Buy PureFragrance Oils for Candle MakingOnline in India - Bulk & Wholesale
Buy Fragrance Oils for Candle Making in Bulk
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50% OFFSandalwood Fragrance Oil
4.2 / 5.0
(10) 10 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFTobacco Vanilla Fragrance Oil
4.0 / 5.0
(7) 7 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
35% OFFRose Fragrance Oil
4.6 / 5.0
(5) 5 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 700.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
25% OFFLavender Fragrance Oil
4.73 / 5.0
(11) 11 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 600.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFVanilla Fragrance Oil
3.75 / 5.0
(4) 4 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 499.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,000.00Sale price From Rs. 499.00Sale -
50% OFFChocolate Fragrance Oil
4.57 / 5.0
(7) 7 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale -
50% OFFCoffee Fragrance Oil
4.67 / 5.0
(6) 6 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale -
50% OFFSaffron Fragrance Oil
4.6 / 5.0
(5) 5 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
33% OFFVanilla & Tonka Fragrance Oil
4.38 / 5.0
(8) 8 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 600.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale -
50% OFFApple Cinnamon Fragrance Oil
4.4 / 5.0
(10) 10 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale -
Strawberry Shortcake Fragrance Oil
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale -
50% OFFBirthday Cake Fragrance Oil
4.25 / 5.0
(4) 4 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFCotton Candy Fragrance Oil
4.43 / 5.0
(7) 7 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFCaramel Fragrance Oil
4.5 / 5.0
(4) 4 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFCappuccino Fragrance Oil
4.5 / 5.0
(6) 6 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFStrawberry Cream Fragrance Oil
4.5 / 5.0
(6) 6 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 900.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFNutmeg Fragrance Oil
4.46 / 5.0
(13) 13 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale -
50% OFFClove Fragrance Oil
4.4 / 5.0
(5) 5 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 349.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 700.00Sale price From Rs. 349.00Sale -
55% OFFBay Rum Fragrance Oil
4.38 / 5.0
(8) 8 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 449.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 1,000.00Sale price From Rs. 449.00Sale -
50% OFFMarshmallow Fragrance Oil
4.57 / 5.0
(7) 7 total reviews
Regular price From Rs. 399.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 399.00Sale
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How to make fragrance candles at home?
Melt your wax to the recommended pouring temperature — for soy, usually around 55–65°C — then add fragrance oil at 6–8% of total wax weight and stir thoroughly for two minutes to ensure even distribution. Pour into containers and leave undisturbed. The step most people skip: wait 48–72 hours before burning or judging the scent. Candles evaluated the same day they're poured consistently read as under-fragranced, because the fragrance hasn't fully bonded with the wax yet. If you're testing a new fragrance oil for the first time, make a small batch — 200–300g — before scaling up.
Which is the best candle fragrance oil for soy wax?
Lavender, vanilla, and sandalwood perform consistently in soy because they bind well at standard load and produce even hot throw after curing. Soy wax has naturally softer throw than paraffin at the same fragrance percentage — if a soy candle smells weak after the full 72-hour cure, increase fragrance load in 0.5% increments and retest rather than jumping to maximum. Pushing past 9% in soy often produces surface issues rather than stronger scent.
Are non-toxic candle fragrance oils available in India?
Yes — but the term "non-toxic" isn't regulated anywhere, so it doesn't carry much weight on its own. What actually answers the safety question is MSDS documentation: flash point, composition data, and handling requirements. For indoor wellness candle ranges, look for IFRA-compliant blends and request COA and MSDS before placing bulk orders. RV Organica provides both with every order.
Which candle fragrance oil is best for Diwali gifting collections?
Oudh, sandalwood, and rose are the natural choices for Indian festive candles — they draw on a fragrance tradition that's genuinely rooted in the context, not imported from elsewhere. For pooja candles, a lighter load (6–7%) suits the setting. For Diwali corporate gift sets, the often-overlooked factor is batch-to-batch consistency — a set where units smell different from each other undermines the gift regardless of which fragrance was chosen. Worth asking your supplier about batch documentation before a seasonal production run.
Are candle fragrance oils available in bulk or wholesale in India?
Yes. RV Organica supplies fragrance oils for candle making in commercial quantities, with COA and MSDS provided per batch. For large-scale buyers planning Diwali production runs, confirming lead time and batch documentation in advance is worth the early conversation. The full fragrance oils range covers candle applications alongside other production categories.
About Fragrance Oils for Candle Making
Candle Fragrance Oils — For Home, Diwali Gifting & Commercial Production
>Most candle fragrance conversations begin with scent profiles. The more useful starting point is wax compatibility and flash point — because a fragrance that smells right in the bottle can still separate in the wax or create problems at the pouring temperature. This collection is part of RV Organica's fragrance oils range, focused specifically on candle fragrance oils suitable for home décor, Diwali gifting, pooja collections, and production-scale candle making. From sandalwood and oudh to lemongrass and vanilla, these oils are selected for performance in soy, paraffin, and blended wax — not just for how they read on a label.
