
Neem has been called “the village pharmacy” in India, where virtually every part of the tree — bark, leaves, seeds, and oil — has been used in Ayurvedic medicine for over two thousand years. Ancient Sanskrit texts mention it. It was brought into British colonial botanical surveys in the 1800s and promptly amazed everyone who studied it. The neem tree has been a subject of serious scientific interest ever since, and the oil pressed from its seeds has one of the longest documented histories of skin use of any ingredient in the natural products world.
Fair warning: neem oil has a smell. It’s earthy, pungent, and unmistakably itself — something between garlic and roasted nuts with a slightly funky edge. In a well-formulated bar, that scent softens considerably, especially with complementary essential oils, but it doesn’t disappear entirely. What you get in exchange is an oil with a strong reputation for supporting troubled, problem-prone skin — the kind that’s tried everything else and is looking for something with real history behind it.
Best Uses: Problem-skin bars, scalp and dandruff formulas, outdoor soaps, and any formula designed for skin that needs more than a gentle touch.