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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

SAP (NaOH)
0.148
SAP (KOH)
0.207
Iodine
10
INS
190
Type
Hard oil
Role
Cleansing hard oil
Saturated
67%
Unsaturated
1%

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 amountNaOH (0% superfat)KOH (liquid soap)
100 g14.8 g20.7 g
500 g74 g103.5 g
1000 g148 g207 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:

Hardness
67
Cleansing
60
Conditioning
1
Bubbly lather
60
Creamy lather
7

Fatty Acid Profile

Fatty acidPercentage
Lauric38%
Myristic22%
Palmitic7%
Oleic1%

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 calculator

More Hard Oils

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