DIY Hair Oil: How to Make It and What Actually Works


DIY hair oils are often seen as a natural way to support hair growth, especially with ingredients like rosemary gaining serious attention. But many people are unsure how to make them correctly, which ingredients to use, or whether the results they are hoping for are realistic. The outcome depends more on formulation, ratios, and consistent use than on any single ingredient.

This guide covers everything from carrier oil selection to step-by-step recipes — including a DIY rosemary hair oil and a quick blend you can make in ten minutes — plus honest guidance on who benefits most and where DIY oil fits in a broader routine.

Quick Answer: DIY Hair Oil DIY hair oil can support scalp health and improve hair condition when made with the right carrier oils and active ingredients like rosemary essential oil. Results depend on correct formulation, consistent use two to three times per week, and whether the underlying cause of hair concerns is being addressed. It is most useful as a scalp treatment rather than a strand coating, and most effective when used alongside a regular wash routine.

Why DIY Hair Oil Has Become the Go-To for So Many People

The surge in interest in diy hair oil and diy hair growth oil is driven by two things: the explosion of rosemary oil content on social media, and a broader preference for knowing exactly what is going on your scalp. Both are reasonable starting points.

The challenge is that most recipes circulating online skip the variables that determine whether a DIY oil actually performs: carrier oil choice, essential oil dilution safety, infusion method, and application technique. Getting these right is the difference between a pleasant scalp treatment and one that causes buildup, irritation, or simply does nothing because the formulation is too diluted to have any effect.

natural diy hair oil trend showing simple ingredients used at home for hair care and scalp health

The Foundation of Any Good DIY Hair Oil — Choosing the Right Carrier Oil

Which Carrier Oil Matches Your Hair Type

The carrier oil is the base of your diy hair oil and it matters more than most recipes acknowledge. Different carrier oils have different molecular weights, absorption rates, and effects on different hair types.

Carrier Oil Best Hair Type Why It Works AU Where to Find
Jojoba All types, especially normal to dry scalp Molecular structure resembles scalp's own sebum. Absorbs without residue. Most versatile for DIY rosemary hair oil. Chemist Warehouse, health food stores, iHerb AU
Fractionated coconut oil (MCT) Fine to medium hair Lighter than standard coconut oil. Penetrates the hair shaft. Longer shelf life in QLD and WA heat. Health food stores, iHerb AU, online
Castor oil Dry or thinning scalp (in blends only) High ricinoleic acid supports scalp circulation. Maximum 20 to 30 percent of a blend. Too heavy to use alone. Chemist Warehouse, Priceline, most pharmacies
Sweet almond oil Dry or colour-treated hair Light to medium weight. Good for overnight treatments. Faint warm scent. Health food stores, iHerb AU
Grapeseed oil Fine or oily hair One of the lightest available. Minimal scent and non-greasy finish. Does not weigh hair down. Health food stores, Woolworths (cooking aisle)
different hair types matched with suitable carrier oils for diy hair oil routine

The Ratio That Changes Everything

Most people making diy hair oil for the first time either use too much castor oil (leaving residue that blocks the follicle) or add essential oils without diluting them properly (causing scalp irritation).

Essential Oil Safety Dilution (The 1 Percent Rule) The safe dilution for essential oils applied to the scalp is 1 percent: approximately 5 to 6 drops of essential oil per 30ml of carrier oil. For a weekly intensive treatment, 2 percent (10 to 12 drops per 30ml) is the upper end for regular scalp use. Going above this does not produce better results — it increases the risk of contact sensitisation without additional benefit. For castor oil in a blend: maximum 20 to 30 percent castor to 70 to 80 percent lighter carrier.
balanced diy hair oil mixture showing correct ratio of carrier oil and active ingredients

The Rosemary Effect — What the Research Actually Shows

A 2015 study comparing topical rosemary essential oil to 2 percent minoxidil found comparable results in hair density after six months of consistent twice-daily scalp application. Both produced measurably more hair at the six month mark than at baseline. The mechanism involves scalp circulation: rosemary's primary active compound appears to support blood flow to the follicle, increasing the delivery of nutrients and oxygen to the growing hair shaft.

