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My cheap and non-toxic alternative to shampoo

last updated on 9 January 2012
by Samantha

Having been freaked out enough by the prevalence of damaging chemicals in most commercial shampoos (I’m looking at you, sodium laureth sulphate or SLS), I made the decision some time ago to stop using them. To be honest, I’ve always known that shampoos contain a plethora of chemicals, but it never really bothered me because I had always thought that anything I put on my skin (and hair and scalp) would just wash off harmlessly. After all, our skin is waterproof.

Wrong! Well, yes our skin and scalps are waterproof, but the chemicals we put on it still get absorbed through our skin. Once absorbed, these chemicals don’t just stay in the skin. They travel through our inner membranes and blood, and end up lodged in faraway organs. For example, SLS has been found in the heart, liver, lungs, brain and eyes from just skin contact **.

In other words — you don’t need to get shampoo in your eyes for it to end up in your eyeballs.

It was really the last one that really got me. Eyes. Let’s just say I freaked out. (Part of me is still freaking out over that. I mean, seriously. ) After that, the decision was made—I needed to stop putting chemicals on my body (since they inevitably end up in my body). There was no going back.

So the first thing I did was to go to my friendly neighbourhood pharmacy. They had walls of shampoo and conditioner. With so much choice, I thought there must be a few that didn’t contain SLS. There wasn’t even ONE. They all had SLS! Okay, so I thought maybe its just this store. All I needed to do was check out a different store, right? I did just that. This time, I had better luck.

I managed to find a shampoo that didn’t contain SLS tucked away in the baby care section. It was a special baby shampoo for little ones with sensitive skin. Unfortunately, it wasn’t ideal. The bottle was tiny and it cost 3 times more than regular shampoos. It also listed a ton of other chemicals besides SLS. I gave it up for a bad job and slunk back defeated, incredulous and very, very disturbed. Was there no hope?

Luckily the Internet saved me. After searching online for a while, I found there were many other people as freaked out about the chemical toxins in shampoos as I was. And I found alternatives I never even knew existed such as natural shampoo bars or liquid castile soap.

But in the end, I opted for the simplest and most sustainable method I found. It’s cheap, non-toxic, cleans my hair and scalp really well and best of all, I can find it in any supermarket or grocery store anywhere in the world.

What I use: Baking soda & Apple cider vinegar

Remember to use baking soda and not baking powder. Baking powder contains other ingredients on top of baking soda which isn’t ideal to put on your head.

The apple cider vinegar is optional, but I like to use it because vinegar works well to draw out excess oil. It also removes build-up and leaves a healthy shine when used as a rinse at the end. (You can also use white vinegar as a substitute to apple cider vinegar. )

How I do it

First, I dilute a little bit of apple cider vinegar in a small bowl I keep in my bathroom. 1 part vinegar to about 10 parts of water (you can experiment to get the right ratio for your own hair; it’s better to find what works for you as too much vinegar will lead to temporary hair dryness).

This makes about a cupful of very diluted vinegar. If you have short hair, you can make do with even less.

After first running my hair and scalp under water, I soak my scalp and roots with the diluted vinegar. It’s better to do this on wet hair, otherwise the vinegar solution will just run off the top of your head and won’t penetrate down through your hair and scalp. When dousing the vinegar water on your scalp, remember that diluted vinegar is still vinegar and it will sting, so mind your eyes. I just close my eyes and wash my face after when doing this.

I leave this in for a while, about 1- 2 minutes. The wait is just to give the vinegar time to work through my scalp and pull out the oil and dirt—which the next step will take care of.

Using the same bowl (now empty) I pour a generous handful of baking soda in. I add in a little water, and mix it enough with my fingers so that it has the consistency of a thick paste.  You can also use more water to make a watery mixture. This will work just as well and can be easier to work with. Just shake the mixture before you use as the baking soda will settle to the bottom.

With this paste on my fingers, I work it through my scalp. The idea is to use the mixture as a scrub to remove dead skin, oil and dirt on the scalp. This is easier to do if you have done the apple cider soak first as apple cider vinegar is very good at pulling that stuff up. However, you can also do this without it.

