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Cosmetic/educational only. Patch-test first. Use sugar scrubs on the body, not the face (too abrasive for facial skin), and never on broken or irritated skin. Oil makes the tub/shower slippery — step carefully.

A sugar scrub is simply sugar (the exfoliant) suspended in oil (the moisturizer). The classic ratio is 2 parts sugar : 1 part oil — adjust for a drier, grittier scrub (more sugar) or a wetter, gentler one (more oil). Because there's no water, it keeps for months.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup granulated sugar (white for fine, raw/brown for coarser/gentler-melting)
  • ½ cup carrier oil (sweet almond, coconut, jojoba or olive)
  • 10–15 drops essential oil (citrus, vanilla, peppermint)
  • Optional add-ins: 1 tsp honey, lemon zest, a little vitamin E

Step-by-step

  1. Mix. Stir the sugar and oil together until it looks like wet sand. Add more sugar for grittier, more oil for smoother.
  2. Scent. Stir in the essential oil and any add-ins.
  3. Jar it. Spoon into a clean, completely dry jar.
  4. Use. In the shower, massage onto damp skin in circles, then rinse. Skip the face.

💧 Keep water out

Water in the jar is what spoils an oil-based scrub. Scoop with a dry spoon (not wet fingers in the shower) and it'll stay good for months.

Variations

Coffee scrub: swap half the sugar for used coffee grounds. Lemon-sugar: olive oil + lemon zest + lemon EO. Brown sugar vanilla: brown sugar + coconut oil + vanilla. Salt version: swap fine sea salt for sugar (more detoxifying feel, a bit harsher).

FAQ

Sugar or salt? Sugar is gentler and dissolves quicker; salt is more abrasive and great for feet. Coconut oil hardens in winter — warm the jar or use a liquid oil. Face scrub? Use a much finer exfoliant (like ground oats) — table sugar is too rough for facial skin.