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Healing Solutions 32-Oil Set Review

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The brand that sells 32 bottles for less than a Vitruvi diffuser

Healing Solutions occupies a peculiar corner of the essential oil market. While brands like doTERRA and Young Living build empires on premium pricing and multi-level distribution, and boutique names like Plant Therapy earn loyalty through education and batch-level transparency, Healing Solutions has carved out its niche almost entirely on volume and value. The brand is among the most prolific essential oil sellers on Amazon, appearing at the top of nearly every high-count bundle search. If you've ever typed "essential oil set" into Amazon's search bar, you've almost certainly scrolled past — or clicked on — a Healing Solutions listing.

The 32-oil set is their flagship offer for newcomers. At roughly $55–$60 depending on the day and any ongoing promotions, it works out to under $2 per bottle, which is either an extraordinary deal or a warning sign, depending on your frame of reference. That price point sits below what most specialty retailers charge for a single 10 ml bottle of quality lavender. So what exactly are you getting? Is the math here genuinely favorable, or are corners being cut in ways that matter?

This review pulls apart the 32-oil set piece by piece — the packaging, the oil list, the scent quality, the GC/MS situation, and the practical use cases where this set performs and where it falls short. The short answer: it depends heavily on what you're planning to do with the oils. The longer answer follows below.

What's in the box — 32 × 10 ml bottles, Euro dropper caps, cardboard tray

When the box arrives, it's compact and lighter than you might expect for 32 bottles. Inside, the oils sit in a printed cardboard tray with individual die-cut slots holding each amber glass bottle upright. The tray is functional but not especially durable — it's single-layer corrugated cardboard with a paper label overlay, and the slots can widen with repeated use. If you plan to store this as a long-term display or travel kit, you'll likely migrate the bottles to a proper wooden box or drawer insert within a few months.

Each bottle is 10 ml, which is a standard size and a reasonable amount for experimenting before committing to a larger supply. The lids are Euro dropper caps — plastic orifice reducers seated in aluminum screw-top caps, colored black. The look is clean and consistent across the set. Labels are printed directly on the bottles rather than adhesive paper, which resists moisture and peeling better than cheaper alternatives.

The outer box itself includes a leaflet with brief usage notes, but it's sparse. There's no individual oil profile sheet, no safety reference card, and no QR code linking to extended resources. That gap matters more than it might seem, and we'll return to it.

The oil list — singles and pre-made blends mixed together; what's actually useful

The 32-oil roster is a mixed bag in the most literal sense. The set combines single-origin oils — lavender, Lemon, Tea Tree, eucalyptus, peppermint, rosemary, frankincense, orange, cedarwood, and others — alongside pre-formulated blends with marketing-forward names like "Breathe," "Immunity," "Relaxation," and "Uplift." The split is roughly two-thirds singles and one-third blends, though the exact composition varies slightly between shipments.

The blend inclusions are a double-edged sword. For someone new to aromatherapy, having a pre-mixed "stress relief" or "focus" blend ready to diffuse is genuinely convenient. But those blends also take up slots in the count, meaning you're not getting 32 unique single-origin oils to build your personal collection — you're getting around 20 singles and 10–12 blends depending on the current product version. That's worth knowing before you buy. If your goal is to learn individual oil profiles and build blending skills from scratch, the blend bottles are of less educational value than additional singles would be.

The more useful singles in the set — lavender, peppermint, eucalyptus, Tea Tree, lemon, orange, cedarwood, rosemary, and frankincense — represent a solid aromatic vocabulary for a beginner. Those nine to ten bottles alone justify a lot of experimentation in diffusion and DIY cleaning projects.

Bottle quality — amber glass, batch numbers printed, plastic dropper caps

Healing Solutions uses amber glass, which is the appropriate material for preserving volatile aromatic compounds from UV degradation. That's a baseline expectation for any brand selling oils at more than trivial volume, and it's good to see it present here rather than the clear glass or plastic you occasionally find on bottom-shelf sets.