Two important caveats: the study used rosemary essential oil at a specific concentration, not a gently infused carrier oil. And the results were most pronounced in people experiencing androgenetic hair loss — not people with normal hair growth seeking additional length or thickness.

rosemary hair oil applied to scalp to support hair growth and improve circulation

Infused Rosemary Oil vs Rosemary Essential Oil (They Are Not the Same Thing)

This distinction is the one most people making diy rosemary hair oil miss — and it matters enormously for what you can expect.

Factor Rosemary Infused Oil Rosemary Essential Oil
What it is Dried rosemary soaked in carrier oil for weeks Concentrated steam distillation of rosemary plant
Active compound level Low to moderate Very high — must be diluted before scalp contact
How to make at home Heat or cold infusion method (see recipes below) Cannot be made at home — requires distillation equipment
Shelf life 3 to 6 months, refrigerate in AU summer 2 to 3 years if stored correctly in dark glass
Best for General scalp conditioning, gentle circulation support More targeted scalp treatment with research support behind it
Available in AU Homemade only ECO Modern Essentials, In Essence at Priceline, iHerb AU

How to Make DIY Hair Oil at Home — Three Methods

Each method below produces a diy hair oil suitable for scalp massage two to three times per week. Choose based on how much time you have and what level of active compounds you want.

Method 1 — Quick Heat Infusion

How to Make DIY Hair Growth Oil — Ready in 2 Hours

Extracts rosemary's beneficial compounds through gentle heat. Produces a usable, aromatic oil in a few hours. Best method when you want something ready this week without waiting weeks for cold infusion.

Ingredients
  • 60ml jojoba oil (or fractionated coconut oil for fine hair)
  • 2 tablespoons dried rosemary (not fresh)
  • Amber glass bottle for storage
Steps
  1. Place carrier oil and dried rosemary in a double boiler over very low heat.
  2. Keep heat low. Oil should be warm to touch but not simmering. Visible steam means too hot — remove immediately.
  3. Maintain gentle warmth for 45 to 60 minutes, stirring occasionally. Oil will turn golden-green.
  4. Remove from heat. Cool completely at room temperature (at least 1 hour).
  5. Strain through cheesecloth into your storage bottle. Press rosemary to extract remaining oil.
Australian storage note: In Queensland and WA summer months, store in the refrigerator to prevent oxidation. Use within 3 months. Fresh rosemary contains moisture that causes mold in oil — always use dried.
quick heat infusion method used to make diy hair oil at home

Method 2 — Cold Solar Infusion

Best Quality DIY Rosemary Hair Oil — 4 to 6 Weeks

Preserves delicate aromatic compounds that may degrade under heat. Requires patience but produces a richer, more fragrant oil. The preferred method when you have time and want the most naturally derived result.

Ingredients
  • 60ml jojoba or sweet almond oil
  • 3 tablespoons dried rosemary
  • A clean, dry glass jar with a tight lid
Steps
  1. Place dried rosemary in a completely dry jar (any moisture causes rancidity).
  2. Pour carrier oil over rosemary. Ensure herbs are submerged by at least 1cm of oil.
  3. Seal tightly. Place on a warm windowsill with indirect light.
  4. Leave for 4 to 6 weeks. Shake gently every few days.
  5. Strain and bottle. Store in a cool, dark location.
Australian climate note: A warm indoor windowsill in QLD, NT, or WA in summer may accelerate the infusion to 3 to 4 weeks. Avoid placing in direct midday sun above 35 degrees Celsius — excessive heat degrades the oil. A warm indoor spot is better than direct outdoor sun.
solar infusion method for diy hair oil using sunlight over time

Method 3 — DIY Rosemary Hair Growth Oil Blend

How to Make DIY Hair Growth Oil — Ready in 10 Minutes

The most practical everyday option and most closely aligned with the research on rosemary and scalp circulation. Uses rosemary essential oil properly diluted in carrier oil. No infusion waiting time required.