Working the paste through the scalp takes a bit of practice, and the first few times, I was a little awkward. It also felt strange because I was so used to foam and bubbles. But I kept with it and I now have a very good technique of working through the baking soda paste thoroughly and all over my scalp. I do section by section (which is how hairdressers shampoo hair at the salon if you think about it).

When I’m done, I wash it all off.

Then I’ll do another rinse with diluted apple cider vinegar again (very quickly this time and not leaving it in to soak) and then wash my hair in cold water. I do this as it makes my hair smooth and shiny. A commenter Lydia also mentioned that this would normalise the pH of our scalps, and I like the sound of that.

Trust me, you don’t need foam or bubbles to get something clean. That’s just something we’ve been programmed to believe. And who benefits from that belief? Commercial shampoo makers and corporations. What do we get in return? Sodium laureth sulfate in our eyeballs. (Good grief.)

My totally awesome results

With just baking soda and some apple cider vinegar, I now have cleaner, healthier hair that looks better and is more manageable. I also notice that without all the gunk and chemicals from shampoo, my hair doesn’t get dirty as quickly as it used to. It looks and feels so much better.

Dandruff is also practically non-existent for me now, whereas before I’d always have to be on the lookout for it. I thought it was normal for people to have dandruff based on all the anti-dandruff commercials I saw! And now I think the companies peddling the dandruff solution were selling the cause of it as well… Sigh.

And while my previous hair cleaning regime had always included conditioner just to make my hair feel smooth, I’ve discovered that I just don’t need any now. It’s remarkable how soft and silky my hair feels and I know that it’s actually the natural, healthy state.  

What’s also great about this natural hair-cleaning method is that when I travel, I don’t need to pack shampoo into those tiny little bottles anymore. Yay!

 

** Our bodies are amazing. It will do its best to clean SLS from our systems, but it takes about 5 days. And since most people shampoo a couple of times a week, that means SLS is always in their systems and organs.


  1. darren permalink
    May 31, 2011

    I have been using baking soda for 2 years now. It took some time to get used to it but my hair feels like as if I use shampoo. I have also found that when I used sls I would have terrible dandruff, nothing would work. Now my dandruff is all but gone. I found that if I have to use sls, the dandruff comes right back, and this I can’t trully prove but I think I am loosing my hair at a slower rate also. I use the baking soda mixed in a 1tbsp to 1/2 cup of water. .

    • Samantha permalink*
      June 1, 2011

      Hi darren, thanks for sharing.

      I’ve had the same results as you — very little dandruff and much less hair fall now. Most of all, I love how soft my hair is sometimes. It’s pretty amazing.

  2. Terri K permalink
    May 31, 2011

    My hair doesn’t feel clean if I use shampoo. It didn’t take long for me to get spoiled. I’ll try the weakened baking soda solution too. I’ve been using baking soda at a ferocious rate. :0)

    • Samantha permalink*
      June 1, 2011

      Me too, I buy them in boxes at a time. If it came in a bucket, I’d buy that too. :) Luckily, the stuff is pretty cheap.

  3. darren permalink
    June 1, 2011

    The irony is that I keep my mixture in an used shampoo bottle. I just have to give it a shake because the baking soda settles at the bottom between uses.

    • Samantha permalink*
      June 1, 2011

      Haha, that’s pretty funny. :D

      And a useful tip too, so thanks. I might try that out to save a bit of time. It never occured to me to pre-mix my baking soda with water. I’ve always had this idea that it has to be “fresh”. Possibly a throwback from my baking days in home econs (???).

  4. caleb permalink
    September 5, 2011

    Just wondering. I saw another post saying to do the baking soda first, and then rinse it out, and then add the apple cider vinegar. Is this just a preference thing, does anyone have any experience with both ways of doing this?

  5. Lisa permalink
    January 7, 2012

    I have super dry hair and I’m thinking about not using shampoo anymore. Should I skip using vinagar to keep some of the natural oils in my hair? Do you put the baking soda mix all over the hair or just on the scalp area?

    • Samantha permalink*
      January 8, 2012

      Hi Lisa

      Vinegar also dries my hair if I use too much, so I’ve learnt to use much, much less + to concentrate the vinegar rinse on my scalp and not my hair. If it’s only your hair that’s dry and not your scalp, maybe you can try the same? I suspect once your scalp normalises, your new hair that will grow out will be less dry also.

