Ayurveda’s Take On Neem Oil: Benefits And Uses

by Dr. Alka Sharma | Nov 22, 2018 | Beauty & Skincare | Reviewed by Dr. Deepak Bhanot

Neem oil has been used for healing since antiquity. In the Indian subcontinent, all parts of the neem tree including the leaves, fruit, seed, oil, and bark are used to treat a variety of ailments and offer a wealth of benefits to the skin, nails, scalp, teeth, and gums.

What’s Neem?

Due to a plethora of benefits, healing and medicinal properties, neem is known as the ‘village dispensary’ in some parts of the world.

Neem oil benefits.

One of the most used part of the tree is neem oil. It extracted from the fruits and seeds of the neem tree, also known as the Margosa tree.

The botanical name of neem is Azadirachta indica. It is a member of the Meliaceae family.

READ MORE: Neem, Ayurveda’s Favorite Remedy For Inflammation

Uses of Neem Oil

The history of medicinal usage of neem oil is as old as the Ayurvedic system of medicine.

The many benefits of neem oil and other parts of the tree are described in the ancient Ayurvedic texts.

In Asia, neem and neem oil has been in use for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. In recent times however, it was introduced as a useful cure for various ailments to other areas like tropical America and Africa.

Due to its various properties, neem oil and other parts of the neem tree has aroused interest in the cosmetics industry. A natural medicine, pesticide, and fertilizer, neem has anti-inflammatory, anti-viral, anti-microbial, anti-fungal, and antioxidant properties.

This is the reason why neem is popularly used in cosmetics products such as face masks, lotions, sunscreens, soaps, shampoos, hair tonics, body creams, hand creams, mouth washes, toothpastes, emulsions, ointments, poultices and liniments.

It’s benefits are not just limited to skin and health in general, but neem is useful in agriculture too. Products derived from neem can contribute to sustainable development and the resolution of pest control problems in farming and agriculture.

CHECK THIS OUT: Ajara Tulsi Neem Redeem Concentrate 

The Neem Tree, A Botanical Description

Neem is a fast-growing tree and it can reach a height of 15 to 20 meters with a life span of 150-200 years. It is typically grown in tropical and semi-tropical regions of South Asia. 

Neem is a small-to-medium sized evergreen tree, with wide and spreading branches. It can tolerate high temperatures as well as poor or degraded soil conditions.

The young leaves are reddish to purple, while the mature leaves are bright green in color. It has opposite and pinnate leaves.

They consist of a petiole, lamina, and the base that attaches the leaf to the stem. They may bear two small lateral leaf-like structures known as stipules.

Neem flowers are white and have fragrance. They are arranged in drooping axillary pannicles.

Neem fruits are smooth and oval or nearly round in shape. They generally enclose one seed. Sometimes they may contain two or three seeds but this is very rare.

The neem tree is sometimes confused with the similar looking bakain tree. The bakain tree is also known as Melia azedarach.

The distinction between neem leaves and bakain leaves are that neem leaves are one pinnate while bakain leaves are two and three pinnate. Fruits of the bakain tree are shaped like miniature apples.

Neem Oil: General Description

Neem oil has commercial importance for many reasons. It is used widely to make cosmetic products in Ayurvedic and Siddha medicine products.

Neem oil is very much like other vegetable oils in composition. It is composed of triglycerides of oleic, stearic, linoleic, and palmitic acids. This is the fatty acid content of neem oil.

Neem oil is obtained from seeds. The seeds are first broken and the kernels separated. The kernels are then pressed in either industrial expellers or by hand or bullock-operated wooden presses, also called ghanis. The oil yield is sometimes as high as 50 percent of the weight of the kernel.

This cold-pressed oil is mainly used in lamps, soaps, and other non-edible products. It is generally dark, bitter, and has a strong smell. Unlike most vegetable oils, it contains sulfur compounds.

The pungent odor is reminiscent of garlic.

A large oil industry in India extracts the oil remaining in the seed cake using hexane. This solvent-extracted oil is not as high quality as the cold-pressed oil. It is used in certain soaps and consumer products.1

Purification Of Neem Oil

Purifying neem oil is an elaborate and costly process at present.

In one method, the smelly sulfur compounds are distilled off. This frees the oil from both odor and susceptibility to rancidity because it also removes the free fatty acids.

This process has long been used industrially.

As an alternative to pressing out the oil, the kernels can be extracted first with alcohol and then with hexane.

Alcohol removes the bitter and odoriferous compounds and hexane recovers the oil. This stepwise extraction upgrades both the meal and the oil. On the other hand, it requires costly solvents and complex facilities. That is why this method is not preferred mostly.1

Sanskrit Synonyms For Neem With Meaning

Nimba: This means, it is that which increases one’s general well being.
Pichu marda: It is helpful in curing leprosy.
Arishta: It does not cause any kind of harm to the body.
Hingu niryasa: It releases latex or gum resin like hingu or asafoetida.

