Beard Balm vs Beard Oil: Which Do You Need?
Author: Faiysal Kothiwala
Updated at: Dec 09, 2024
Walk into any beard care aisle, and you'll find both sitting next to each other, with similar ingredients on the label, but different consistency in the tin.
Some assume that balm and oil used on beards are the same, but that’s not really the case. These two products solve different problems.
Used in the right order, they work together, and most men with a serious beard end up using both. The only real question is understanding what each one does.
What's the True Difference Between Beard Balm and Beard Oil?

The core difference comes down to texture and purpose.
Beard oil is a pure liquid conditioning treatment. No wax, no hold, just oils that absorb into the hair shaft and the skin underneath.
Beard balm adds beeswax to that same base, which changes everything about how it sits on the beard and what it can do.
|
Feature |
Oil |
Balm |
|
Texture |
Liquid |
Solid/paste |
|
Primary function |
Conditioning and hydration |
Conditioning and light styling |
|
Hold |
None |
Light to medium |
|
Best beard length |
Any length, including stubble |
Medium to long beards |
|
When to apply |
First, after showering |
After oil, as a finisher |
|
Contains beeswax |
No |
Yes |
Oil for Beards 101
An oil is the non-negotiable starting point for any beard care routine, whether you're two days into a stubble or two years into a full beard.
It's a blend of carrier oils and essential oils formulated to condition both the hair fibres and the skin underneath. Good oils absorb fast and don't leave a greasy residue.
Different carrier oils bring different benefits:
-
Babassu oil - anti-inflammatory properties
-
Jojoba oil - antimicrobial and anti-acne benefits
-
Squalane - supports all beard growth stages
The combination matters, which is why learning the effects of beard oil and reading ingredient lists is worth the effort.
Balm for Beards 101
A balm takes the conditioning benefits of oil and adds structure. The result is a product that hydrates while giving you control over where your beard actually sits.
The one ingredient that separates balm from oil is beeswax. It coats the hair fibre, holds it in place enough to tame flyaways, and adds a natural shine that doesn't read as greasy.
Everything else in the formula, the carrier oils, essential oils, and vitamins, works the same way as in an oil. You're not replacing one product with the other. You're building on top of it.
When to Use Oil vs Balm on Your Beard

Order matters. Oil conditions, balm seals, and styles.
Apply Oil First
Apply oil after washing your beard with a proper beard shampoo. The clean canvas matters; oil absorbs more efficiently into freshly washed hair.
-
Take a few drops in your palm, scale to beard length
-
Rub palms together to warm the oil
-
Work fingers through the beard, distributing evenly
-
Make sure oil reaches the skin underneath
Don't skip the skin step. That's where the long-term benefit lives.
Apply Balm Second
Balm goes on after the oil. It's the second layer, not a replacement.
-
Scrape a small amount from the tin, about the size of a thumbnail.
-
Warm between palms until it melts to an oil-like consistency.
-
Work through the beard using fingers, then shape with a comb or a brush.
-
Style as needed.
How to Choose the Right Product for Your Beard

Not every beard needs the same thing. A few factors actually change the answer.
Beard Length and Thickness
A balm's beeswax is designed for beards long enough to need controlling. On stubble, it's wasted. If your beard is particularly thick and hard to manage, a wax with a stronger hold will do more work than balm.
|
Beard Stage |
Recommended Product |
|
Stubble (0 to 10mm) |
Oil only, or butter for extra moisture |
|
Short beard (10 to 40mm) |
Oil only, balm optional |
|
Medium beard (40 to 80mm) |
Both oil and balm |
|
Long or thick beard |
Both, consider wax for stronger hold |
Skin Type
Skin type should drive ingredient choices, not just product type.
-
Acne-prone skin. Avoid products with comedogenic oils. Look for jojoba, which won't block pores.
-
Sensitive skin. Avoid silicones, parabens, and alcohol. These show up in cheaper products and cause irritation.
-
Dry skin. Both oil and balm help, but prioritise oil for deeper skin hydration.
Ingredients
Read the label. Natural ingredient lists with science-backed components are worth paying for. The benefits-to-price ratio holds up when the formula is solid. A product stuffed with synthetics will cost less and deliver less.
Scent
Scent is personal for daily use. Smell a product before committing to it. The best beard care routine is the one you'll actually stick to, and if the scent puts you off every morning, you won't.
Beard Balm vs Beard Oil: The Verdict
For most men, the answer isn't one or the other. It's both.
Oil is the foundation, conditioning the skin and hair shaft regardless of length. A balm layers on top once there's enough growth to shape. The only exception is stubble, where beeswax does nothing useful. Stick to oil until there's length to work with.
Clean beard, oil in, balm on top. That's the routine.
The Beard Struggle's range of products is formulated with natural ingredients to make that routine count. Find the right balm or oil for your beard type in our collection.

