Does Beef Tallow Actually Work for Aging Skin? I Tested 17 Tallow Balms - Here Are 5 That Actually Deliver
Beef tallow is finally making a comeback, and it’s about damn time.
For decades, the beauty industry’s been pushing products loaded with ingredients we can’t even pronounce, all wrapped in fancy jars and endorsed by celebrities who get paid millions to lie to us.
But here’s what they don’t tell you…
Your great-grandmother had better skin than you do. Why?
Beef tallow. That’s it.
She didn’t need $200 lab-made serums or prescription creams with side effects that outlast the results. She used rendered animal fat, and her skin was incredible.
Tallow isn’t some new trend. Humans have used it for thousands of years, right up until pharmaceutical companies realized they could make more money selling synthetic chemicals that wreck your skin barrier. Then you’d need even more products to “fix” the damage.
It’s a brilliant business model (if you’ve got no soul!)
Real grass-fed tallow gives your skin exactly what it’s made from: Vitamins A, D, E, and K. These fatty acids match your skin’s natural oils, so your body recognizes these nutrients instantly and actually uses them.
But now that tallow’s threatening Big Beauty’s profits, the market’s flooded with knockoffs. Some brands are the real deal, but plenty are just cashing in on the trend, cutting corners on sourcing, adding cheap fillers, and masking poor-quality tallow with pretty packaging.
The question is, which ones are actually pure?
Which ones are lying about being made in America?
And which ones are worth your money?
My name’s Sarah, and I’ve spent the last 18 months testing every tallow balm I could get my hands on. After years of watching “conventional skincare” destroy my skin, I went down the ancestral health rabbit hole and never looked back.
I’ve tested products for:
- Getting rid of crepey, aging texture
- Healing chronic dryness nothing else would touch
- Stopping irritation from synthetic fragrances
- Re-hydrating dry skin without that gross sticky feeling
Just to be clear, I’m not a dermatologist. I’m just someone who got tired of being lied to by the beauty industry and decided to test everything myself.
And after testing 17 different brands, I’ve found five worth talking about.
So without further ado, let’s start with my absolute favorite…
#1 The Tallowed Truth - F- Balm
Let me start off by saying, The Tallowed Truth’s , F-Balm is a big F-U to the beauty industry… And I love it!
I actually came across The Tallowed Truth in an Instagram ad one night. Usually, I scroll straight past that stuff, (it’s all overly edited, fake smiles, and filters), but this one felt different. It was the founder, Ben, walking through their warehouse, showing how everything’s made. It stopped me mid-scroll because it didn’t look like an ad, and I could tell he actually cared about what they were making.
I absolutely loved the transparency, so I started digging into the reviews. And people LOVE this stuff. There were photos, stories, and comments from people saying this tallow had helped fade their wrinkles, ease their dryness, and even treat their eczema and rosacea! The more I read, the more I realized this stuff was genuinely working for real people.
Between the reviews and how genuine the brand seemed, I figured I’d give it a shot.
When it arrived, I was instantly impressed. The texture wasn’t thick or waxy, and it melted right into my skin. It doesn’t really have a scent either, just a faint natural sweetness that disappears after a minute.
A few hours later, I caught myself in the mirror and just thought “woah.” My skin felt baby-soft, smoother than it had in years, and I had a healthy glow I hadn’t seen in forever. I kept using it twice a day, and after a few weeks, my skin looked incredible.
And I’m not that old, so wrinkles aren’t a huge problem for me, but the lines I did have? Completely gone.
One morning I ran into my neighbor and she stopped mid-conversation and told me “you look amazing, what are you doing?” I told her about F-Balm, showed her the reviews, and now she’s ordering one too!
I’ve tried so many tallow balms at this point, and after a month of testing F-Balm against everything else, I ended up throwing the other jars out. There’s just no comparison once you’ve used this one.
So what makes this different from every other tallow balm?
First, The Tallowed Truth triple-purifies their tallow. Most brands purify it once and bottle it, leaving impurities that give some balms that beefy smell. F-Balm on the other hand, cleans their tallow three separate times, leaving just the faint, sweet scent I mentioned earlier.
Their formula is as clean as it gets: grass-fed Canadian beef tallow, organic olive oil, Ontario beeswax, raw honey, and a touch of frankincense oil. That’s it!
The raw honey’s a big deal. Most brands skip it because it’s expensive and harder to source, but raw honey is antibacterial, so it helps to calm inflammation and heal skin. While store-bought honey is basically dead, processed and stripped of enzymes, raw honey still has all the nutrients your skin loves.
