Most candles marketed as "clean" are clean in one narrow sense — no paraffin — and stop there. The wick might still be a mystery. The fragrance oil might still carry phthalates. The wax might be a soy blend cut with cheaper filler wax to hit a price point. "Clean" on a label doesn't always mean clean in the jar.
What clean burning actually requires
A candle that's genuinely clean has to get every component right, not just the headline ingredient:
- The wax — coconut soy or 100% soy, not a paraffin blend disguised with a soy percentage low enough to still call it "soy candle"
- The wick — natural wood or cotton, free of the lead or zinc cores older or cheaper candles sometimes still use
- The fragrance oil — phthalate-free specifically, since "fragrance" as a label term can legally hide a lot
- The burn itself — minimal soot, no black smoke, a wick that stays trimmed and doesn't mushroom
Why this matters beyond air quality
A cleaner burn is also just a better burn. Candles built on cheaper wax and cored wicks tend to tunnel, smoke, and burn unevenly — the ingredient shortcuts that affect air quality are often the same ones that make a candle perform worse. Clean and well-made tend to go together.
What to actually look for when shopping
Skip the marketing language and check for three things directly: coconut soy or 100% soy wax stated plainly (not just "soy blend"), a wood or cotton wick called out by name, and phthalate-free fragrance oils mentioned specifically rather than implied. If a brand won't say what's actually in the candle, that's usually the answer.
Our own candles are built on exactly this standard — coconut soy wax, wood wicks, phthalate-free fragrance oils, hand-poured in small batches. You can see the full breakdown on our sustainability page.
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