How Much Fragrance Oil Per Pound of Wax? Chart & Calculator

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How Much Fragrance Oil Per Pound of Wax: Candle Scent Load Chart

Written by HIQILI Editorial Team Updated: May 2026

Review note: This candle-making guide was checked for fragrance load math, wax-type usage ranges, IFRA safety basics, and practical scent throw testing. Always follow your wax supplier's maximum fragrance load and the IFRA certificate for the exact fragrance oil you use.

Quick answer: For 1 lb of candle wax, start with about 1 oz of fragrance oil, which is a 6.25% fragrance load. For a stronger candle, many makers test 1.3 oz per pound of wax, which is about 8%. Do not assume more oil means a stronger candle. Too much fragrance oil can cause sweating, weak burn performance, wick clogging, or poor hot throw.

Use the chart and test method here for soy candles, coconut wax candles, wax melts, or blended-wax candles when you want a stronger scent without pushing the wax past what it can hold.

Candle making workspace with wax, fragrance oil, and digital scale

Measure fragrance oil by weight so each candle batch is repeatable.

Key Takeaways

  • 1 oz fragrance oil per 1 lb wax is the classic beginner baseline for candles.
  • 6-10% fragrance load is the common testing range for many soy and blended wax candles.
  • 8% is often a good first test when you want stronger scent without immediately pushing the wax too far.
  • Measure by weight, not drops, teaspoons, or cups. Fragrance oils have different densities.
  • Check both limits: your wax's maximum fragrance load and the IFRA limit for that fragrance oil.
  • If the candle smells weak, fix wick, temperature, cure time, and jar size before adding more oil.

For candle projects

Choose wax-compatible fragrance oils

Use candle-safe fragrance oils, weigh them accurately, and test 6%, 8%, and 10% before scaling.

Quick Answer: How Much Fragrance Oil per Pound of Wax?

Use this simple starting point: 1 oz fragrance oil per 1 lb wax. That equals about 6.25% fragrance load because 1 lb of wax is 16 oz.

If you want a medium-strong candle and your wax allows it, test 1.3 oz fragrance oil per 1 lb wax, which is about 8%. For wax melts or coconut-heavy blends, some makers test higher loads, but only if the wax supplier and fragrance safety limit allow it.

The useful way to think about it: fragrance load is a percentage, not a mood. A weak-smelling candle is not always under-fragranced. Sometimes the wick is too small, the wax did not cure long enough, or the fragrance was added at the wrong temperature.

Fragrance Oil per Pound of Wax Chart

This chart uses 1 lb of wax, or 16 oz, and shows practical amounts for common fragrance loads.

Fragrance Load Fragrance Oil for 1 lb Wax Best Use Notes
6% 0.96 oz / 27.2 g Light to medium candles Good first test for soy wax and small rooms.
8% 1.28 oz / 36.3 g Medium to strong candles A useful test point for many soy, coconut, and blended waxes.
10% 1.6 oz / 45.4 g Strong scent tests Only use if your wax and IFRA limit allow it.
12% 1.92 oz / 54.4 g Wax melts or special wax blends Not a default candle load. Test carefully.

HIQILI starting point: If you are testing a new scent in soy wax, make three small candles at 6%, 8%, and 10%. Keep the same jar, wick, wax, and cure time. That gives you results you can compare instead of guesses.

Fragrance Oil Calculator Formula

The math is simple. Use this formula:

Wax weight x fragrance load = fragrance oil amount

For example, if you have 16 oz of wax and want an 8% fragrance load:

16 oz x 0.08 = 1.28 oz fragrance oil

If you work in grams, the same formula applies:

454 g wax x 0.08 = 36.3 g fragrance oil

Common Candle Batch Examples

Wax Amount 6% Load 8% Load 10% Load
8 oz wax 0.48 oz / 13.6 g 0.64 oz / 18.1 g 0.8 oz / 22.7 g
1 lb wax 0.96 oz / 27.2 g 1.28 oz / 36.3 g 1.6 oz / 45.4 g
2 lb wax 1.92 oz / 54.4 g 2.56 oz / 72.6 g 3.2 oz / 90.7 g
5 lb wax 4.8 oz / 136.1 g 6.4 oz / 181.4 g 8 oz / 226.8 g

Recommended Fragrance Load by Wax Type

Wax type changes the answer. Soy, paraffin, coconut, beeswax, and blended waxes all hold and release fragrance differently.

Wax Type Typical Test Range What to Expect
Soy wax 6-10% Clean look and steady burn, but it often needs cure time and wick testing for strong hot throw.
Paraffin wax 4-8% Usually throws scent well, but follow the wax supplier's limit.
Coconut wax 8-12% Often holds fragrance well, especially in blends, but can still sweat if overloaded.
Beeswax 3-6% Naturally scented and harder to fragrance strongly. Expect a softer result.
Wax melts 8-12% Can often use more fragrance than wicked candles because there is no flame, but wax limits still matter.

If you are still choosing a wax, compare the pros and cons in Soy Wax vs Paraffin. For the broader fragrance oil foundation, see Fragrance Oils 101.

Why You Should Measure Fragrance Oil by Weight

Measuring fragrance oil by drops, spoons, or cups is one of the fastest ways to make a candle batch inconsistent. Candle formulas should be measured by weight.

