Cape Island Candles: Pros, Cons, and One Great Alternative in SA

Cape Island Candles: Pros, Cons, and One Great Alternative in SA
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Buyer's Guide
7 min read

Updated 9 May 2026

If you’ve shopped for a scented candle in South Africa in the last few years, you’ve crossed paths with Cape Island. The brand sits on shelves at Yuppiechef, Sarza, Foxhills, Bealuscious, The Local Edit, and on the brand’s own site, with the Black Gold and Clifton Beach jars showing up regularly in gift guides and homes around Cape Town and Joburg.

Cape Island has built a strong following on craft, packaging, and a clear African storytelling angle. Like any premium product, it has things it gets right and things buyers should weigh up before paying R484 to R924 a candle. This piece walks through both, fairly, and then covers one local alternative for buyers who want to compare options before deciding.


What Cape Island is and what it makes

Cape Island was founded in 2015 by Suzanne Snowdowne and Karin Wood. It’s a 100% female-owned, B/BBEE Level 4 South African brand with a workshop and store at 186 Main Road, Diep River in Cape Town. From the start the positioning has been clear: eco-luxe home fragrance with collections inspired by African landscapes and moments.

The product range has grown well beyond candles. Cape Island sells scented candles, fragrance diffusers, room sprays, perfumes, hand creams, body lotions, liquid soaps, wax melts, and gift sets. The signature scent collections include Black Gold, Clifton Beach, Safari Days, Summer Vineyard, Wild Coast, African Storm, and seasonal launches like White Celebration. Each collection is built around a story or place: Safari Days reads as warm spice and sunset; Clifton Beach leans coastal and clean; Black Gold goes deeper and richer.

Candles come in three sizes, Mini at R228, Classic at R484, and Large at R924. Diffusers run at R699 with R349 refills. The candles are hand-poured in South Africa using what the brand describes as a soy wax blend, with fragrance oils sourced from European perfumers. Distribution in SA is broad: capeisland.co.za, Yuppiechef, Sarza, Foxhills, Clarens Interiors, Bealuscious, The Local Edit, and selected boutiques.


What Cape Island does well

The brand’s strengths are worth naming directly.

It’s locally made and ethically structured. A 100% female-owned, B/BBEE Level 4 SA brand making product in Cape Town is meaningful in a category dominated by import-relabel operators. Buyers who care about supporting local manufacturing and women-led business get a real story to support.

The packaging carries weight as a gift. The vessels are heavy frosted glass, the lids printed metal, the typography considered. The whole presentation reads as expensive before you light anything. For a host gift, a wedding present, or a corporate hamper, the box does work the candle doesn’t have to.

Scent storytelling is consistent. Each collection ties to a specific Africa-inspired idea, which gives the buyer something to anchor on beyond a fragrance name. Customers reach for Safari Days when they want warm and spiced; Clifton Beach for coastal and clean. The taxonomy holds together.

The product range goes wider than candles. Diffusers, soaps, lotions, hand creams, and room sprays let you build a layered scent across a home. If you’ve fallen in love with Summer Vineyard, you can carry it from the kitchen to the bathroom to the entry hall.

Retail distribution is solid. Cape Island is on Yuppiechef for fast delivery, in Sarza, Foxhills, and Clarens for in-store browsing, and on Bealuscious and The Local Edit online. Buyers can smell a product before committing, which matters at a R484-plus price point.

Sustainability messaging is followed through. Micro-batch production, reusable glass packaging, and a Giving Back programme that channels a percentage of selected candle proceeds to local non-profits. The claims line up with visible practice.


Where Cape Island falls short

These critiques aren’t fringe; they show up across product reviews, candle-industry coverage, and conversations with buyers comparing options at this price point.

The “soy wax blend” label is opaque. Cape Island markets candles as “soy wax blend” without publishing the ratio. In the global candle industry, “soy blend” has no regulated minimum; a candle can legally carry that label with as little as 5% soy and 95% paraffin. There’s no public claim from Cape Island that this is true of their product, and the brand may well be majority-soy. The point is buyers can’t tell from the label, and a “soy blend” candle from a premium retailer has the same wording as a candle that’s mostly paraffin. For buyers shopping specifically for clean-burn, this is a friction.

Fragrance oils are imported and synthetic-led. The brand sources from European perfumers, which delivers consistent quality and a polished scent profile. Buyers who specifically want essential-oil-only or fully natural perfume will find this a tradeoff. Sensitivity sufferers (asthma, headaches, fragrance reactions) are also more cautious with synthetic-led blends regardless of brand.

Pricing sits at the high end of the local market. R228 for a mini, R484 for a classic, R924 for a large. For a 100% soy candle with disclosed ingredients, that’s competitive. For a “blend” with undisclosed ratio and synthetic fragrance, buyers comparing the spec sheet against pure-soy or coconut-soy SA brands sometimes pause.