Ingredients (makes 30ml)
  • 25ml jojoba oil
  • 5ml castor oil (optional — skip for oily or fine hair)
  • 6 drops rosemary essential oil (approx. 1% dilution)
  • 2 drops peppermint essential oil (optional — patch test first)
Steps
  1. Combine carrier oils in a dark glass bottle.
  2. Add essential oil drops directly to the bottle.
  3. Cap and roll gently between palms to blend (do not shake vigorously).
  4. Perform a patch test on inner elbow and wait 24 hours before first scalp use.
  5. Ready to use immediately. Store in refrigerator during Australian summer months.
Where to find in Australia: Jojoba oil at Chemist Warehouse or iHerb AU. ECO Modern Essentials rosemary essential oil at Priceline, selected Coles stores, or online. Castor oil at Chemist Warehouse and most pharmacies.
fast diy rosemary hair oil blend made by mixing carrier oil and essential oil

How to Use DIY Hair Oil So It Actually Does Something

Scalp Massage Technique

Part the hair and apply 4 to 6 drops directly to the scalp skin (not the hair lengths). Use fingertips in circular motions for 5 to 10 minutes. The mechanical massage supports scalp circulation as much as the ingredients themselves. Cover all areas methodically.

Leave-On Time

Minimum 30 minutes for basic absorption. For a deeper treatment, 2 to 4 hours or overnight (use a shower cap). For overnight use, apply a smaller amount to avoid excess buildup that is difficult to remove with a single wash.

Washing Out

Follow with a sulphate-free shampoo — sulphate-based shampoos strip both the oil and the scalp's natural sebum. One thorough wash is usually sufficient. If hair feels heavy or greasy after washing, reduce the amount applied next time.

Frequency

Two to three times per week for most hair types. Once per week for very fine or oily hair. More frequent use on oily scalp types tends to compound oiliness rather than reducing it. Consistency over weeks matters more than frequency in individual sessions.

diy hair oil applied to scalp with massage to improve absorption and effectiveness

The Situations Where DIY Hair Oil Doesn't Help Much

Very fine or easily weighed-down hair Most DIY hair oil recipes include castor oil, which is genuinely too heavy for fine hair. Even lighter carriers like jojoba can cause visible limpness if applied too liberally. For fine hair, reduce the amount per application significantly and apply to the scalp only, keeping oil away from mid-lengths and ends entirely.
Oily scalp types Adding more oil to an oily scalp can compound sebum buildup around the follicle opening. If your scalp produces excess oil, a lightweight scalp serum or leave-in spray with active ingredients is more appropriate than an oil-based treatment. Signs your scalp is too oily for regular oil treatment: hair feels greasy within 24 hours of washing even without oil application.
Genetic or hormonal hair loss A rosemary oil treatment does not block DHT, does not alter hormone levels, and does not address follicle miniaturisation associated with pattern hair loss. Rosemary oil may provide circulation support as a complement to other treatments but is not a standalone solution for androgenetic hair loss.
Inconsistent use The 2015 rosemary study involved twice-daily application over six months. Most people use a DIY oil once a week for four weeks and conclude it is not working. Results, where they occur, require at minimum eight to twelve weeks of consistent two to three times per week use before a meaningful assessment is possible.
hair conditions where diy hair oil is not effective such as severe hair loss or scalp disorders

Where This Fits in a Scalp-First Hair Routine

Hair Growth Shampoo, Conditioner, and Spray

A diy hair oil works at the scalp surface level. It does not replace a cleanser, a conditioner, or a daily leave-in treatment. The most effective way to use it is as a pre-wash scalp treatment two to three times per week within a complete routine that also addresses the scalp's daily environment.

Finding the best hair growth products Australia offers for building that complete routine means looking for a sulphate-free foundation system that cleanses without stripping the scalp's natural oils between oil treatments. Hair Folli's sulphate-free Hair Growth Shampoo and Conditioner washes away DIY oil residue effectively and delivers caffeine and rosemary oil with each wash — adding topical active ingredient contact on the days you are not doing a full oil treatment. The Hair Growth Spray applied daily provides the continuous scalp-level support that makes the biggest difference to the follicle environment over time.

Shop Hair Growth Shampoo and Conditioner

Why Trust Hair Folli

Since starting Hair Folli in 2020, we've grown to serve over 183,000 customers worldwide and expanded into wholesalers across 51 countries. But the mission remains the same: focus on hair loss first, not quick fixes.

