If you've ever watched someone you love scratch raw, inflamed skin at two in the morning, you already know that eczema isn't just a skin condition — it's exhausting, demoralizing, and relentless. Conventional creams often bring short-term relief at the cost of long-term side effects, which is why so many people are turning back to what plants have quietly offered for centuries: real, whole-ingredient relief. Below, we'll walk through five well-researched herbs that form the backbone of a thoughtful herbal salve for eczema, explain why they work, and show you how to bring them together safely at home.
Why Herbal Salves Work Differently Than Conventional Creams
Most commercial eczema creams rely on corticosteroids or synthetic emollients to suppress the immune response at the skin's surface. They work — sometimes dramatically — but long-term steroid use can thin the skin and disrupt the microbiome. An herbal salve takes a different approach: rather than suppressing, it nourishes. A base of beeswax or plant wax creates an occlusive barrier that locks in moisture while carrying fat-soluble botanical compounds directly into the dermal layers. The herbs infused into the carrier oil are not diluted additives — they are the medicine.
This matters because eczema is fundamentally a barrier dysfunction disease. Research published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2019) confirmed that restoring the skin's lipid barrier is as therapeutically important as managing the inflammatory cascade itself. Plants like calendula and chamomile address both simultaneously — which is something a single synthetic molecule rarely can.
5 Herbs to Include in Your Homemade Eczema Salve
1. Calendula (Calendula officinalis) — The gold standard of skin herbs. Calendula's triterpenoids and flavonoids have been shown to accelerate wound healing and reduce dermal inflammation. A review in the Journal of Wound Care (2018) highlighted calendula's ability to promote epithelial cell regeneration — exactly what cracked, eczema-damaged skin needs.
2. Chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla) — Chamomile's active compound, bisabolol, is a powerful anti-inflammatory that penetrates the skin barrier efficiently. It calms redness and itch without the drying effect many topical treatments cause.
3. Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) — Beyond its well-known calming scent (which we've written about in our post on how natural essential oils affect you when you breathe them in), lavender applied topically has demonstrated antimicrobial properties that help prevent the secondary skin infections eczema sufferers are especially vulnerable to.
4. Plantain Leaf (Plantago major) — Not the banana — the humble backyard weed. Plantain is rich in aucubin and allantoin, compounds that reduce histamine-driven itch and encourage cellular repair. A study in Phytotherapy Research (2014) confirmed plantain's significant anti-inflammatory and wound-healing activity in skin tissue.
5. Turmeric (Curcuma longa) — Curcumin, turmeric's primary active constituent, inhibits NF-\u03baB, a key regulator of the inflammatory response in skin cells. A 2016 systematic review in Phytotherapy Research found curcumin beneficial across multiple inflammatory skin conditions. Note: use sparingly in salves as it can stain fabric and skin yellow.
A Simple Recipe to Try at Home
Making an herbal salve at home is genuinely approachable. Here's a basic framework:
- Fill a clean glass jar loosely with dried herbs — calendula, chamomile, and plantain work beautifully together as a trio.
- Cover completely with a carrier oil such as organic olive oil or fractionated coconut oil. Seal and let infuse in a warm spot for 4\u20136 weeks, shaking daily. For a faster method, use a slow cooker on the lowest setting for 8\u201312 hours.
- Strain the infused oil through cheesecloth, pressing firmly to extract every drop.
- Gently melt beeswax (or carnauba wax for a vegan option) into your infused oil — roughly 1 ounce of wax per 4 ounces of oil, adjusting for firmness.
- Add a few drops of lavender essential oil off the heat, then pour into tins or small jars and allow to set undisturbed.
The result is a clean, effective barrier salve with no parabens, no fragrance chemicals, no petroleum derivatives — just what the plants intended. As we explore in our piece on the wisdom plants are quietly offering us, this kind of formulation is about listening carefully to what nature already provides.
What to Look for in a Ready-Made Herbal Salve
Not everyone has the time, equipment, or sourcing connections to make a reliable herbal salve from scratch — and that's completely valid. If you're buying rather than making, read the ingredient list with the same scrutiny you'd bring to a food label. A trustworthy salve will list every single ingredient, use responsibly sourced herbs, and contain no synthetic preservatives or fragrance blends. It also helps when the maker uses a synergistic multi-herb approach rather than a single-herb extract, because skin inflammation is a multi-pathway problem. We went deep on exactly that reasoning in our post about why using 20 herbs in one formula matters — the same logic applies to skin as it does to pain.
Whether you make your own salve or reach for something trusted and ready-made, the most important step is simply starting — moving away from chemical-laden products and toward ingredients your skin was designed to recognize. For those dealing with both skin inflammation and deeper muscle or joint discomfort, our Godsend Angels Pain Relief Salve, crafted with over 20 botanicals including turmeric, lavender, and arnica, is worth keeping close.
References
- Elias PM, Wakefield JS. Mechanisms of abnormal lamellar body secretion and the dysfunctional skin barrier in patients with atopic dermatitis. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 2019. https://pubmed.ncbi.
