Why Your Natural Deodorant Isn't Working Skip to content
 

Why Your Natural Deodorant Isn't Working

Why Your Natural Deodorant Isn't Working

If you’ve ever switched to a “clean” deodorant and thought, “Why do I smell SO bad?” or “I sweat too much for natural deodorant!” …well you’re not alone! I struggled with excessive sweating for years, I would literally sweat in a cold room through a sweatshirt. I highly considered botox under my armpits and I even tried a prescription deo that didn’t help, just left me with burns. 

Years later, I swapped to natural deodorant, committed and NOW I actually sweat LESS and I live in florida. I think all those years my body was trying to tell me something. 

Most of us were taught that sweat is gross, odor is embarrassing, and dryness = hygiene. So we’ve been using antiperspirants for years without realizing what they actually do and why the transition can feel… humbling.

Let’s break down what’s happening, why your “BO” might be a symptom of something deeper, and how to make the switch in a way that actually works plus supportive supplements to help you detox naturally. 

First: Deodorant vs Antiperspirant 

Antiperspirant:  is designed to stop sweat.
Most conventional antiperspirants use aluminum salts (like aluminum chlorohydrate) to temporarily block sweat ducts by forming a gel-like plug near the surface of the skin.

Deodorant: is designed to reduce odor. It doesn’t stop sweating, it helps manage the bacteria and byproducts that create smell.

So when you switch from antiperspirant to natural deodorant, your body goes from:

  • sweat ducts partially blocked + less moisture
    to

  • “full sweat output + bacteria suddenly living their best life”

That’s why people think natural deodorant “doesn’t work.” Often it’s not the deodorant. It’s the transition.

Sweating Is Not the Enemy

Sweating isn’t just about being hot and gross. It’s involved in: 

1) Thermoregulation

Your body uses sweat evaporation to cool you down. Blocking sweating doesn’t “break” this, but it can shift how your body compensates.

2) Skin + microbiome balance

Your underarms have a unique ecosystem especially because they contain apocrine glands. Sweat and skin oils influence what microbes grow there.

3) Signaling and stress physiology

Sweat rate can spike with stress, adrenaline, caffeine, hormones, and blood sugar swings. A lot of “random BO” is actually linked to your nervous system.

4) Sweat = Detoxing

"Detox" is such a buzzword but science shows that in our sweat we don't just lose sodium but actually our body excretes microplastics and other chemicals our body accumulates daily. Armpits are wear dozens of lymph nodes are that process toxins TO BE excreted. Stopping that process can cause backup and so many health issues. 

Sweat is normal.

Why You Stink

Here’s the plot twist: sweat itself isn’t what smells.

Sweat from eccrine glands (most of your body) is mostly water + electrolytes and is typically low-odor.

Odor happens mostly in areas with apocrine glands (armpits, groin). Apocrine sweat is thicker and contains more lipids and proteins. When that sweat interacts with skin bacteria, bacteria break it down into odor-causing compounds.

Why you might smell more after quitting antiperspirant

  • You’re sweating more (no blockage)

  • There’s more moisture (bacteria thrive in damp environments)

  • Your microbiome is adjusting

  • Old product buildup + trapped keratin can take time to clear

The “Detox” Phase

Let’s keep it real: you are not “detoxing aluminum” out of your armpits like a dramatic cleanse.

What most people call “detox” is really:

  • sweat output normalizing

  • skin microbiome shifting

  • product residue clearing

  • inflammation/irritation calming down

Common timeline

  • Days 1–7: sweat increases, odor increases, you question your life choices

  • Weeks 2–4: things start stabilizing

  • Weeks 4–8: many people notice major improvement
    (Some people adjust faster. If you’ve used heavy-duty antiperspirant for years, it can take longer.)

When BO Is a Symptom of Something Deeper

If you feel like your odor is intense, sudden, or different or natural deodorant never works for you: look deeper. Odor can be influenced by:

1) Diet + sulfur compounds

Garlic, onions, cruciferous veggies, eggs, and high-protein diets can increase sulfur-containing compounds for some people. This doesn’t mean those foods are “bad”, it means your body may need better detox pathways and gut support.

