Melt & Pour Soap Making Guides
Melt and pour soap is the easiest way to get into soap making. Because the base has already saponified, there is no lye to measure and no long cure to wait out: you melt, color, scent, pour, and unmold the same afternoon. These guides each cover one soap project from its supply list to the finished bar, with the exact weights and temperatures that help produce a smooth, professional-looking result. Supply links go straight to the products each project uses. New to the bases themselves? Start with our soap making supplies and pick a project below.
Start Here
If you have never poured a bar, these are the guides to begin with.
Melt & Pour Soap Projects
The full library, from a first kids' bar to two-base embed work. Each guide links the individual supplies it calls for.
How to Make Hand Soap with Kids
An opaque melt and pour soap base and a playful design come together in a project that helps make handwashing more appealing to kids.
How to Make Succulent Embed Soaps
Pour colored succulent embeds, then suspend them in a clear base to create the look of miniature succulents displayed in glass.
How to Make Cosmic Galaxy Soap
Translucent bases swirled with deep color for a galaxy in every bar.
How to Make Shaving Soap
A moisturizing shave bar poured in a wide mold, built for a close lather.
How to Make Melt & Pour Hand Soap (Video)
A short video walkthrough of scenting and pouring a foaming hand soap.
How to Make M&P Christmas Ornaments
Soap-base ornaments cast in holiday molds; a giftable use for the same clear base.
Stephenson Soap Recipes (Video)
Three video recipes built on our goat's milk base: a coffee scrub bar, a honey swirl bar, and citrus blended bars.
How to Make Foaming Bath Butter
Whip a Stephenson base with fragrance and an exfoliant into a fluffy, scoopable body scrub.Bath & Body Projects
The same skin-safe fragrance oils and colorants, beyond the bar. Quick, kid-friendly projects that share the soap aisle's supplies.
Soap Supplies
Every project above starts from a soap base and a fragrance oil. Browse the melt and pour soap bases to pick a base, and scent it with a soap-safe fragrance oils. Our clear soap bases are being discontinued, so over time the Goat's Milk Soap base is the one that will remain; check the soap making supplies category for current availability before you plan a project around a specific base.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is melt and pour soap?
Melt and pour soap starts from a pre-made soap base that already went through saponification, so there is no lye to handle and no weeks-long cure. You cut the base into chunks, melt them gently, stir in color and fragrance, and pour into a mold. The bar is ready to use as soon as it sets, usually within a few hours.
Is melt and pour soap good for beginners?
It is the easiest way to start making soap. The base does the chemistry for you, the working temperatures are forgiving, and a finished bar is ready the same day. Most of the projects on this page are written for a first-time soap maker, with the trickier two-base and embed techniques flagged as intermediate.
What supplies do I need to make melt and pour soap?
A soap base, a mold, and a skin-safe fragrance oil cover most projects. A microwave or double boiler melts the base, and a stirring utensil and a spray bottle of rubbing alcohol handle mixing and surface bubbles. Each guide lists the individual supplies its project uses.
Can kids make melt and pour soap?
With adult supervision at the melting step, yes. The base melts at a low temperature and sets fast, which makes it a good project to do with children. The hand soap guide on this page is written specifically as a kids' activity to encourage handwashing.

