and right.  I attempted to use some a few years ago and it was a failure in my mind then.  It didn’t clean the clothes the way I wanted, so I couldn’t switch over.  Then, over the years we’ve started to make huge changes in our family’s health.  Each year, we changed a few things which have now added up to many, including eliminating all toxic chemicals from our house.  So, I thought it was a good time to share this recipe with you.

Let me just say, I love Method cleaning products. Branding, packaging, partnerships with cool designers, and plant-based products.  I still use them in other areas of my home.  I just new in my heart that I could easily be making laundry detergent.

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Homemade Laundry Detergent

1 box Borax

(also named sodium borate, sodium tetraborate, or disodium tetraborate, whitener and deodorizer)

1 cup washing soda (sodium carbonate, dirt removal)

3 bars of grated soap, your choice

(see below for my research of which to use)

Use 1/2 cup of homemade detergent

Optional additions at the time of doing laundry:

1/2 cup vinegar (acetic acid and water, natural odor remover)

Mix all ingredients together in a large bowl and store in an air-tight container of your choice.  You will need a large one!  You can follow instructions for making liquid soap by dissolving the ingredients together with water but this powder has worked totally great and saves the step!!  Mix and your done.  So easy!  All ingredients can be found on Amazon (I made a list here for easy shopping).

Why you should make laundry detergent:

Better Health:

When a person starts living a chemical-free life, you begin being ok with clothes that are not washed as well as the ones that have toxic chemicals.  Yes, I have totally become one of those crazy people who is appalled by that junk.  Eek!  It’s like a conversion experience of sorts.  I can’t believe what I used to be breathing every day.  My whites are not as bright as a person who uses bleach, but I can live with that if it means cleaner air for my family to breath in.  I believe this change a few years ago was one of many reasons my daughter has been relieved of asthma.  She had just been diagnosed after a few years of wheezing and some really bad attacks.  We used that inhaler so many times.  Now, she hasn’t had so much as a wheezing moment for over a year.  I’m so thankful to God for His healing and the wisdom He gave me to know these changes can make a difference.  I’m not saying a chemical-free life will cure asthma.  I just know what we experienced and the way our eyes have been opened to the way chemicals can trick you into thinking they can reside in your lungs without doing definite damage.  Don’t believe me?  Watch the reaction of one of my kids when they go near bleach.  You’d think it was a skunk or a rotten egg!  They are so sensitive to it, having not been around it for their whole lives that breathing it is unbearable.  For a lot of people, they have been desensitized to it over years of exposure.  Craziness!

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Chemical-free life:

I chose this soap because of much research on which would be the least toxic whilst also not ruining my clothes.  It has a pink dye in it but I weighed that against its homemade laundry soap competitor, Fels-Naphtha, which also has dye.  The dye in Zote soap is used as a brightener and I was ok with that in this context.  HOWEVER, since making the batch in these pictures, I discovered something better and the reason for the switch might only matter to me so I didn’t bother to re-photograph everything.  More below on that.  Changes like this are always a process.

Plant-based and Animal-free products:

New info for me:

Most soap these days is made from tallow or animal fat.  I eat meat and don’t have issues with using/eating tallow.  However, I only eat meat that has been raised locally and cared for in the way I believe God intended them to be cared for.  The point made by this wonderful lady, made SO much sense to me.  If I am purchasing a soap, be it Fels-Naptha, Zote, or whomever, the beef tallow being used in the soap would be needed in mass quantities and is most likely coming from large farms where the animals are tortured and left for dead, but not before their parts are taken.  It’s a rough thought, I know, but it has to be said.  If this isn’t important to you then any  bar soaps will be fine for this detergent.  Tallow is the ingredient that adds lather.

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You choose the ingredients:

Just so you know, Zote smells like citronella but only before the clothes are washed and not after.  I wonder if this detergent repels mosquitos?  That would be pretty awesome.

If you’ve read a million recipes for laundry soap and they all look the same, they basically are.  They all seem to included Borax, washing soda, and some kind of bar soap.  You get the choice in that bar soap.  That’s pretty cool.  If you are choosing bar soaps, be sure to check the ingredients yourself.  They might be advertising themselves as “natural”, but still include mostly toxic or icky ingredients.  Fels-naptha and Zote were the most common ones I saw.

Fels-Naptha 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

Zote Ingredients:

Sodium tallowate, sodium cocoate, fragrance (citronella oil), optical brightener, and violet 10.

Ivory soap Ingredients:

 sodium tallowate and/or sodium palmate, water, sodium cocoate or sodium palm kernelate, glycerin, sodium chloride, fragrance, one or more of the following: coconut acid, palm kernel acid, tallow acid or palm acid, and tetrasodium EDTA.

Kirk’s Castile Soap Ingredients:

Coconut Soap, Water, Vegetable Glycerin, Coconut Oil, Natural Fragrance

Dr. Bronner’s Pure Castile Soap (citrus scent):

Organic Coconut Oil*, Organic Palm Oil*, Sodium Hydroxide**, Water, Organic Orange Oil, Organic Olive Oil*, Organic Hemp Oil, Organic Jojoba Oil, Organic Lemon Oil, Organic Lime Oil, Salt, Citric Acid, Tocopherol
* CERTIFIED FAIR TRADE INGREDIENTS
** None remains after saponifying oils into soap and glycerin

I think we’ve found some winners!!  Do you see them?!

I feel so silly for not having found the Dr. Bronner’s or Kirk’s Castile bar in the first place.  I use the liquid Dr. Bronners Castile soap but because I’ve never seen the bars before, I didn’t know they existed until I searched on amazon for a different Dr. Bronner’s product.  Castile soap simply means they are made from pure vegetable oils, as made originally in Spain.  Being able to understand your ingredients is important!

