Is DAMDAM Temple Balm Actually Clean? Ingredient Deep Dive

Greenwashing Check
This viral melting balm claims to be ‘pure enough to eat’ — but its ingredient list says otherwise.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
🔍 **The “Edible” Lie**
DAMDAM’s Temple Balm went viral for being “pure enough to eat.” Cute marketing. But I checked the ingredient list — and it’s not exactly a salad.

The real issue? “Natural” doesn’t mean safe for ingestion. Castor oil can cause digestive upset in high doses. This balm is lovely on skin. Please don’t eat it.

🧴 **What You’re Actually Buying**
$38 for 1.7 oz. A solid balm that melts on contact. The brand’s whole thing is Ayurvedic + minimalist. Three ingredients only — that’s the flex.

1

Texture magic

Goes from hard wax to silky oil in 3 seconds of body heat. No greasy residue.

2

Scent (or lack thereof)

Smells like… nothing. No essential oils. No fragrance. Just a faint earthy note from the castor.

3

Multi-use flex

Hair, face, cuticles, elbows. I’ve used it as a brow tamer — works better than my $22 gel.

📋 **The Ingredient Truth**
Three things: Castor oil, candelilla wax, and tocopherol (vitamin E). That’s it. No preservatives. No water. No fillers.

  • Castor Oil: Thick, antibacterial, deeply moisturizing — but can clog pores if you’re prone to breakouts
  • Candelilla Wax: Plant-based thickener that gives it that solid-to-liquid drama
  • Tocopherol: Antioxidant to prevent rancidity (smart, since there’s no preservative)
  • No water: Means no bacteria growth — actually safer than most ‘clean’ balms

⚗️ **Melts Like Butter, Stains Like Sin**
First touch: hard little puck. Then your finger heat turns it into liquid gold. Absorbs in about 15 seconds — longer than I expected. Leaves a slight sheen, not a matte finish.

Week 3 update: My cuticles stopped splitting. But I used it on my face once and woke up with a tiny whitehead. Not for acne-prone zones. One weird thing — it stains light fabrics. That yellow castor oil color doesn’t wash out.

💡 **One Thing** Warm a pea-size between your palms before applying to hair. Otherwise it clumps instead of smoothing.

❌ **Real Talk: Did It Work?**
My dry patches on my elbows? Gone. My hairline? Less frizzy. My face? Meh. It’s fine, but not better than my regular moisturizer.

Buy if
You have dry knees, elbows, or cuticles and want one product for all of them
⏭️

Skip if
You’re acne-prone or hate anything that sits on your skin for more than 10 seconds
💰

Worth it?
$38 for a balm you’ll use 3x a week for 6 months? Yeah. But try the mini first.

✅ **Final Verdict**
It’s clean-ish. Not edible. But for dry spots and hair flyaways? Solid.

7.5/10
Good balm, bad marketing
🛍️

Where to Buy: DAMDAM’s site or Credo. Get the travel size ($18) before committing to the puck.