Learning Center

Soy Wax vs. Paraffin Wax

Soy wax and paraffin wax both make excellent candles, and the right choice depends on the scent throw, burn characteristics, and appearance you want. Here is how the two compare on origin, scent throw, burn performance, soot, and overall candle-making characteristics, so you can choose the wax that best fits your project.

Copper bowl of soy wax flakes beside a white paraffin wax slab on a wood counter

Soy wax and paraffin wax are the two waxes most candle makers start with, and the choice between them influences how strongly a fragrance throws, how the candle burns, and how it looks on the shelf. Both make excellent candles. The right pick comes down to the throw, burn time, and finish you want, plus whether a renewable source matters to you or your customers. Since 1999 we have walked thousands of makers through this exact decision, and the answer is that neither wax wins on every count.

This guide compares soy and paraffin on the points that actually change the candle: how each is made, scent throw, burn time, soot and safety, appearance, and cost. Use it to match the wax to the candle you have in mind.

Soy vs. Paraffin at a Glance

Start here for the short version. The sections below explain the why behind each row.

Soy Wax vs. Paraffin Wax

PropertySoy WaxParaffin Wax
SourceHydrogenated soybean oil, a renewable cropRefined from petroleum
Hot throwGood; usually a touch softerUsually the strongest
Burn timeTends to burn longerTends to burn faster
AppearanceOpaque, natural, matteBase: translucent/glossy; blends: opaque/creamy
SootLow when well-wickedLow when well-wicked
Best forLonger burn, natural look, renewable sourceMaximum throw, dye-friendly colors

Both waxes are available in our candle wax selection, with soy wax and paraffin wax organized into separate categories so you can easily compare and choose the option that best fits your project.

How Each Wax Is Made

The starting materials are completely different, and that is where most of the practical differences come from.

Where Soy and Paraffin Come From

Soy Wax

Soy wax starts as soybean oil, pressed or solvent-extracted from soybeans. The oil is then hydrogenated, a process that adds hydrogen to the oil so it firms from a liquid into a solid wax with a higher melting point[3]. Some soy waxes are pure soybean oil; others blend in other vegetable or wax materials. The base wax is colorless and usually appears opaque.

Paraffin Wax

Paraffin wax is refined from petroleum. It is a mixture of saturated hydrocarbons, mostly straight-chain alkanes, separated out during petroleum refining[1][2]. Base paraffins are colorless and tend to appear translucent and glossy, while paraffin blends tend to set more opaque and creamy.

Hand scooping soy wax flakes from a plastic bag with a metal measuring cup
Soy wax ships as flakes that scoop and weigh straight into the pot.
Hand using a metal scraper to break up a plastic-wrapped slab of paraffin wax
Slab paraffin is typically cut or broken into smaller pieces before melting.

Is Paraffin Wax Toxic?

This is the question we hear most, and it is almost always asked about paraffin rather than soy, since paraffin is refined from petroleum. Paraffin wax used in candles is not poisonous, and it has to meet federal standards before it is sold for candle use. The worry people usually have is about soot and emissions, and that part is worth understanding clearly.

Any burning candle can produce soot, soy and paraffin alike. Soot comes from incomplete combustion, which a wick that is too large or left untrimmed causes in any wax. How much a candle emits depends mostly on the wax composition and how cleanly it burns, rather than on the soy-versus-paraffin label alone[4]. A research evaluation of scented-candle emissions modeled realistic indoor exposure and concluded that under normal conditions of use, scented candles do not pose known health risks to the consumer[5].

If you or someone in your home is sensitive to perfumes or smoke, you may notice a reaction to any burning candle, scented or not. That is a sensitivity to combustion or fragrance in general, not a soy-versus-paraffin distinction.

Scent Throw

Scent throw is the most common reason makers pick one wax over the other. In a finished candle, paraffin usually gives a slightly stronger hot throw, the smell that fills a room while the candle burns. Soy holds scent well too, and many makers prefer it, but it often reads a touch softer than the same fragrance in paraffin.

How much oil a wax can hold is not the whole story. Scent throw depends on the wax, the fragrance load, the wick size driving the melt pool, and how long the candle cured before its first burn. A soy candle with the right wick and a proper cure can out-throw a poorly wicked paraffin candle. For the full breakdown of what controls throw and how to fix a weak candle, see our scent guide, and for fragrance load specifics by wax, our Fragrance Oils FAQ.