Batch numbers are printed on each bottle, which is a meaningful quality marker. It means the oil can theoretically be traced back to a specific production run, and it signals that at least some lot-level tracking is in place. Whether those batch numbers connect easily to publicly accessible lab data is a separate question addressed in the GC/MS section below.

The plastic dropper caps are the most common functional complaint in user reviews. The orifice size is fine for dispensing into a diffuser but can be inconsistent for drop-by-drop work in DIY formulas. A few reviewers have noted that the plastic collar occasionally loosens over time, creating a slow leak risk if bottles are stored horizontally. Vertical storage is strongly recommended. The caps are also not child-resistant, which is worth flagging for households with young children.

Scent impressions — across four representative singles (lavender, peppermint, eucalyptus, tea tree)

Lavender: The lavender in the 32-pack is almost certainly Lavandula angustifolia sourced from Bulgarian or similar Eastern European growing regions, which is standard for mass-market oil. The scent profile is recognizable — floral, slightly herbaceous, with the expected soft aldehydic top note — but it presents a bit flat compared to small-batch French or Tasmanian lavender. It's not unpleasant; it just lacks the aromatic complexity that distinguishes higher-price lavenders. For diffusion and linen spray projects, it works perfectly well.

Peppermint: This is one of the set's stronger performers. The peppermint is bright, clean, and high in menthol character. Cold diffusion disperses it effectively into a room, and the scent throw is noticeably better than the lavender. No obvious adulteration on the nose — it smells like peppermint oil rather than a peppermint compound.

Eucalyptus: Camphorous and sharp, consistent with Eucalyptus globulus rather than the milder radiata variety. That's a meaningful distinction because globulus is the more commonly used and less skin-friendly of the two. The scent is exactly what most people picture when they think of eucalyptus — which is useful for diffusion and DIY cleaning, but not the gentler option you'd choose for topical applications. The label does not specify the species, which is a transparency gap.

Tea tree: The Tea Tree is serviceable. The classic medicinal-green scent profile is present, though it leans slightly toward the mustier end of the tea tree spectrum, which can indicate older stock or a harvest from a less premium growing region. It's not off, just less crisp than a freshly distilled Melaleuca alternifolia from a quality Australian source.

Scent impressions — across two "blends" (often marketed-named mixes)

"Breathe" blend: This respiratory-adjacent blend smells predominantly of eucalyptus and peppermint, with what appears to be a hint of tea tree and possibly rosemary. The combination is familiar and functional for diffusion. What you won't find is a full ingredient breakdown on the label — just the proprietary blend name. That makes it impossible to assess individual component ratios, which matters if you're sensitized to any constituent oil.

"Relaxation" blend: Heavy on lavender and cedarwood, with a grounding woody-floral character. It's a pleasant diffuser blend that performs well in the evening or as a background scent in a bedroom. Again, the lack of a transparent ingredient list is the primary limitation. You're trusting the brand's formulation decisions entirely rather than being able to evaluate or replicate the blend yourself.

GC/MS transparency — Healing Solutions publishes but the reports are harder to audit than Plant Therapy's

Healing Solutions does publish GC/MS testing reports, which puts it ahead of many budget brands that offer only a certificate of analysis or no documentation at all. The reports are accessible via their website and, in some cases, through QR codes or links printed on packaging. This is a real positive and should be acknowledged.

The gap versus brands like Plant Therapy is in accessibility and depth. Plant Therapy's GC/MS portal lets you search by batch number, view detailed constituent percentages, and cross-reference data for the specific bottle in your hand. Healing Solutions' documentation, by contrast, is organized less intuitively, and tracking a specific batch number to a specific posted report can require more effort than it should. For a buyer who cares about constituent profiles — especially for DIY skin formulations — that friction matters. The data exists; getting to it cleanly is the friction point.