      I put the baking soda mix on my scalp and just concentrate on getting my scalp clean. The “run-off” from my rinses and any incidental scrubbing while I work on my scalp are enough to clean my hair of build-up. Without the chemical goop from shampoos, my hair has become so much easier to work with that it’s really like a different world. I’d actually forgotten what it was like before, but you reminded me.

      • Lisa permalink
        January 9, 2012

        Thanks so much! It’s kind of funny because I have dry hair and an oily scalp. I just used baking soda for the first time today, and my hair actually feels better. I have curly hair and when i use shampoo it feels like wire afterward, it actually can make a squeaky sound when I run my fingers through it lol. I can’t believe that stuff(sls) is in our toothpaste too!

        p.s. vinegar is amazing! I use it to clean my house instead of nasty chemical cleansers.

        • Samantha permalink*
          January 9, 2012

          You’re very welcome, and I’m glad to hear it. I love curly hair, it always looks so exotic to me since my own hair is straight.

          Yes, vinegar is awesome and super versatile isn’t it? I recently had a very tea-stained spoon that won’t give from my scrubbing. I gave vinegar a try just for fun and the stain was gone just like that.

          I’ve also discovered that baking soda is great for removing grout in bathroom tiles if I leave it in to soak for a few hours. So actually, both my hair and my bathroom have benefited! ;)

  6. Kaitlyn permalink
    January 19, 2012

    Hey, I will try this. But is it good for short hair as well? Just wondering….

  7. Kaitlyn permalink
    January 19, 2012

    Oh and does anybody know how to make your hair grow longer? I NEED IT!

  8. Tam permalink
    January 25, 2012

    I tried no shampoo/water only last year and it worked quite well and stopped being greasy but suddenly became really static no matter what I did. Has this happened to anyone else? I had to go back to conditioner because it was uncontrollable. I’ve not tried baking soda and vinegar though so that’s what i’m doing next!

    • Samantha permalink*
      January 25, 2012

      Hi Tam, I assume you mean you’ve got flyaway hair now. Not sure why only water would cause that…maybe someone else will chime in.

      Take care not to use too much vinegar as it’s drying and probably won’t help flyaway hair. Let me know if baking soda + vinegar works for you. I’d be interested to hear.

  9. jess permalink
    January 31, 2012

    hi, recently I have been having allergic reactions and I don’t know whether this is food or chemical related yet, either way I have had to cut out any cosmetic/chemical products until I know. Do you if SLS can cause allergic reactions? I read that if the concentration in shampoo’s is less than 2% its OK but many have been reported to be upto 20% and I can’t find any info on the exact amounts in my shampoo so I’m all for this method as I have sensitive skin anyway. Thanks for the info and advice.

  10. Kiwi permalink
    March 20, 2012

    Hi Samantha!
    I love this new way of washing my hair – it makes me feel so good! Thank you for sharing it! I have followed your instructions for two weeks, but today something very odd happened. I proceeded as I had done with the previous washes, but when I dried my hair, the roots were so greasy i couldn’t even look at them. after a few hours, I squeezed a lemon on my scalp and then used bicarbonate and vinegar as you say. Now the oil has moved from the scalp (which is very nice and clean) down to the rest of my hair, just in some patches. I have tried lemon here again but it doesn’t seem to work. Has this ever happened to you in the first few weeks of shampoo-free washes?

    • Samantha permalink*
      March 20, 2012

      Hi Kiwi, this might not apply to your case, but for me, the vinegar *really* pulls up the oil from my scalp to my roots, so I’ve learnt to be very, very thorough with the baking soda scrub afterward (which gets rid of all the grease). In the beginning, I’ve had instances where I rushed through this 2nd step and I came out of it with a greasy scalp, which was quite unpleasant.

      But like I said, this might not apply to you. If you find lemon juice works better, go for it! :)

  11. Tanya permalink
    April 10, 2012

    Hey this sounds awesome to try but wouldn’t my hair smell like vinegar afterwards?

    • Samantha permalink*
      April 10, 2012

      Hi Tanya, it shouldn’t smell after the final rinse in cold water.

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