Burn Time and Appearance

Soy wax tends to burn longer than paraffin. Soy has a lower melting point, and a well-wicked soy candle generally gives more burn hours than the same-size paraffin candle. Paraffin lights and reaches a full melt pool readily, which is part of why its throw comes on strong.

The two waxes also finish differently. Soy sets opaque and matte, the natural look many candle makers prefer. Paraffin's finish depends on the type: base paraffins tend to set translucent and glossy, while paraffin blends tend to set more opaque and creamy. Paraffin also tends to hold dye colors well, making it a popular choice for vibrant, richly colored candles. Soy can develop surface frosting or an uneven top as it cures, which is normal for a natural wax and does not affect the burn.

How to Choose

There is no single best wax. Match the wax to the candle you want to make.

Pick by What You Want

Choose paraffin when

you want the strongest hot throw and vibrant dyed colors. Base paraffins give a translucent, glossy finish, while paraffin blends set more opaque and creamy, so pick the paraffin type that matches the look you want. Paraffin is a dependable choice when fragrance performance is the priority. Browse paraffin wax.

Choose soy when

you want a longer burn, an opaque natural look, and a wax that comes from a renewable crop. Soy is a popular pick for container candles and for makers whose customers ask for a plant-based wax. Browse soy wax.

Choose a blend when

you want a middle ground. Soy-paraffin blend waxes pair paraffin's throw with some of soy's longer burn and opaque look. Test any blend for wick size and load before scaling a batch.

Once you have settled on a wax, our soy wax guide and paraffin wax guide help you pick the specific wax within each family, and the candle waxes & additives guide covers additives and how different waxes behave when you pour. Whichever you choose, you are starting with a wax that is safe to use and made for candles.

Sources

  1. Glossary — Wax U.S. Energy Information Administration
  2. Safety assessment of waxes, paraffinic, refined, derived from petroleum-based or synthetic hydrocarbon feedstock, low viscosity, for use in food contact materials EFSA Journal (European Food Safety Authority), 2023
  3. Partial hydrogenation of soybean oil over a Pd/bentonite catalyst RSC Advances, 2025
  4. Emission of air pollutants from burning candles with different composition in indoor environments Environmental Science and Pollution Research International, 2014
  5. Human health risk evaluation of selected VOC, SVOC and particulate emissions from scented candles Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology, 2014

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between soy wax and paraffin wax?

Soy wax is made from hydrogenated soybean oil and comes from a renewable crop; paraffin wax is refined from petroleum. In a finished candle, paraffin usually gives a slightly stronger hot throw, while soy tends to burn longer and comes from a renewable source. Both pass federal standards for candle use, and both can soot if the wick is too large or untrimmed.

Is paraffin wax toxic?

Paraffin wax used in candles is not poisonous, and both paraffin and soy candles have to meet federal standards before they are sold for candle use. Any burning candle can produce soot and trace combustion byproducts, and how much depends mostly on the wax and how cleanly the candle burns. Research on scented candles found that under normal conditions of use they do not pose known health risks. Burn candles in a ventilated room with a trimmed wick that is not throwing soot.

Does soy wax burn cleaner than paraffin?

Neither wax is inherently clean or dirty. Soot comes from incomplete combustion, which a too-large or untrimmed wick causes in any wax. A well-wicked, trimmed candle in either wax burns with very little soot. Studies of candle emissions find that wax composition and burn conditions, not the soy-versus-paraffin label alone, drive how much a candle emits.

Is soy wax better than paraffin for candles?

Neither is better outright; they suit different goals. Choose paraffin when you want the strongest hot throw and vibrant dyed colors; base paraffins give a translucent, glossy finish, while paraffin blends set more opaque and creamy. Choose soy when you want a longer burn, an opaque natural look, and a wax derived from a renewable crop. Many makers also use soy-paraffin blends to balance throw and burn. The best wax is the one that matches the candle you want to make.

What is soy wax made of?

Soy wax is made from soybean oil that has been hydrogenated, a process that adds hydrogen to the oil so it firms from a liquid into a solid wax with a higher melting point. Some soy waxes are pure soybean oil; others blend in other vegetable or wax materials. The base wax is colorless and typically appears opaque.

Can you mix soy and paraffin wax?

Yes. Soy-paraffin blend waxes are sold specifically to combine paraffin's stronger hot throw with some of soy's longer burn and opaque look. If you blend waxes yourself, test the result for wick size, fragrance load, and finish before committing to a batch, since the blend behaves differently from either wax alone.