Burn time isn’t transparently published per product. Most retailer listings and the brand site don’t list a clear burn-hours figure for each candle size. Buyers comparing candles by hours-per-rand have to ask, search, or guess.

Scent throw is on the lighter side, by design. Customer testimonials often highlight that the fragrance is “elegant” and “not overpowering”. For some buyers that’s exactly right; for others who want a candle that fills a whole open-plan living area, the throw can read as soft. Worth knowing before buying, Cape Island tunes for elegance over room-filling impact.

There’s no refill option. Once a candle has burned through, the heavy glass vessel goes to recycling or the bin. Cape Island doesn’t sell candle refills (only diffuser refills), so each candle purchase is a fresh single-use vessel. Buyers who want to reuse a vessel they like have to clean and repurpose it themselves.


A local alternative: Mylk

Mylk scented candles, reed diffuser, and gift boxes - Cape Town local alternative to Cape Island

For South African buyers who like the idea of a local, Cape Town-made scented candle but want disclosed ingredients, refill infrastructure, and a tighter price point, Mylk is the closest direct comparison.

Mylk is a Cape Town-based, family-run brand founded in 2025. It makes scented candles, reed diffusers, and refill packs. The product range is smaller than Cape Island’s by design, six fragrances at the time of writing, all built around specific Cape Town moments (an Atlantic dawn, a Table Mountain hike, a citrus orchard in spring, a late-night cocktail bar).

On the structural points where Cape Island leaves room for criticism, Mylk takes a different approach.

Cape Island Mylk
Wax Soy wax blend (ratio undisclosed) Coconut-soy blend, zero paraffin, parabens, or phthalates
Fragrance Imported European perfume oils Perfume-grade oils, IFRA-compliant, used by US and EU perfume brands
Wicks Cotton Cotton
Burn time Not transparently published ~45 hours per candle, lab-tested, edge-to-edge melt pool
Refill option Diffuser refills only; no candle refill Mylk Packs — pre-blended scented wax pouches you melt and pour back into the same vessel
Pricing Mini R228, Classic R484, Large R924 Candle R409–R429, refill R309, diffuser R369; free shipping over R600
Made in Diep River, Cape Town Cape Town
Scent range 7+ collections across many product types 6 fragrances, deeply specific to Cape Town locations

Cape Island and Mylk play in the same neighbourhood but aim at slightly different buyers. Cape Island fits buyers who want a polished gift candle from a wider product family, with the broad retail availability that goes with it. Mylk fits buyers who want fully disclosed ingredients, refill infrastructure, and scents tied to a single city’s specific moments rather than a continent-wide story. To get a feel for the difference, browse the scented candle range and read up on how Mylk Packs work.


Frequently asked questions

Are Cape Island candles paraffin or soy?

Cape Island markets its candles as a soy wax blend. The brand does not publicly disclose the soy-to-paraffin ratio. Industry-wide, “soy blend” is an unregulated term and can mean anywhere from majority-soy to a small soy percentage with paraffin making up the rest. Buyers who need a fully soy or coconut-soy candle (no paraffin) usually choose a brand that publishes the ingredient breakdown explicitly.

Where can I buy Cape Island candles in South Africa?

Cape Island is sold across South Africa on capeisland.co.za, Yuppiechef, Sarza, Foxhills Jewellers, Bealuscious, The Local Edit, Clarens Interiors, and selected boutique homeware stores. The brand also runs a flagship store at 186 Main Road, Diep River, Cape Town. Pricing is consistent across retailers: R228 for a mini, R484 for a classic, R924 for a large.

What’s the best alternative to Cape Island in South Africa?

The closest local alternative is Mylk: Cape Town-based, coconut-soy wax with no paraffin, perfume-grade fragrance oils, refillable via Mylk Packs, R309 to R429. Other SA brands worth knowing include Rekindle Candle Co. (mineral wax, ceramic vessels, sustainable angle), Frazer Parfum (organic, Cederberg-inspired), and Kapula (hand-painted, Fair Trade, Bredasdorp-made). Each does something distinct.

Is Cape Island worth the price?

For buyers who value the gift-ready packaging, the breadth of the product range, and the ethical brand structure, R484 for a classic candle lines up with comparable premium SA brands. Buyers who prioritise ingredient disclosure, hours-per-rand, or refill infrastructure tend to find better value elsewhere. The honest answer depends on what you’re optimising for.


In short

Cape Island has built a real brand on craft, beautiful packaging, and an African storytelling angle that holds up. If you’re buying a gift, want an in-store option, or already love a specific scent in the range, it’s a strong product.

If transparent ingredients, refill infrastructure, or a deeper tie to a single city’s moments matters more to you, a local Cape Town alternative is now a real option, often at lower cost.

Browse Mylk’s most-loved scents

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