Digital scale measuring fragrance oil by weight for candle making accuracy

Why volume is unreliable

Fragrance oils do not all weigh the same by volume. A heavy vanilla-style fragrance and a light citrus-style fragrance can measure differently in a spoon even when the weight is the same.

What to do instead

Put your empty container on a digital scale, press tare, and weigh the fragrance oil in ounces or grams. This makes the recipe repeatable.

HIQILI Testing Notes: How to Find Your Best Fragrance Load

Do not start with a full batch. A new fragrance oil needs a small test because wax, wick, vessel, and fragrance all work together.

  1. Make three small candles: one at 6%, one at 8%, and one at 10% fragrance load.
  2. Keep everything else the same: same wax, wick, jar, dye, pour temperature, and cure time.
  3. Let the candles cure: soy wax often needs 1-2 weeks before you judge hot throw.
  4. Burn test safely: check melt pool, flame size, jar temperature, soot, and scent strength.
  5. Pick the lowest load that performs well: the best candle is not always the one with the most oil.

Record the fragrance name, wax type, jar size, wick, fragrance load, fragrance-add temperature, pour temperature, cure time, cold throw, and hot throw. It is a small habit, but it is what makes the next batch repeatable.

How to Improve Candle Scent Throw Without Overloading Oil

Checking soy wax temperature with a digital thermometer before adding fragrance oil

  • Add fragrance at the right temperature. Many soy and coconut waxes blend well around 180-185 F, but follow your wax supplier's instructions.
  • Stir slowly for about 2 minutes. You want the fragrance distributed evenly, without whipping in air bubbles.
  • Use the right wick. A wick that is too small may never create enough melt pool to release scent. A wick that is too large can burn too hot.
  • Give the candle enough cure time. Soy candles often smell better after 1-2 weeks than they do the next day.
  • Use candle-safe fragrance oils. Perfume oils, skin carrier blends, and random scented oils are not automatically suitable for candle wax.

For step-by-step scenting details, read How to Add Scent to Candles. For wick issues, use the DIY Candle Wick Guide.

Common Fragrance Load Mistakes

Adding more oil when the wick is the problem

If the melt pool is too small, the candle may smell weak even when the fragrance load is fine. Fix the wick before increasing the load.

Using carrier oil in candle wax

Jojoba oil, almond oil, and body oil blends do not belong in candle wax. Use candle-safe fragrance oil directly in wax.

Ignoring wax limits

Some waxes cannot hold a high fragrance load. Pushing beyond the limit can cause sweating, separation, or poor burn quality.

Testing too many variables at once

If you change wax, jar, wick, fragrance percentage, and cure time in the same test, you will not know what helped.

Choose Fragrance Oils for Candle Making

For candle projects, choose fragrance oils made for wax and test them in your actual candle setup. A scent that smells strong in the bottle still needs the right wax, wick, jar, and cure time to work in a candle.

Safety References

Fragrance load is both a performance question and a safety question. These references are useful when a hobby candle becomes something you plan to sell or gift.

Also check your wax supplier's technical sheet and your fragrance oil supplier's IFRA certificate for the exact materials in your candle.

FAQs About Fragrance Oil per Pound of Wax

How much fragrance oil do I need for 1 lb of soy wax?

Start with about 1 oz of fragrance oil for 1 lb of soy wax, which is roughly a 6.25% load. If the scent is too light and your wax allows it, test 1.28 oz for an 8% load.

Is 1 oz of fragrance oil per pound of wax enough?

Yes, 1 oz per pound is a good beginner baseline for many candles. It may not be the strongest possible load, but it is a practical starting point before testing 8% or 10%.

Can I use 10% fragrance oil in soy candles?

Sometimes, but only if your soy wax supplier allows a 10% load and the fragrance oil's IFRA limit allows it. Test first because 10% can cause sweating or wick issues in some formulas.

Why does my candle still smell weak with enough fragrance oil?

The wick, cure time, fragrance-add temperature, wax type, jar size, or scent choice may be the issue. Do not increase fragrance load until you check those variables.

Should I measure fragrance oil in grams or ounces?

Either grams or ounces can work, but use weight, not volume. A digital scale gives more consistent results than drops, teaspoons, tablespoons, or measuring cups.

What happens if I add too much fragrance oil to wax?

Too much fragrance oil can cause sweating, separation, wick clogging, soot, poor burn quality, or weak hot throw. More oil does not always mean a stronger candle.

How much fragrance oil do I use for an 8 oz candle?

For 8 oz of wax, use about 0.48 oz fragrance oil at 6%, 0.64 oz at 8%, or 0.8 oz at 10%. Always check your wax and fragrance safety limits before choosing the final load.

Do wax melts need more fragrance oil than candles?

Wax melts often use a higher fragrance load than wicked candles because there is no flame, but the wax still has a maximum load. Many makers test 8-12% for wax melts.

Conclusion

For most candle makers, the starting answer is simple: use about 1 oz fragrance oil per 1 lb of wax, then test 6%, 8%, and 10% if your wax and IFRA limit allow it. Measure by weight, keep your variables steady, and judge the finished candle after a proper cure.

A strong candle is not just a high fragrance load. It is the right fragrance oil, the right wax, the right wick, the right cure time, and a recipe you can repeat.