Kid-Friendly Projects

How to Make Bath Bombs

Bath bombs are a good first project to make with kids. The fizz comes from baking soda meeting citric acid in water, and a little foaming powder turns the bath colorful. Choose a soap-safe fragrance oil from Lone Star, then source the baking soda, citric acid, and molds separately.

Three round bath bombs speckled gray with teal flecks, wrapped in clear cellophane tied with silver star-spangled ribbon, on a white background

A bath bomb is a pressed ball of dry powders that fizzes when it hits the water. The fizz is a simple reaction: citric acid and baking soda stay quiet while they are dry, and the moment they meet water they react and release the bubbles you see[1][2]. A foaming powder called SLSa adds the foam and carries the color through the bath. This is a good project to make with kids, with an adult nearby for the one dusty step. Choose a soap-safe fragrance oil from Lone Star, then source the baking soda, citric acid, salt, and molds separately from a grocery store, craft store, or online retailer.

The whole process is: weigh the dry powders, work in the scent and color by hand, bind the mix with a little glycerin until it packs like damp sand, press it into a mold, and let it dry overnight. The batch below makes about five or six bombs roughly two and a half inches across, and it doubles or triples cleanly if you want more.

Watch the full project: weighing the dry ingredients, working in the fragrance and color, binding with glycerin, and packing the two-piece mold.

What You'll Need

The dry ingredients are pantry and craft-store items you measure by weight on a digital scale. The one thing to choose with care is the fragrance: use a fragrance oil approved for bath bombs and stay within its IFRA usage level for that application.

What You'll Need

Check items off as you gather them

Supplies

  • A Soap-Safe Fragrance Oil About 14 grams; use any of our fragrance oils approved for bath bombs and stay within its IFRA limit.
  • Baking Soda 10 oz; any grocery-store baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)
  • Citric Acid 5 oz; sold in the canning or craft aisle and online
  • Bath Salt or Sea Salt 5 oz; optional. Epsom salt works and is the choice for sore muscles
  • SLSa (Sodium Lauryl Sulfoacetate) 3 oz; foaming bath powder. Optional, but gives the bath bombs their foam and color.
  • Vegetable Glycerin the binder that holds the dry mix together
  • A Colorant A water-based or glycerin-suspended soap colorant, sourced from a craft or cosmetic supplier. Do not use mica; it can stain the tub.
  • A Two-Piece Bath Bomb Mold the round metal kind, sourced from a craft store or online

Tools & Equipment

  • Digital Scale the recipe is by weight; our digital scale reads finely enough
  • Mixing Bowl large enough to sift and hand-mix the dry powders
  • Stirring Utensil a whisk to sift the dry powders together before you add the wet
  • Gloves they keep hands clean and keep citric acid and color off skin and nail polish
  • Dust Mask wear it while weighing the SLSa; the fine powder can irritate your airways

A note on what to source where: the dry powders, salt, molds, and bath-and-body colorant are common craft and grocery items, so buy them wherever is convenient. Lone Star's part is the soap-safe fragrance oil. Our liquid and block dyes are formulated for candles and are not skin-safe, so do not use them in bath bombs.

How to Make Bath Bombs

Work in order: dry powders first, then the wet ingredients, and the glycerin binder last. The reason for the order is moisture. Citric acid and baking soda only fizz once moisture reaches them[1][2], and water-based colorants or witch hazel can start the reaction early. Add liquid ingredients gradually, and add the colorant a few drops at a time.

How to Make Bath Bombs

  1. 1

    Weigh and sift the dry ingredients

    Put on gloves and a dust mask. Weigh the baking soda, citric acid, salt, and SLSa into a bowl. Whisk them together thoroughly and break up any clumps by hand so the powder is even, then you can take the mask off once the SLSa is mixed in.

  2. 2

    Add the fragrance and color

    Weigh in about 14 grams of soap-safe fragrance oil and work it through by hand. Add the colorant a few drops at a time; it foams a little because it is water-based, which is exactly why you use it sparingly. Keep working it by hand until the color is even and no clumps remain.

