Bayberry Wax for Soap Making
Bayberry Wax is a hard hard oil dominated by lauric (38%), myristic (22%), palmitic (7%). Very high in lauric and myristic acids, it makes a hard, fast-lathering bar but is drying on its own, so most makers pair it with conditioning oils.
Quick Facts
How Much Lye for Bayberry Wax?
With a SAP value of 0.148, fully saponifying bayberry wax takes 0.148 grams of sodium hydroxide per gram of oil (at 0% superfat):
| Oil amount | NaOH (0% superfat) | KOH (liquid soap) |
|---|---|---|
| 100 g | 14.8 g | 20.7 g |
| 500 g | 74 g | 103.5 g |
| 1000 g | 148 g | 207 g |
Real recipes use a superfat discount (typically 5%) and almost always blend several oils. Always run your full recipe through the Soaply lye calculator rather than weighing lye from a single-oil table.
Predicted Bar Properties
Derived from the fatty acid profile, for a bar made of 100% bayberry wax:
Fatty Acid Profile
| Fatty acid | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Lauric | 38% |
| Myristic | 22% |
| Palmitic | 7% |
| Oleic | 1% |
Substitutes for Bayberry Wax
The closest matches by fatty acid profile, which is what actually determines how an oil behaves in soap. Swap by weight and re-run the lye calculation, since SAP values differ:
Build a recipe with Bayberry Wax
The free Soaply calculator handles the lye math, water, superfat, and property predictions for any blend of 100 oils.
Open the lye calculatorMore Hard Oils
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