Bonus:  Sweet citrus smells and the choice of a few other scents from organic oils!!

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Saving you money:

Personally, I believe this claim has been exaggerated.  Making your own detergent is only cheaper when you compare it to what you are already buying.  I had been purchasing Method products, so making it DEFINITELY saved me money. However, if you are using a store brand or just a cheap detergent, this will NOT save you money.  For me, the health benefits are amazing and the price is less, so it’s a win-win!  A whole container of this cost me about $15.  If you find the ingredients cheaper or buy in bulk, it will naturally cost less.  I made an amazon ingredient list here, in case you feel the need to make this immediately! :)

Cleaning clothes, naturally:

What most people want to know is, “Will it clean my clothes?”  My answer is yes!  It will definitely clean your clothes and make them smell fresh.  It won’t, however, get all of those stains out.  I am willing to accept a few stains for the price of health and no toxic chemicals.  I just have to do a better job of soaking my boy’s clothes and also our rags we use in the kitchen that build up musty smells.  No biggie.   I can share more on that method another day!

Making good choices for your family:

If you are reading this far down the page, you are probably the one who makes decisions about the household.  We are the ones responsible for great changes, like this for our family.  Go make some!  I’m so excited to have finally given this homemade laundry detergent a shot again!

Below is my laundry setup with a dispenser for vinegar (get it now at Target in the seasonal section!!) and one for the detergent (find this lidded glass container at the Crate & Barrel outlet):

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16 comments to Homemade Laundry Detergent Recipe

  • Candice B.

    Hey Bonnie! Thanks! I’ve totally been wanting to try this and I’m gonna do it now! YAY! I’m just like you girly. Been slowly making changes the last several years and am so happy that I am! I’m totally horrified at the nastiness in everything, ugh.
    btw, Trader Joe’s has the Dr. Bronners castile peppermint soap bars all the time. I buy mine there but they are a bit pricey. Maybe cheaper on amazon?

    • Bon

      Yay for healthy living!! :) I’ll see if my Trader’s has the bars. I just ordered the citrus scent on amazon :)

  • Jane@Buzzmills

    Hey Bonnie, thanks for such an informative post! You’ve got me thinking…and now I’m thinking I might give this a try! :)

  • becky

    The same as you, I tried this a few years ago and was disappointed…but am willing to try again with a recommendation I trust – especially in that I have recently discovered the brilliance of vinegar in all things. Our family has made the same commitment over the past few years from where our meat comes from to the kind of vegetables we grow. We now make our own bread, cereal, tortillas, salsas, sauces – everything that I can reasonably work into our busy schedule. I love the online community for sharing all their knowledge and trials and errors – though I tend to believe these movements are simply the pendulum swinging back away from the convenience driven eras of the 50’s through 90’s as people have realize we have paid a price as a society…from the unraveling bonds of family to our diminished health and wellness. Sorry for my verbosity – but it is early and my children are not up yet :)

  • DeAnna

    I have seen this on posts. Do you use a high efficiency (HE) washer? I have found I must be really careful of products because my HE washer will get a musty, mildew smell with a lot of products. I use vinegar only as fabric softener because I have found them to be a big culprit of the moldy, mildewy smell/buildup.

    • Bon

      I don’t have a HE washer but i would assume, as with most natural products, you’d have to try it to find out. :) Come back and let us know!

  • kim

    I love how simply and yet detailed you explained this. I really feel equipped to go and make it myself now! My dad gives me a box of Kirk’s Castile bars every now and then (its lasts forever), and I can’t go back to any other kind of soap; it’s the best! Also, I wanted to mention I use Seventh Generation oxy stain remover powder, mixed in warm/hot water in a bucket, and soak stained clothing for days, and the stains almost always come out. Now you’ve got me thinking about what’s reeeeally in it, though, so I’m going to go check out the ingredients. If it’s safe to use, then try it, b/c it does work! :)

    • Bon

      Yeah, I would check the ingredients :) I’ve never checked that product. As with everything, it’s a process. I still use seventh generation dishwashing soap. I’m still trying to find a homemade replacement that works :)

  • Mitch

    The active ingredient in oxy stain remover products is sodium percarbonate. Much cheaper to buy on it’s own without additives and yes it works miracles on stains.

  • Elizabeth

    Thanks for the laundry detergent info, I have my list and planning a trip out to get everything today! I have to make a change, because the detergent that I have always used, must have changed something, because I have broken out in a rash everywhere my clothes hit!

    I just found this for dish washing detergent, have not tried it but plan to…

    1 cup borax, 1 cup washing soda (or baking soda will work, as well), 1/2 cup citric acid, and 1/2 cup of kosher salt as a scrubbing agent. Use vinegar as your rinsing agent.

  • lulu

    ZOTE … is not animal free … please examine what it actually says … for instance, where does tallowate come from?
    Then there is optical brightener, and colour dyes … YUK actually, YUK!

    Zote Ingredients:

    Sodium tallowate, sodium cocoate, fragrance (citronella oil), optical brightener, and violet 10.

    • Bon

      If you actually read my post you would understand that I reached the same conclusion. Thanks for taking the time to write but please read first next time. Thanks!

  • pahmiek8

    Just an FYI . .. I buy my Zone soap at the 99 cent store.

    • Bon

      Thanks! I actually mention in the post that I switched soaps (and didn’t re-photograph) because the pink Zote didn’t fit with what I was going for with natural soap ;)