What Are Candle Fragrance Oils?
>Candle fragrance oils are aromatic compounds specifically formulated to remain stable through the wax melting and burning process. What distinguishes them from general fragrance oils is primarily flash point. A candle fragrance oil should have a flash point above the working temperature of the wax — for most soy and paraffin formulations, that means above 65–70°C. Below that threshold, there are genuine handling risks during pouring, not theoretical ones.
They're also not interchangeable with essential oils for candle use. Essential oils can work at low concentrations, but their volatility means the scent dissipates faster during burning — consistent hot throw across a production batch is harder to achieve. For commercial and semi-commercial production, fragrance oils are more predictable.
One term worth addressing: "natural fragrance oils for candles" describes the origin of aromatic compounds, not a regulated standard. In practice, even oils marketed as natural typically contain both naturally derived and synthetic components. What actually tells you what's in the bottle is documentation — COA and MSDS — not the word natural on the label.
Fragrance Oils for Candle Making — What Actually Affects Performance
>Fragrance Load and Wax Compatibility
Fragrance oils for candle making behave differently across wax types. Soy wax typically takes 6–9% fragrance load well; paraffin handles 8–10%. These aren't hard maximums — they're the range within which fragrance stays bound to the wax rather than migrating to the surface. Going above the upper limit doesn't produce stronger scent. It usually produces a sweating or greasy appearance on the candle surface and, in some cases, inconsistent burn.
Vanilla, sandalwood, and lavender perform consistently in both paraffin and soy at standard load. The real variable is the wax itself — the same fragrance oil from the same batch can behave differently in soy wax from two different manufacturers. Discolouration, frosting, and fragrance bleed are usually wax compatibility issues, not quality defects in the oil.
Soy Candle Fragrance Oils — Cure Time Matters
Soy candle fragrance oils need adequate time to bond with the wax after pouring. Most soy wax formulations require 48–72 hours of curing before hot throw reaches its actual strength. A candle evaluated the same day it's poured will smell noticeably weaker than the same candle tested three days later. This is the most common source of unnecessary reformulation — people increase fragrance load in response to weak scent they measured too early.
Lavender, jasmine, and sandalwood bind particularly well in soy blends and reward the full cure time. At 7% in soy with 72 hours of curing, these fragrances produce a controlled, even throw — steady through the burn cycle rather than strong at first light and flat an hour in.
Non-Toxic Candle Fragrance Oils — What the Label Actually Means
"Non-toxic" as a term has no regulated definition in India or globally. It appears frequently on candle fragrance marketing; it doesn't tell you much on its own. What actually addresses the safety question is MSDS documentation, which contains flash point data, composition information, and handling requirements — all directly relevant to production conditions and end-consumer use.
The more specific thing to look for is IFRA compliance. IFRA guidelines set concentration limits for individual aromatic compounds. Blends formulated within these limits carry lower risk of respiratory irritation during extended burn sessions in enclosed spaces — relevant both at the production stage (pouring conditions) and for consumers burning candles in bedrooms or small rooms. Rose, lemongrass, and vanilla are standard options for wellness-focused and indoor candle ranges when sourced from a supplier who can provide proper batch documentation.
Candle Natural Fragrance Oils — Soy and Beeswax Pairing
For producers working with natural wax bases — soy, beeswax, or blends — fragrance oils with plant-derived aromatic compounds tend to integrate more smoothly than fully synthetic profiles. Sandalwood, jasmine, and citrus-based options diffuse cleanly in these wax types and suit the clean-label positioning that eco-conscious and wellness candle ranges often require.
The important caveat: "natural fragrance oil" doesn't mean allergen-free or unconditionally safe. Some naturally derived aromatic compounds are sensitisers. Documentation is the only reliable way to know what's in an oil and at what concentration — which is why COA and MSDS matter regardless of how a product is labelled.
Best Fragrance Oil for Candles — By Use Case
>Best Candle Fragrance Oil for Home Use
The best fragrance oil for candles in home settings delivers balanced projection without overwhelming a room. Lemongrass, vanilla, and lavender are the most-used options for daily home fragrance — not because they're the most interesting choices, but because their throw is predictable and they don't fatigue the senses after a 2–3 hour burn session.
At moderate concentration in soy or blended wax, these fragrances produce steady ambient scent rather than an initial intensity spike. For bedrooms and smaller living spaces, keeping fragrance load at 6–7% tends to work better than pushing toward maximum load.
