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Olive oil in soap making

Published by The Soap Brain Team

Olive oil is a conditioning soap-making oil rich in oleic acid (72%). A gram of it turns to soap with about 0.135 g of NaOH (lye). It makes a mild, gentle bar and pairs well with a harder, cleansing oil. Most soapers use it at 20–100% of their oils.

Fatty-acid profile

Olive oil is a gentle, conditioning oil, mostly unsaturated fatty acids that leave a mild, moisturising bar with a softer, lower lather. It pairs naturally with a harder, more cleansing oil to firm the bar up and add bubbles.

Olive oil is about 16% saturated fat and 83% unsaturated — that unsaturated majority is what makes it conditioning and slower to trace, but softer on its own.

Fatty-acid composition of Olive oil
Fatty acid Share What it does in soap
Oleic acid 72% a monounsaturated fatty acid that makes a gentle, conditioning, moisturising bar with a slick, lower lather and a slower trace
Palmitic acid 13% a saturated fatty acid that builds a hard, long-lasting bar with a stable, creamy lather
Linoleic acid 10% a polyunsaturated fatty acid that is very conditioning but oxidises readily — a driver of DOS (dreaded orange spots) at high levels
Stearic acid 3% a saturated fatty acid that adds hardness and a thick, stable lather; a large share can speed up trace
Linolenic acids (C18:3) 1% the polyunsaturated C18:3 family — deeply conditioning but the most prone to rancidity; keep the combined polyunsaturated total modest

Olive oil in the bar

Olive oil gives a mild, low, slick lather on its own. Blended with a bubbly, cleansing oil it contributes body and mildness while the partner oil supplies the bubbles.

High-oleic Olive oil traces slowly, which gives you comfortable working time for swirls and layers. In exchange the bar is soft at first and rewards a longer cure — four to eight weeks — to harden fully and last in the shower.

In a blend Olive oil is the conditioning, skin-feel component and can often make up the bulk of the oils. Add a firmer, more cleansing oil — coconut, palm or a hard butter — to bring hardness and bubbles the finished bar would otherwise miss.

Closest substitutes for Olive oil

Out of Olive oil? These oils behave most like it in a bar — ranked by how close their hardness, cleansing and conditioning profile and lye (SAP) requirement are. The numbers are predicted properties for a 100% single-oil bar, not a safety guide; always recalculate the lye when you swap an oil.

Olive oil compared with its closest substitute oils
Oil Hardness Cleansing Conditioning SAP (NaOH)
Olive oil (this oil) 16 0 83 0.135
Soybean oil 15 0 83 0.136
Corn oil 15 0 83 0.135
Avocado oil 17 0 80 0.133
Sesame oil 14 0 80 0.137

Using Olive oil in a recipe

One gram of Olive oil needs about 0.135 g of NaOH (sodium hydroxide) to turn fully to soap, within a documented range of 0.132–0.14 g/g across sources. The calculator below uses this value; always confirm the lye weight before you mix.

Its iodine value is about 84 — a moderate value, a good all-round balance of hardness and conditioning. Iodine value is only a rough guide, not a hard rule, but it gives you a feel for how a bar built around this oil will wear.

Most soapers use Olive oil at roughly 20–100% of their oils.

Maker's note: Castile base; mild, conditioning, dense small-bubble lather.

Calculate lye for Olive oil

The calculator below is pre-loaded with Olive oil. Enter your weights, add other oils, and it works out the exact NaOH (lye) weight, water and quality numbers. Always weigh lye, oils and water — never measure by volume, wear gloves and eye protection, and add lye to water (never the reverse).

Loading the calculator…

Where these numbers come from

Every figure on this page is backed by at least two independent references, listed below — so you can check our work instead of taking our word for it.

SAP data last updated · 51 oils covered.

Olive oil soap FAQ

Can you make soap with 100% Olive oil?
Yes. Olive oil can be soaped at up to 100% of the oils — a single-oil, castile-style bar. Expect a very mild bar that needs a long cure (six weeks or more) to firm up and lather its best.
What superfat should I use with Olive oil?
A 5% superfat is a safe, common starting point for recipes using Olive oil; adjust to taste once you know how the finished bar feels. Never drop to 0% or below without a deliberate reason — the calculator will ask you to confirm it.
Does Olive oil speed up or slow down trace?
High-oleic Olive oil traces slowly, which gives you comfortable working time for swirls and layers. In exchange the bar is soft at first and rewards a longer cure — four to eight weeks — to harden fully and last in the shower.

Recipes with Olive oil