Most people approach hair growth the wrong way — switching products without understanding how hair grows, what their scalp needs, or why consistency matters.

That's why Hair Folli is built on a scalp-first approach, using vegan, non-irritating formulations designed for long-term use. Every product is created not just to sell, but to support real people dealing with thinning hair, loss of confidence, and the frustration of slow progress — with simple, consistent care that actually makes sense.

FAQs About DIY Hair Oil

How do I make DIY hair oil at home?
The quickest method is combining 25ml jojoba oil with 6 drops of rosemary essential oil in a glass bottle — ready in 10 minutes. For an infused option, combine dried rosemary with carrier oil and heat gently in a double boiler for 45 to 60 minutes, then strain and store. A cold solar infusion method (4 to 6 weeks) produces a richer oil but requires patience. Always use dried rosemary rather than fresh to prevent mold in oil.
How do I make DIY rosemary hair oil?
Combine 25ml of jojoba oil with 6 drops of rosemary essential oil (approximately 1 percent dilution). Roll gently to mix. Perform a patch test on the inner elbow 24 hours before first scalp application. Apply to the scalp using fingertip massage, leave for at least 30 minutes, then wash out with sulphate-free shampoo. Use two to three times per week. ECO Modern Essentials rosemary essential oil is available at Priceline across Australia.
Is there a difference between rosemary infused oil and rosemary essential oil for hair?
Yes, they are significantly different. Rosemary infused oil is a carrier oil soaked with dried rosemary herbs — a mild, conditioning oil with relatively low active compound concentration. Rosemary essential oil is a concentrated steam distillation product with a much higher concentration of the active compounds associated with scalp circulation support. The research on rosemary for hair growth used essential oil at a specific dilution, not infused carrier oil.
What is the best carrier oil for DIY hair growth oil?
Jojoba oil is the most versatile because its molecular structure resembles the scalp's natural sebum and it absorbs without residue on most hair types. Fractionated coconut oil is better for fine hair due to its lighter weight. Castor oil is useful in small proportions (maximum 20 to 30 percent of a blend) for scalp circulation support but cannot be used undiluted as it is too heavy and causes buildup.
How long does it take to see results from DIY hair oil?
Eight to twelve weeks of consistent use (two to three times per week) is the minimum before a meaningful assessment is possible. Hair grows roughly one centimetre per month and the follicle responds to scalp environment changes gradually over multiple growth cycles. The rosemary research involved six months of twice-daily application. Expecting visible results in two to four weeks sets an unrealistic timeline.
How much essential oil should I add to DIY hair oil?
The safe dilution for essential oils applied to the scalp is 1 percent: approximately 5 to 6 drops per 30ml of carrier oil. For a weekly intensive treatment, 2 percent (10 to 12 drops per 30ml) is the upper end for regular scalp use. Do not exceed this — higher concentrations increase the risk of scalp irritation and contact sensitisation without providing additional growth benefit.
Can I use DIY hair oil if I have fine or oily hair?
With modifications. For fine hair, use only lightweight carriers like jojoba or grapeseed, skip castor oil entirely, and apply a very small amount to the scalp only (avoiding mid-lengths and ends). For oily scalp types, reduce frequency to once per week. If oiliness persists after washing, a lightweight scalp serum or spray may be more appropriate than an oil treatment.

DIY Hair Oil Works Best When You Know Exactly What It Is and Isn't

DIY hair oil is a genuinely useful scalp treatment when made correctly, applied to the scalp with consistent massage technique, and used at the right frequency for your hair type. It is not a substitute for a complete routine, and the results depend almost entirely on consistency over months rather than on any single application.

The most practical starting point is the ten-minute essential oil blend: 25ml jojoba, 6 drops rosemary essential oil, ready now and immediately effective as a twice-weekly scalp treatment. For those who want the ritual of an infused oil, the heat or cold infusion methods produce a conditioning treatment that complements rather than replaces the essential oil approach.

Used consistently alongside a sulphate-free shampoo and a daily leave-in scalp treatment, a diy hair oil for hair growth becomes one valuable layer in a system rather than a standalone experiment with uncertain results.