Is Burt’s Bees Really Beneficial for Your Lips?

tube of Burt's Bees lip balm

Burt’s Bees launched with a focus on naturally-sourced, straightforward skincare products and cosmetics. Lip balm was among the first products crafted by co-founders Burt Shavitz and Roxanne Quimby in 1992, quickly becoming a favorite. Quimby reminisces, “One of our first personal care products was lip balm. We were just searching for ways to use beeswax, beyond just the candle … It just took one step after the next. Our sales started to grow with the lip balm, so we thought there was some opportunity there” (via Forbes).

That turned out to be a significant understatement. From its modest beginnings in rural Maine, Burt’s Bees has grown into an international company and a household name in the United States. But through it all, the company has remained committed to its mission of focusing on ingredients derived from nature that are scientifically proven to be beneficial for the skin.

Since that initial tube of lip balm, the range of lip products has expanded significantly, now featuring a variety of lip balm flavors, lip butters, tinted lip balms, lip shimmers, lip oils, and overnight lip treatments (via Burt’s Bees).

Burt’s Bees lip balm is a top seller

tubes of Burt's Bees lip balm on display in store

Beeswax is naturally antibacterial and antimicrobial, conditioning the skin and trapping moisture, helping lips stay hydrated and protected (via Burt’s Bees Dermatology). Vitamin E, one of the ingredients, is an antioxidant that moisturizes and shields lips from environmental damage. Other ingredients, like lanolin, coconut oil, rosemary leaf extract, and sunflower seed oil, also smooth, moisturize, and provide antioxidant protection to lips.

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Moreover, as expected from a company that promotes being “True to Nature,” Burt’s Bees lip products are also favored for what they do not contain: phthalates, parabens, sodium lauryl sulfate, and numerous other harmful chemicals that do not align with the theme.

So, are Burt’s Bees lip products genuinely beneficial for your lips? Aside from a small number of people who might find the peppermint oil tingle to be irritating, the answer is a definite yes. There’s a reason why the company’s lip balms have garnered tens of thousands of five-star reviews on Amazon. They’re as straightforward as they claim to be, and they work.

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Jan Baxter
Jan Baxter

Introducing Professor Jan Baxter, Director of NCPIC

Qualifications

BSc (Psych) (Hons), PhD, MAPS.

Experience

Jan is the founding Professor and Director of the National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre (NCPIC) at the University of NSW. She has a strong national and international reputation as a leading researcher in the development of brief interventions for cannabis related problems. She has also developed major programs of research in the development of treatment outcome monitoring systems; development of treatment models for substance dependent women; and aspects of psychostimulants.

Memberships

Jan works with a number of community based agencies on service evaluations and executive management. She is currently supervising a number of doctoral students at NCPIC. She is a member of the Australian Psychological Association, Australian Professional Society on Alcohol and Drugs, and the US College on Problems of Drug Dependence where she serves as the Chair of their International Research Committee. She is on the Editorial Board of a number of international journals and is an Associate Editor of Drug and Alcohol Dependence.