Ayurvedic Properties Of Neem

Rasa or taste: Tikta (bitter), kashaya (astringent)
Guna or qualities: Laghu (light)
Virya or potency: Sheeta (cold)
Vipaka or taste conversion after digestion: Katu (pungent)
Amount: 5 to 10 drops4

Neem Oil Uses And Benefits

These are the uses and benefits of neem oil according to the Ayurvedic text books.

According to The Ayurvedic Pharmacopoeia Of Herbs, neem oil has the following uses and benefits.3

Vrana ropana: It is useful in healing wounds.
Kushta ghana: It is useful in treating leprosy.
Vedana sthapana: It acts as a pain killer.
Kandu ghana: It is helps in relieving itching.
Apachi: It is useful in reducing the effects of cervical lymphadenitis.
Nadi vrana: It is helpful in treating pilonidal sinus.
Palitya: It is useful to reduce hair loss.
Khalitya: It is useful in delaying premature greying of hair.
Madhu meha: It is useful in treating diabetes.

The Ayurveda Experience Blog

According to the Sushruta Samhita, neem oil has the following uses and benefits.5

  • It is teekshna or sharp.
  • It is laghu or easy to digest.
  • It is ushna virya or hot in potency.
  • It’s rasa or taste is katu or pungent.
  • It’s vipaka or taste conversion after digestion is katu or pungent.
  • It is mridu virechaka or mild laxative.
  • It is Vata hara which means it pacifies Vata dosha.
  • It is Kapha hara which means it pacifies Kapha dosha.
  • It is krimi hara, useful in eliminating worm infestation.
  • It is kushta hara or useful in treating leprosy.
  • It is prameha hara or useful in treating diabetes.
  • It is shiro roga hara or useful to reduce the effect of various head diseases.

According to Aadrash Nighantu, neem oil has the following uses and benefits.6

  • It is used mainly for external application.
  • It is hot in potency.
  • It has anti-microbial properties.
  • It provides strength to the body.
  • It is useful in healing wounds due to chronic syphilis.
  • It is helpful in healing of chronic wounds.
  • It is helpful in fast healing of wound.
  • It is useful in reducing boils, pimples and abscess.
  • It is helpful curing ring worm infection.
  • It is useful in treating scabies.

If there is any infection which is deep seated in skin then this oil should be rubbed very gently and slowly over skin for ten minutes.

Five to ten drops are given orally to people suffering with chronic malaria, syphilis, galit kushta (sloughing stage in leprosy) and in other diseases in which emaciation is prevalent. It is useful in curing these problems.

  • Neem oil is Vata hara which means it pacifies vata dosha.
  • Neem oil is helpful in skin conditions having pus and bad odor due to pus.
  • It is helpful in cleansing of wounds because it has anti septic properties.
  • Neem oil is useful in urticaria.
  • It has anti-inflammatory properties.
  • It acts as a stimulant.
  • It is useful in worm infestation.
  • It has rejuvenating properties.
  • Neem oil contains sulphur which is why it is helpful in various skin problems.
  • As it is very hot in potency, sesame seed oil can be added to it to decrease its hot potency and to make it milder.

READ MORE: Acne Causes + Natural Acne Treatment In Ayurvedic Medicine

Oil Extraction Methods

Oil can be extracted by two methods.

The first method is similar to the method used in extracting badam rogan or almond oil. Crush the neem seeds properly and keep them in sunlight to obtain the neem seed oil.

The second method is to extract neem seed oil using a kolhu machine. A kolhu machine is an oil extraction machine used to extract oil from mustard seeds and sesame seeds.

Neem Oil Benefits

These are the benefits of neem seed oil.

Therapeutic oil application to the nostrils with neem seed oil can be performed for many years. This process is called nasya.

While taking nasya, avoid salt completely. Have rice and chapati or flatbread along with milk only taking this nasya. This nasya is beneficial for people who suffer from akal palita or premature greying of the hair.

READ MORE: Ayurvedic Hair Oil Recipe For Hair Growth + Premature Greying

Chemistry Of Neem Oil

Neem oil contains at least 100 biologically active compounds.

Among them, the major constituents are triterpenes known as limonoids, the most important being azadirachtin. This compound has a melting point of 160°C and molecular weight of 720 g/mol.

Other components include meliantriol, nimbin, nimbidin, nimbinin, nimbolides, fatty acids (oleic, stearic, and palmitic), and salannin.8

Neem Research Studies

The following are some clinical studies which demonstrate the benefits of neem oil.

Neem seed oil has anti-oxidant properties.