  3. 3

    Bind with glycerin

    Add vegetable glycerin about one tablespoon at a time, mixing after each, until the texture is like damp sand that holds its shape when you squeeze a handful. A humid kitchen needs less; a dry climate can take three or four tablespoons. Glycerin is the binder to use here, not witch hazel, since witch hazel is water-based and starts the fizz early.

  4. 4

    Pack the mold

    Overfill each half of the two-piece mold so the powder mounds above the rim, press the halves together firmly, and give them a twist. Knock off any excess, tap the mold to release the bomb, and set it on a cushioned surface like silicone cupcake liners or a tray of dry rice.

  5. 5

    Dry overnight, then wrap

    Leave the bombs to dry in open air overnight. Do not leave them sealed in the mold, which slows drying. Once they are fully hard, wrap them airtight; shrink wrap is the most common choice. Wrapping a bomb before it has fully set traps moisture and ruins it.

Make It Your Own

The base recipe is a starting point. Once you have made a batch, you can adjust it to the kind of bath you want.

Ways to Vary the Recipe

Skip the Color or Scent

Leave the colorant out for a plain white bomb, or leave the fragrance out for an unscented one. The fizz works the same either way.

A Cold-and-Flu Fizzy

Scent the batch with peppermint or spearmint for a bright, clearing fizz that suits a stuffy-nose night.

Epsom for Sore Muscles

Use Epsom salt for the salt portion. The citric acid and baking soda are softening on dry winter skin, and the Epsom salt suits a soak after a hard day.

A Foaming Bath Salt

Stop before the glycerin and molding steps and you have a loose, effervescent bath salt instead of a bomb. Scoop it into the bath the same way you would loose salts.

Where to Take It Next

For more bath projects, our How to Make Scented Bath Salts guide covers the loose-salt version, and How to Make Hand Soap with Kids is another no-heat craft to do together. When you are choosing a scent, browse the soap-safe options in our fragrance oils collection; each lists whether it is approved for bath bombs and its IFRA usage level so you can scent a bath product safely[3][4]. Browse the rest of the Learning Center for more projects.

Sources

  1. Citric Acid (PubChem compound summary, CID 311) National Library of Medicine, PubChem
  2. Sodium Bicarbonate (PubChem compound summary, CID 516892) National Library of Medicine, PubChem
  3. Fragrances in Cosmetics U.S. Food & Drug Administration
  4. Understanding the IFRA Standards International Fragrance Association

Frequently Asked Questions

What does SLSa do, and do I need it?

SLSa (sodium lauryl sulfoacetate) is the foaming agent. It is what makes the bath foam and lifts the color into the water so the bath looks vivid. It is optional. Without it the bombs still fizz from the baking soda and citric acid, the foam and the color just come out softer. SLSa is a very fine powder, so wear a dust mask while you weigh it; it can irritate your airways as a dust.

Why won't my bath bombs hold together?

The mix needs more vegetable glycerin. Add it about a tablespoon at a time and work it through until the texture is like damp sand that holds its shape when you squeeze a handful. A mix that crumbles when you press the mold has too little glycerin. Climate matters here: in humid conditions you may need less glycerin, while a dry climate like Arizona can take three or four tablespoons.

Can kids make bath bombs, and what age?

Yes, this is a project to do with kids, with an adult keeping an eye on it. Weighing the dry ingredients, working in the color, and packing the molds are good jobs for kids around the age in our video. The one step that needs an adult is weighing the SLSa, since the fine powder calls for a dust mask. Have everyone wear gloves, which keeps hands clean and keeps the citric acid and color off skin and nail polish.

What colorant is safe for bath bombs?

Use a water-based or a glycerin-suspended soap colorant made for bath and body, sourced from a craft or cosmetic retailer. Do not use mica powder. Mica does not dissolve, so it separates in the bath water and leaves a ring that stains the tub. Add any colorant a few drops at a time, since the water in it starts the fizz reaction early.

How long do bath bombs need to dry, and how do I store them?

Let them dry in open air overnight, sitting on a cushioned surface like silicone cupcake liners or a tray of dry rice. Leaving them sealed in the mold slows drying. Once they are fully hard, wrap them airtight; shrink wrap is the most common choice. Wrapping a bomb before it has fully set traps moisture inside and ruins it.