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Cold-Process Soap

Canola Oil in soap: SAP value, lye amount & what it does

Updated 20264 min read

Canola Oil has a SAP value of 0.124 g NaOH per gram, and it leans toward conditioning in the bar. Here are the exact lye numbers and how it behaves.

SAP value & how much lye canola Oil needs

The saponification (SAP) value of canola Oil is 0.124 g NaOH per gram of oil (0.174 g KOH per gram for liquid soap). So 500 g of canola Oil needs about 62 g of NaOH at 0% superfat, or roughly 59 g at a 5% superfat. Always confirm your full recipe in a lye calculator — SAP is an average and lye is unforgiving.

What it brings to the bar

At 100% (a single-oil bar), its fatty-acid profile works out to these SoapCalc-style qualities (typical range in brackets, per Kevin Dunn):

  • Hardness: 6 [29–54] — low
  • Cleansing: 0 [12–22] — low
  • Conditioning: 91 [44–69] — high
  • Bubbly lather: 0 [14–46] — low
  • Creamy lather: 6 [16–48] — low

How to use it

Canola Oil is very high in conditioning (mostly oleic/linoleic), so a 100% bar is soft and slow to trace. It's usually a large but not sole part of a recipe, cured long, or hardened with a saturated oil.

FAQ

What is the SAP value of canola Oil?

Canola Oil has a SAP value of 0.124 g NaOH per gram of oil (0.174 g KOH per gram). Multiply your oil weight by that to get the lye at 0% superfat.

How much lye do you need for canola Oil?

About 62 g of NaOH for 500 g of canola Oil at 0% superfat, or ~59 g at 5% superfat. Always verify the whole recipe in a lye calculator.

Is canola Oil good for soap?

Yes — used correctly. Canola Oil is very high in conditioning (mostly oleic/linoleic), so a 100% bar is soft and slow to trace. It's usually a large but not sole part of a recipe, cured long, or hardened with a saturated oil.

What you need to soap with it

Cold-process soap is lye chemistry — accuracy and protection matter more than the mold.

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The app for this
Trace runs the full lye + quality math for your recipe
Build a recipe from canola Oil and any other oils, set your superfat and water, and Trace computes the exact NaOH or KOH, water, and the hardness/cleansing/conditioning/bubbly/creamy profile — each number cited to Kevin Dunn's Scientific Soapmaking. Pay once, no subscription, works offline.
Get Trace on the App Store

Sources

SAP values and fatty-acid profiles are typical published averages; every batch of oil varies slightly, so always run your final recipe through a lye calculator. Lye is caustic — soap at your own risk with proper protection.