Their tallow comes from independent ranchers who raise cattle on pasture – no feedlots, no hormones, no antibiotics. Their honey comes straight from local beekeepers, never outsourced overseas like most “natural” brands, and everything’s made in Canada under their control.
What really sold me was the people behind it. Two brothers started The Tallowed Truth in their basement during COVID after getting fed up with the beauty industry’s toxic products. Now, they run their own manufacturing facility in Ontario and oversee every single batch themselves.
While everyone else was losing their minds and pharma companies were silencing anyone asking questions, these guys built a brand that stood for truth and freedom. They’re not chasing trends or influencers. They just want to help people get away from a system designed to keep you hooked on broken products.
I used to have an entire drawer of products: day cream, night cream, eye cream, lip balm, hand cream, neck cream. Now I just use F-Balm twice a day on everything, face, eyes, lips, hands, anywhere that gets dry.
A little goes a long way!
Overall, The Tallowed Truth have knocked it out of the park with F-Balm. The triple purification kills the beef smell and impurities while keeping the good stuff. The raw honey adds healing benefits very few offer. It actually replaces half your skincare routine instead of adding to it.
The sourcing is clean, the transparency solid, and it supports real farmers, not factory farms. They’ve got over 5,000 verified reviews from real customers, and they actually stand for something.
The only downside? They make small batches, so it sells out a lot. If you see it in stock, grab it now because waiting on restocks is torture once you find something that works.
Check Out The Tallowed Truth#2 Ancestral Cosmetics – Tallow & Black Seed Oil Clarifying Cream
When I first came across Ancestral Cosmetics, I’ll be honest — it looked a little too polished for my taste. The packaging was nice, the branding clean, but something about it felt more like a skincare company trying to look “ancestral” than one that actually lives it. Still, I wanted to give it a fair shot.
Their Clarifying Cream caught my eye because of the black seed oil. I’ve heard about its anti-inflammatory benefits, and since my skin can get red and dry in the winter, I figured it was worth testing. I noticed it also included raw honey, which I already knew from F-Balm works wonders for my skin. That combo sounded promising, so I ordered a jar to see what all the hype was about.
When it arrived, it did make a good first impression. The cream is soft and easy to spread, and it sinks in quickly without feeling greasy. The scent is floral and noticeable: – pleasant at first, but after a few minutes, it started to feel a bit overpowering, especially if you’re sensitive to fragrance.
After a few days, my skin felt smooth and hydrated. It definitely performs well. But as time went on, I started noticing that my skin would sometimes feel a bit overwhelmed, just like there was too much going on. When I looked closer at the ingredient list, it made sense: there are a lot of different oils, extracts, and essential oils mixed in. It even contains naturally occurring fragrance allergens like Limonene, Geraniol, Linalool, Citral, and Citronellol, which can be tricky for more sensitive skin types.
Everything in there is natural, but I found myself missing the simplicity of F-Balm’s fewer ingredients. This one feels more like it’s trying to impress you with how much it can fit into a jar.
I also tried to dig deeper into how and where it’s made. They mention Irish grass-fed tallow, which sounds good, but there isn’t much transparency beyond that. No mention of who’s producing it, or if it’s made in-house. Maybe I’m spoiled by how open The Tallowed Truth is about their process, but once you’ve seen that level of honesty, anything less feels distant.
To be fair, it’s a solid product. It works, it feels nice, and the ingredients are quality. But it doesn’t give me the same sense of trust or connection. It feels like a company selling a good skincare line, not a brand built on principle or conviction.
If you’re looking for something lightweight and pretty, this could be worth trying. But if what matters to you is integrity, sourcing, and knowing exactly who’s behind the jar, this one falls short of that mark.
Check Out Ancestral Cosmetics#3 Toups & Co – Tallow Balm (Original)
Next up is Toups & Co’s Original Tallow Balm. This is one I’d seen floating around in a few different clean beauty circles, and it caught my attention with its honest, family-run branding. Toups & Co are female founded, family run, and proudly make a big deal about sourcing their ingredients from regenerative farms in the US, which I definitely love.
When my jar arrived, it looked simple and wholesome, which I liked. The balm itself has a thicker texture, more like old-fashioned salve than a cream, and you really have to warm it up between your hands before it spreads. Once it melts down, it goes on smooth, but it does take a few minutes to fully sink in.
The scent is where things got a little tricky for me. It’s not bad, just busy. They mix in four different essential oils: lavender, bergamot, frankincense, and sandalwood, and together it’s a lot. Compared to the faint, natural sweetness of F-Balm, this felt more like something you’d smell in a spa. Nice at first, but a little much for daily use.
