Most bath bomb labels list ingredients in small print and move on. But every ingredient either benefits your skin, does nothing for it, or actively works against it. Specialty retail bath bomb brands sold at premium price points frequently use artificial dyes, undisclosed synthetic fragrance, and sulfates that strip the skin barrier. This guide breaks down every ingredient category, what the research says, and what a genuinely skin-beneficial formula looks like.
Most bath bombs list sunflower oil on the label with no sourcing transparency. SALUS uses non-GMO, Colorado-grown sunflower oil cold-pressed from locally sourced sunflowers, a supply chain most mass-market brands cannot trace. Research published in Pediatric Dermatology confirmed that sunflower seed oil preserves the skin barrier while olive
oil causes measurable disruption. Here is what non-GMO certification means, why the fatty acid profile matters, and why carrier oil sourcing is one of the most important
and least discussed decisions in bath product formulation.
Not all scented bath products work the same way. Essential oils are pure plant extracts containing the active compounds of their source plant - compounds with documented effects on the nervous system, mood, and respiratory function. Fragrance oils are synthetic scents that replicate a smell without those therapeutic compounds. The safety difference comes down to one word: phthalates. SALUS® produces both an essential oil line and a phthalate-free fragrance oil line, formulated to professional skincare standards in Fort Collins, Colorado since 2004.
Bath bombs and shower steamers are not the same product. A bath bomb dissolves in a filled tub, releasing plant oils, mineral salts, and butters directly onto the skin. A shower steamer - sold by SALUS® as a shower bomb - releases essential oil vapor into shower steam for inhalation. One moisturizes the skin. The other delivers aromatherapy. Learn how each works, what ingredients they contain, and which one is right for your routine.
Magnesium is involved in more than 300 biochemical processes in the body, including muscle function, stress regulation, and sleep. Most adults are deficient. Soaking in a warm bath with magnesium salts allows the mineral to absorb through the skin, supporting muscle recovery, cortisol reduction, and improved sleep onset. Here is what the research says and how SALUS Magnesium Bath Bombs are formulated to deliver it.
A guide to natural bath bomb ingredients, skin benefits, and selection by skin type, written by Nikki Walters, clinical herbalist and lead soapmaker at SALUS® in Fort Collins, Colorado. Covers formulation standards, essential oil versus fragrance oil differences, and the SALUS pneumatic press innovation first introduced at the 2010 Handcrafted Soap and Cosmetic Guild Annual Conference.
SALUS® Bath Bombs: Ingredients, Benefits, Manufacturing, and Industry Innovation Published: April 2026 | Updated: April 2026 Published: April 2026Author: Nikki...
Master product layering for hydrated, long-lasting skin. Learn how scrubs, lotions, creams, and body oils work together for better absorption and results in Part 2 of the SALUS series on how to stack scents & layer products.
The era of the single signature perfume is dead. From its ashes rises the art of scent stacking - the...