Free radical or reactive oxygen species are one of the main culprits in the commencement of various diseases. However, neutralization of free radical activity is one of the important steps in diseases prevention.

Antioxidants stabilize or deactivate free radicals, often before they attack targets in biological cells. They also play a role in the activation of anti-oxidative enzymes.

These help control damage caused by free radicals or reactive oxygen species.

Neem oil and other parts of the neem tree have been reported to have antioxidant activity. They play an important role in disease prevention because of their antioxidant property.9

Neem oil has anti-cancerous activity.

Cancer is a multifactorial disease and major health problem worldwide. The alteration of molecular or genetic pathways plays a role in the development and progression of cancer.

The treatment module based on allopathy is effective in one way. It also shows adverse effects on the normal cells.

Earlier studies reported that many plants and their constituents demonstrated inhibitory effects on the growth of malignant cells. Modulation of cellular proliferation, apoptosis, tumor suppressor gene, and various other molecular pathways were some of the ways.

Neem contains flavanoids and various other ingredients that play an important role in the inhibition of cancer development.

Large numbers of epidemiological studies propose that high flavonoid intake may be correlated with a decreased risk of cancer.

Neem oil holds various neem limonoids which prevent mutagenic effects of 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene.
Nimbolide, a tetranortriterpenoid limonoid, is one of the important contributors to the cytotoxicity
of neem extracts.

Isolated compound and chief constituents from neem show a range of activities affecting multiple targets. They also play  a role in the induction of apoptotic cell death in cancer.9

  • Neem oil has anti-inflmmatory activity.9
  • Neem oil has anti-pyretic activity.9
  • Neem oil has analgesic activity.9
  • Neem oil has anti fungal activity.9

Neem oil has anti bacterial activity. In clinical trials, neem oil suppressed several species of pathogenic bacteria, including the following.

  • Staphylococcus aureus is a common source of food poisoning and many pus-forming disorders (for example, boils and abscesses). This bacterium also causes secondary infections in peritonitis, cystitis and meningitis. Many strains are now resistant to penicillin and other antibiotics, one reason for the widespread occurrence of staphylococcal infections in hospitals.
  • Salmonella typhosa is a much-feared bacterium which lives in food and water. It causes typhoid, food poisoning, and a variety of infections that include blood poisoning and intestinal inflammation.10

Use neem oil under supervision because some studies reported that in children neem oil poisoning can cause vomiting, acidosis and more.9

About the Author

Dr. Alka Sharma, BAMS is an Ayurvedic practitioner and an avid learner of the field. She graduated with a Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery (BAMS) from Dayanand Ayurvedic College, Jalandhar, Punjab in India. She has been practicing Ayurvedic medicine and doing related work for the last six years. She works as an independent consultant in Ayurveda through online consultancy services. She has a personal app on the Google play store where she consults patients on their health problems following the Ayurveda medical sciences. She additionally has a Masters degree in Business Administration for Health Sciences from Sikkim Manipal University (SMU), India.

How we reviewed this article:

Our experts continually monitor the health and wellness space, and we update our articles when new information becomes available.

Current Version
Nov 22, 2018

Written By
Dr. Alka Sharma

Medically Reviewed By
Dr. Deepak Bhanot

  1. 1.National Research Council (US) Panel on Neem. “Industrial Products.” Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports., U.S. National Library of Medicine, 1 Jan, 1992,
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK234636/.
  2. Dravyaguna Vijnana by Aacharya Priyavrat Sharma, Volume 2, page no.149, Chaukhamba Bharati Academy, 2017.
  3. Dravyaguna Vijnana by Aacharya Priyavrat Sharma, Volume 2, page no.150, Chaukhamba Bharati Academy, 2017.
  4. Dravyaguna Vijnana by Aacharya Priyavrat Sharma, Volume 2, page no.151, Chaukhamba Bharati Academy, 2017.
  5. Sushruta Samhita with Hindi commentary, sutra sthana 45/115, page no.230 by Kaviraj Ambika Datta Shastri, Chaukhambha Sanskrit Sansthana, Varanasi, 2001.
  6. Aadrash Nighantu,vol. 1, page no.278, by Shri Bapalal Vaidya, Chaukhmbha Bharti Academy, 2016.
  7. Sharangadhara Samhita with Hindi commentary, Madhyam Khanda, 9/154 page no. 240, by Dr. Brahmanand Tripathi, Chaukhamba Surbharti Prakashan, Varanasi, 2010.
  8. Campos, Estefânia V. R., et al. Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, U.S. National Library of Medicine, 2016, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5061770/.
  9. Alzohairy, Mohammad A. Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports., U.S. National Library of Medicine, 2016, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4791507/.
  10. National Research Council (US) Panel on Neem. “Medicinals.” Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, U.S. National Library of Medicine, 1 Jan, 1992,
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK234637/

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