2) Gut microbiome imbalance

If your gut is off, you may notice:

  • stronger body odor

  • worse breath

  • bloating

  • skin issues
    Your body eliminates through stool, urine, breath, and skin. If one pathway is backed up, another can get loud. Check in with yourself, do you have stinky BO, skin issues, smelly poops etc? … all could be connected!

3) Blood sugar swings + stress hormones

That “stress sweat” is real. Cortisol/adrenaline changes sweat composition and can intensify odor.

4) Hormone shifts

Ovulation, PMS, postpartum, perimenopause: hormones change skin oil production and microbial balance.

5) Mineral imbalance

Electrolytes and minerals matter for sweat composition. Low magnesium, zinc, and general mineral depletion can show up in surprising ways.

If odor is extreme and persistent, or you notice other symptoms (fatigue, GI issues, irregular cycles), it may be worth digging deeper with a practitioner.

How to Mindfully Switch to Natural Deodorant 

Step 1: Do a “reset week”

For 5–7 days, focus on removing buildup and keeping the area calm:

  • Wash with a gentle cleanser

  • Keep underarms dry (pat dry after shower)

  • Wear breathable non synthetic fabrics (cotton/linen)

Step 2: Use an underarm “clarifier” 2–3x/week

This is a game-changer for odor because it reduces bacterial overgrowth:

(If you’re sensitive, go slow. Irritation can make odor worse.)

Step 3: Choose the right style of natural deodorant

Not all natural deodorants are created equal. Some work by:

  • absorbing moisture (arrowroot, tapioca) like Nala, Good Flower Farm, 

  • neutralizing odor (magnesium, zinc, baking soda) like Good Flower Farm, Cleo + Coco & Rustic Maka

  • supporting microbiome (certain ferment ingredients) like Hygiene Lab & Cleo + Coco

  • Finding the right scent (essential oils) that blend well with your unique natural scent. (There are certain brands I can use only certain scents with) 

If you react to baking soda (itching, rash, darkening), skip it. There are plenty of effective baking-soda-free options now.

Step 4: Reapply strategically (at first)

Natural deodorant is not always “one-and-done” during the transition. Early on:

  • apply in the morning

  • reapply mid-day if needed

  • keep wipes or a clean cloth for a quick refresh

Supplements That Can Support Odor

1) Magnesium Complex

Supports stress response, nervous system regulation, and regularity (because constipation can absolutely show up as odor). Many people are low.

How to use: daily, especially in stressful seasons.

2) Zinc

Zinc plays a role in immune function and can influence skin and odor for some people.

Note: Don’t mega-dose long-term without guidance—zinc and copper balance matters.

3) Chlorophyll / chlorophyllin

Often used as an internal deodorizer support and nicknamed “internal deodorant”. Many people swear by it.

How to use: drink daily, watch how your digestion responds.

4) Probiotics + gut support

If odor comes with bloating, irregular stools, or skin flare-ups, supporting gut balance can help address the “why.”

5) Fiber / binders

If you’re not eliminating well, your body tends to “offload” through other routes. Supporting daily bowel movements is an underrated body-odor strategy.

6) Electrolytes + minerals

Sweat is literally minerals leaving the body. Supporting hydration and mineral status can help sweat feel less “intense,” especially if you’re active, sauna-ing, or stressed.

The Bottom Line

Switching from antiperspirant to natural deodorant isn’t always just a product swap! You’re not “gross.” You’re not failing. You’re learning how your body works again.

And once you find the right formula + support your root causes (stress, gut, minerals, hormones), most people end up in a place where they:

  • sweat normally

  • smell way less

  • and feel better knowing they’re not plugging sweat ducts

It can sometimes take a while before finding the right combination of formula + scent that works for you! If you find you are drier but smell off, it could be as simple as a scent switch or underlying issue we discussed!

 

Juna

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by Iliriana Zeneli – January 26, 2026