Essential oils are concentrated plant extracts used most commonly for scent, and in some traditions, topical wellness routines. They're not medicine, and claims about them should be read with a healthy dose of skepticism — but used thoughtfully, they're a low-risk way to add scent and ritual to a daily routine.
How they're typically used
- Diffusing. A few drops in a water-based diffuser disperses scent through a room without direct skin contact — the lowest-risk way to use most oils.
- Topical application with a carrier oil. Essential oils are highly concentrated and can irritate skin if applied directly. Diluting with a neutral carrier oil (like jojoba or sweet almond oil) is standard practice.
- Direct ingestion. Some oils, like black seed oil, are used this way in various traditions — but this is a meaningfully different product category from oils meant for diffusing, and not all essential oils are safe to ingest. Don't assume interchangeability.
A few oils to know
Lavender is one of the most common starting points, generally associated with calming, relaxing scent profiles. It's widely used in diffuser blends before bed.
Frankincense has a long history of traditional use for grounding and calming rituals, often diffused or applied topically with a carrier oil.
Black seed oil is used somewhat differently from typical aromatherapy oils — often taken directly or blended into food in various wellness traditions, rather than diffused.
What to check before buying
- Purity claims. Look for "100% pure essential oil" rather than "fragrance oil," which is often synthetic and behaves differently.
- Carrier oil ingredients, if pre-diluted. Some blends come pre-mixed with a carrier oil — check what that carrier is, especially if you have any known sensitivities.
- Sourcing transparency. Reputable sellers can generally tell you where an oil is sourced from and how it's extracted.
Getting started without overspending
You don't need a large collection to start. A single versatile oil like lavender, a basic diffuser, and a neutral carrier oil for topical use covers most beginner use cases before you decide what you actually enjoy using regularly.