After a couple of weeks, I’d say it did what it promised. It moisturized really well, and it definitely soothed any dry or rough patches. But it didn’t give me that deep, lasting hydration I got from the first two. My skin felt soft, but not transformed. The biggest difference was that it seemed to just sit on top a little longer before fully absorbing.
Ingredient-wise, it’s good – grass-fed tallow and olive oil, which are both solid basics. But after using other brands with raw honey or beeswax blended in, I couldn’t help but notice this one felt simpler… maybe too simple. It’s missing that extra something that helps your skin repair and glow, not just stay moisturized.
I still think Toups & Co is a brand doing things the right way: small batch, family-run, no toxins, no fillers. I respect that. But if we’re talking results, this one just didn’t wow me. It’s the kind of balm I’d keep around for emergencies or winter dryness, not something I’d reach for every single day.
Overall, I’d say it’s a clean, trustworthy product. But compared to the first two, it just doesn’t hit the same way. That’s why it lands at #3 for me: I like the brand and what they stand for, but when it comes to results, it just can’t compete with the depth and performance of the top two.
Check Out Toups & Co#4 Fat Cow Skincare – Tallow Balm
By the time I got to Fat Cow, I was starting to realize how different these tallow balms can be – not just in terms of results, but in how much thought actually goes into them. Fat Cow was one of the simpler ones on my list, and that’s both its strength and its weakness.
The formula’s as bare-bones as it gets: grass-fed tallow, jojoba oil, beeswax, and shea butter. All solid ingredients, and I respect that they keep it clean and natural. But after testing some of the more refined blends, this one felt a little unfinished. Like a base that’s missing something to really make it come alive.
The texture’s thick, heavier than most, and it takes a bit of effort to warm up and spread. Once it’s on, it does moisturize well, but it tends to sit more on top of the skin instead of absorbing in. It left my hands and elbows soft, but on my face, it felt a bit too heavy.
There’s no strong smell, which I appreciated, and it definitely does what it says: it hydrates. But that’s about where it stops. It doesn’t brighten, smooth, or restore the way F-Balm or even Ancestral’s cream does. It’s more of a basic protector – good for dryness, not for transformation.
I do like the heart behind the brand. They’re open about using grass-fed tallow and talk about animal welfare and responsible sourcing. It feels genuine, and I always respect that. But the product itself could use more depth. Something like raw honey or a healing oil that adds more benefit beyond moisture.
In the end, Fat Cow’s Tallow Balm is a clean, trustworthy option – the kind of thing you keep around for dry hands or winter roughness. But if you’re looking for something that really changes your skin, it doesn’t quite get there. That’s why it lands at #4 for me: simple, well-intentioned, but not enough to stand out.
Check Out Fat Cow Skincare#5 Forge Skin – Tighten & Lift Beef Tallow Balm
Forge was one of those brands that found me whether I wanted it to or not. Their ads were everywhere, loud, polished, and full of marketing buzzwords like “clinically proven” and “scientifically backed.” You know the type. The kind that feels more like a corporate skincare commercial than something made by people who actually care about what’s in the jar.
Still, I wanted to give it a fair shot, especially since so many people seem to swear by it.
When it arrived, I could tell right away that this was a very different kind of tallow balm. The packaging was clean and professional, but it had that mass-produced feel, more like something you’d find in a department store than a small-batch skincare brand. Then I looked at the ingredients list and it made sense. Tallow was in there, but it shared space with a long list of synthetic additives: dimethicone, carbomer, artificial coloring, fragrance, and several chemical stabilizers.
To be fair, it does work. My skin looked smooth and plump after using it for a few weeks, and it gave that instant “soft focus” finish you usually only get from high-end moisturizers. But the effect felt surface-level. It made my skin look good, not necessarily become healthier.
The texture is silky and easy to apply, but it feels more like a silicone-based cream than a natural balm. It leaves a light film that gives a temporary glow, but it doesn’t have that deep, nourishing absorption I’ve found with true, minimally processed tallow.
The scent is mild but noticeably artificial, likely there to mask the base formula.
Overall, Forge delivers results, but in the same way most modern skincare does—through cosmetic finish rather than genuine skin repair. And while that’s not inherently bad, it’s not what drew me to tallow in the first place.
Forge reminded me why I moved toward ancestral skincare. It’s slick, well-marketed, and probably works for a lot of people, but it doesn’t have the purity, transparency, or soul that make the truly great brands stand out.
If you want quick results and that instant “lifted” look, this will deliver. But if you care about clean sourcing and long-term nourishment, it’s not the same league as something like F-Balm. That’s why it sits at #5 for me—effective, but missing the heart of what tallow skincare should be.
Check Out Forge Skin