Candle Fragrance Oil for Festive Gifting — Diwali and Pooja Collections
Oudh (oud), chandan (sandalwood), and rose have been central to Indian ritual fragrance for centuries. Their use in candle form is less a trend than a translation of that same tradition into a different medium. For pooja candles specifically, a lighter concentration — around 6–7% — tends to suit the setting better than maximum load. The intent is a subtle ambient presence rather than a fragrance statement.
For Diwali corporate gift sets, the consideration that often gets overlooked is batch consistency. A gifting set where individual candles smell noticeably different from each other undermines the presentation regardless of how well any single unit performs. This is where sourcing from a supplier with consistent batch documentation makes a direct difference to product quality.
Best Candle Scents in India — Popular Fragrance Oils and Their Applications
>Vanilla Fragrance Oil One of the more forgiving options for anyone starting out in candle production. Vanilla's warm, creamy profile holds well in both paraffin and soy at standard fragrance load (7–8%) and produces reliable hot throw without becoming overpowering in medium-sized rooms. Works across everyday home candles and Diwali gifting sets where the brief is something broadly appealing — though if your range is meant to feel distinctive rather than accessible, vanilla's ubiquity is worth thinking about.
Sandalwood Fragrance Oil Chandan has been central to Indian ritual fragrance for centuries — its presence in candle form is a translation of that tradition, not a trend. The woody-resinous base diffuses slowly and cleanly, which suits pooja settings and premium home fragrance lines. In soy wax, sandalwood tends to perform better at slightly lower fragrance loads (6–7%). Push it above 9% and the character shifts — heavier, less refined.
Lavender Fragrance Oil If you're building a sleep or wellness candle range, lavender is the obvious starting point — and the reason it's obvious is consistent performance rather than novelty. Hot throw in soy wax is reliable without requiring precision on fragrance load. At 7%, with a full 72-hour cure, it produces the kind of soft background scent that doesn't compete with itself. The caveat: lavender candles are everywhere, which is a market positioning consideration as much as a product one.
Rose Fragrance Oil Rich and distinctly floral — which makes it an excellent fit for wedding candles, celebration sets, and premium gifting, but less suitable as an everyday home fragrance where subtler profiles tend to work better. Holds in blended wax at standard concentration and has consistent demand in festive hampers and corporate presentation boxes.
Lemongrass Fragrance Oil Where sandalwood and vanilla add depth and warmth, lemongrass does the opposite — a candle with lemongrass makes a room feel clean and open rather than cosy. The citrus-herbal profile performs well in paraffin and soy, maintains clarity after curing, and suits modern and wellness-focused candle lines. For small rooms, keep the fragrance load at the lower end; the projection is sharper than its category neighbours.
Oudh Twist Fragrance Oil Deep, resinous, and complex enough to hold its character through multiple burn cycles. Earns its place in premium Diwali gift sets and luxury home fragrance lines where the candle will be burned over weeks rather than days. Best in high-quality blended wax; lower-grade paraffin can mute the base notes.
Jasmine Fragrance Oil The question with jasmine isn't whether it projects — it does, and it does so across most wax types without much coaxing. At maximum fragrance load in a small room, it's assertive in a way that isn't always welcome. For spa-inspired and luxury candle lines where jasmine is positioned as the primary fragrance statement, that intensity is exactly the point. For blended or background applications, keep the load at the lower end.
Browse the full candle fragrances collection for the complete range.
How to Choose the Right Candle Fragrance Oil
>The most common sourcing error is evaluating fragrance oils purely on cold throw — how they smell in the bottle or on a scent strip. Hot throw, the scent diffusion that actually happens during burning, can differ significantly. Test in your actual wax blend before committing to a bulk purchase.
Documentation to request: COA and MSDS. A COA documents what's in the oil and confirms composition. An MSDS contains flash point data, safety information, and storage and handling requirements. Suppliers who can't produce both aren't equipped for commercial supply relationships.
IFRA compliance matters for any fragrance going into a product sold to consumers — it confirms the blend is formulated within established safety limits for aromatic compounds.
Storage in Indian conditions: Northern India's April–June heat regularly pushes ambient temperatures above 40°C. Fragrance oils stored without climate control in these conditions degrade faster than shelf life estimates account for. Dark glass or aluminium containers, away from direct light and heat sources, make a material difference. For bulk stock held through summer before Diwali production runs, storage planning is worth the attention.
For bulk candle fragrance oil suppliers in India: Specific questions before committing — What is the flash point range across batches? Is fragrance load consistent batch-to-batch? Can you provide IFRA compliance documentation alongside COA and MSDS? These questions separate suppliers capable of production volumes from those equipped only for retail quantities.
RV Organica
>RV Organica supplies candle fragrance oils with COA and MSDS documentation provided with every order. Products are available in multiple packaging sizes, from sample quantities through to large-batch supply, with dispatch from Panipat, Haryana. All commercial and bulk orders include batch documentation as standard.
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