Make Your Own Laundry Detergent ~ Simple, and Super Cheap!

in #homesteading7 years ago

Making your own laundry detergent sounds intimidating, but it’s one of the easiest things you can do! If you know how to use a cheese grater and a measuring cup, you can make your own detergent. The best part is, this stuff works BETTER than what you buy in the store, and for a tenth of the cost. There are three simple steps to the process – grate & melt the soap, combine with washing soda and borax, and add water. That’s it! This recipe makes 5 gallons of concentrated detergent, which you’ll further dilute to make 10 gallons of ready-to-use laundry detergent.

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Here’s what you need:
1 bar of Fels-Naptha soap
1 cup of Arm & Hammer washing soda (NOT baking soda)
¾ cup of Borax
Essential oils of your choice (optional)
Cheese grater
Whisk
Long-handled spoon or stirring utensil
5 gallon bucket with lid

JUST A COUPLE OF NOTES BEFORE WE PROCEED FURTHER: 

Fels-Naptha soap and Arm & Hammer washing soda are both available at your local Wal-Mart in the laundry aisle, and also on Amazon. If you can’t find Fels-Naptha, Ivory soap works just fine, too!   

For this recipe, you MUST use washing soda (sodium carbonate). You cannot substitute baking soda (sodium bicarbonate).  It is possible to make washing soda from baking soda, but we’ll cover that in a later post. Baby steps!   

1. Grate soap & melt on stove 

First, grate the bar of soap and place shavings into a medium pan and add enough water to cover the soap shavings. Heat the soap mixture gently over a medium-low flame, while stirring regularly with a whisk, until the soap dissolves. Depending on your stove, this may take anywhere from 15-30 minutes. While the soap is melting, add 1 cup of washing soda and ¾ cup of borax to the bottom of your 5 gallon bucket. It’s best to keep your bucket on the floor as it will get very heavy!   

2. Combine soap with borax and washing soda 

Once all soap chunks have disintegrated and your soap mixture is completely smooth, turn off the heat and pour the soap mixture into the bucket. Whisk the mixture quickly, dissolving the borax and washing soda completely. Add hot water from your tap (as hot as possible!) and keep stirring.  I use a long-handled spoon for this, but you can use anything that reaches the bottom of the bucket and can handle the hot mixture. I’ve even used a mortar paddle attached to the cordless drill! Fill your bucket close to the top with hot water, while stirring.   

3. Let sit overnight 

You’ve filled your bucket, now snap or twist on the lid, and let the detergent sit overnight to congeal. I use a five gallon bucket with a gamma lid for my detergent because it’s water-tight and prevents spills, but any tight-fitting lid will work just fine… just don’t tip the bucket!   

4. Stir, add scent, and fill smaller containers 

The next morning you’ll take off the lid and stare at your congealed detergent and wonder if you’ve made a mistake. You haven’t! It’s supposed to look like globs of snot. Give it a good stir with whatever long-handled thing you were using the night before to break up most of the globs. At this point, your detergent is done, but I prefer to take it a step further. I add scent and dilute it so that it’s not gloppy but a nice, smooth liquid. Simply fill whatever laundry detergent container or plastic jar with lid you’d like to use halfway with glop. Plop, plop!  Add very hot water to fill the remainder of your container. Add essential oils for scent – I love to use 10 drops of rosemary, and 10 drops of lavender in our 1 gallon containers, but feel free to experiment and use whatever scents you prefer. Now give it a good shake, and your detergent is ready to use!  

To use this detergent:

Add 1/4 cup to 1/2 cup of liquid detergent to each load.  How much you use depends greatly on the size of the load, and the size of your washer.  This detergent is safe to use in HE washers too!

A note on prices ~ in our area, a 150 ounce of laundry detergent costs approximately $7 (USD). Using this recipe, I am able to make 10 gallons of detergent for less than a single bottle of commercial detergent. On average, I wash two loads of laundry PER DAY so this saves us quite a bit of money!

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You are a god send. I have researched how to make my own laundry soap and living in a small community almost impossible to find the ingredients. I am not a big fan of shopping online, but hey you said Walmart. I live in Canada so I am hoping they sell it here too. Thank you, following you and upvoted. Keep the good stuff coming.

Thanks! I couldn't find it on Walmart.ca, but Amazon.ca has it online! A bit more expensive than here in the US but I would imagine still cheaper than buying regular liquid detergent. If you are uncomfortable buying online, I think you can buy Amazon gift cards at Walmart and use that to purchase. Not 100% sure on that though!

Amazon gift cards what a great idea, thank you, now to find a store that carries them, love living in a small town, and 2 hour drive to anywhere.

Thank you my friend
I submitted
Well done
We wish you luck

Great post. Even though I am not sure when and where I will find all ingredients, as I live in Vietnam, but it is good to have this in case I manage to find all. I always preferred homemade soaps I was buying regularly from locals while living in Thailand. Making a laundry detergent is even better project :)

Gosh I wish I could help you. I tried googling but couldn't really come up with much. If it's helpful, washing soda is the same as sodium carbonate. If you can find sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) this can be turned into sodium carbonate by baking it for a while until it dries out and changes into a coarser texture.
Borax is sodium tetraborate, sodium borate, or salt of boric acid (NOT the same as boric acid). Sorry I can't be more helpful!

I have been looking for this recipe for a while. thank you!!!

you're welcome! Please let me know how it worked out for you :)

My wife has been using this recipe for over 10 years. It works great and costs mere pennies a load. One thing you didn't mention is that this works well in cold water so you can also save on the cost of heating your water.

Very true, hadn't thought about that!