Diffusion test — coverage and scent throw for lavender and lemongrass

Tested in a 350 sq ft open-plan space with a mid-range ultrasonic diffuser running for 30 minutes at medium output, both Lavender and lemongrass performed adequately. Lemongrass was the stronger performer — its bright citrus-grassy profile filled the room noticeably within 10 minutes and maintained presence through the full test period. Lavender was present but lighter, requiring a higher drop count (around 6–8 drops) to achieve a scent that registered clearly from across the room.

Neither oil produced any harshness or chemical off-note during diffusion, which is a basic but important baseline. Some very low-cost oils develop a slightly synthetic or sharp edge when diffused for extended periods, which can indicate the presence of carrier dilution or synthetic fragrance additions. That wasn't observed here.

Topical caution — many in the 32-pack are not skin-friendly neat, some are labeled only in English despite containing phototoxic citrus

This section deserves direct language: several oils in the 32-pack should not be applied to skin without dilution into a carrier oil, and some should not be applied to sun-exposed skin at all. The citrus oils in the set — including lemon and bergamot if included in your version — are phototoxic in their steam-distilled forms. Direct skin application followed by sun exposure can result in significant skin irritation or discoloration.

The labels do not include dilution ratios, application warnings, or phototoxicity alerts in a consistent or prominent way. The brief included leaflet doesn't fill this gap meaningfully. For an experienced user, this is a known landscape. For a complete beginner who receives this as a gift and starts applying oils directly to their skin, the risk is real and the guidance is insufficient.

The Tea Tree and eucalyptus bottles are similarly unlabeled for dilution requirements. Neither oil is appropriate for undiluted skin application, particularly for people with sensitive skin or in concentration on children.

Price analysis — ~$1.80 per 10 ml bottle

At $55–$60 for 32 bottles, you're paying approximately $1.70–$1.88 per 10 ml unit. That's an almost implausibly low figure compared to specialty retailers, where 10 ml of quality lavender routinely runs $8–$14 and a comparable eucalyptus might run $5–$8. Even Plant Therapy, which prices competitively for a quality-focused brand, typically runs $4–$7 for a 10 ml single.

What that price differential buys in the budget segment versus the mid-tier segment is a combination of lower sourcing standards, higher-volume production efficiency, and thinner margins. You're not getting the same raw material provenance or the same depth of quality control infrastructure. What you are getting is enough oil in enough varieties to fill a diffuser for a very long time without financial stress. For the stated use cases — gifts, experimentation, cleaning projects — the price makes real sense.

Where it makes less sense is if you're building a formulation practice for skin care or personal blending, where sourcing consistency and constituent accuracy become material to your outcomes.

Where Healing Solutions wins — bulk purchase, gift sets, DIY cleaning

Healing Solutions earns its market position in three clear use cases.

Gift sets: The 32-oil presentation box is an attractive gift for someone curious about aromatherapy. The variety is exciting to receive, the bottles look uniform and professional, and the price allows the giver to be generous without significant expenditure. For birthdays, holidays, or "starter kit" gifting, this is a well-suited product.

DIY cleaning: Several of the singles in this set — tea tree, Lemon, eucalyptus, peppermint, lavender — are commonly used in homemade cleaning products like all-purpose sprays, toilet tablets, and laundry fresheners. The risk profile for cleaning applications is lower than for skin applications, and the volume of oil you go through in cleaning projects makes the price-per-bottle math particularly favorable. See Best Essential Oil Starter Sets & Kits for broader context on how high-count budget sets compare when evaluated specifically for cleaning use.

Bulk building: If you're setting up a craft room, a yoga studio's supply drawer, or a small-batch candle-making operation that uses aromatics as a secondary element, buying 32 bottles at once for under $60 is genuinely efficient.

Where Healing Solutions loses — consistency batch-to-batch, educational support, kid-safe curation

Batch-to-batch consistency is the most frequently cited limitation in long-term user reviews. Buyers who repurchase the set often note that a particular oil smelled notably different in a later shipment — sometimes better, sometimes worse. That variability is expected at this price point but worth knowing if you're building a routine around a specific oil's scent profile.

Educational support is sparse. There's no app, no oil guide, no community, no safety reference, and no beginner curriculum. Brands like Plant Therapy invest heavily in educational content because they understand that an informed customer is a safer and more loyal customer. Healing Solutions doesn't appear to view education as part of their product. That leaves new users without context they genuinely need.

Kid-safe curation is absent. The 32-pack includes several oils that require careful dilution and age-appropriate consideration for use around children — eucalyptus globulus and peppermint are both contraindicated for use near young children's faces in standard aromatherapy guidance. The set makes no mention of this and doesn't flag any oils as requiring special handling in a pediatric context.

Who this set suits — gift-givers, experimenters, budget-conscious builders

This set is best matched to three buyer profiles.

The gift-giver who wants to deliver variety and visual impact without spending $100 or more will find this set performs exactly as needed. It looks like a lot, because it is a lot, and the recipient gets genuine exploration value.

The experimenter who wants to smell 20+ different aromatics before deciding which ones to invest in more seriously will extract real value here. Using the 32-pack as a "tasting menu" before purchasing better bottles of your favorites from a quality-focused brand is a legitimate strategy.

The budget-conscious builder who primarily wants oils for diffusion and cleaning — not for skin formulation — gets a strong return on the spend. The aromatic performance for non-topical applications is acceptable, the variety is genuine, and the price is unbeatable at this count.

Verdict — the "experiment cheaply" set, not the "rely on this for skin blends" set

The Healing Solutions 32-oil set does exactly what its price suggests: it delivers wide variety at a cost that makes experimentation feel low-stakes. If you want to fill a diffuser, stock a cleaning supply shelf, or hand someone an impressive-looking aromatics collection without breaking the bank, this set earns its place.

What it is not, and should not be positioned as, is a reliable foundation for topical formulation work. The constituent transparency is limited, the batch consistency is variable, the safety labeling is inadequate for newer users, and the educational infrastructure around the product is essentially nonexistent.

Buy it for experimentation. Buy better single bottles — from Plant Therapy, Rocky Mountain Oils, or a comparable quality-focused brand — for anything going on your skin.


Frequently Asked Questions

Are all 32 oils in the Healing Solutions set pure, undiluted essential oils?
Healing Solutions markets all single oils in the set as 100% pure and undiluted. GC/MS reports are available through their website, though connecting a specific bottle's batch number to a specific posted report can require some searching. The pre-formulated blends in the set are blends of multiple essential oils, not individual pure oils, and their full ingredient lists are not disclosed on the label.
Is the Healing Solutions 32-oil set safe for use directly on skin?
No. Many of the oils in this set — including citrus oils like Lemon, eucalyptus, peppermint, and Tea Tree — require dilution in a carrier oil before any skin application. Citrus oils can also cause phototoxic reactions if applied before sun exposure. The set's labeling does not provide adequate dilution guidance, so new users should research each oil individually before applying any of them to skin.
How does Healing Solutions compare to Plant Therapy for a beginner?
Healing Solutions wins on price and bottle count. Plant Therapy wins on GC/MS accessibility, educational resources, kid-safe labeling, and brand consistency. For a beginner prioritizing budget and variety — especially for diffusion — Healing Solutions is a reasonable starting point. For a beginner who wants to learn safely and build formulation skills, Plant Therapy offers significantly more support infrastructure.
Can the oils in this set be used in DIY cleaning products?
Yes, and this is one of the strongest use cases for the set. Oils like tea tree, lemon, eucalyptus, and peppermint are commonly used in homemade all-purpose cleaners, scrubs, and laundry fresheners. The risk profile for cleaning applications is lower than for skin applications, making the set's price-per-bottle math especially favorable for this purpose.
Does the Healing Solutions 32-oil set come with any educational materials?
The set includes a brief leaflet with general usage notes, but it does not include detailed oil profiles, dilution charts, safety warnings for individual oils, or any link to extended online resources. Users who are new to essential oils should supplement the set with independent research from reputable aromatherapy sources before using the oils in any application beyond basic diffusion.