Chem. recycling of waste plastics into diesel fuel and other precursors that can be used to generate new plastics reduces reliance on conventional fossil energy sources and ensures a circular economy.In this study, we investigated the catalytic pyrolysis of waste plastics-derived pyrolysis wax (PW) into low-aromatic oil, focusing on naphtha (C5-C12)- and diesel (C13-C22)-range hydrocarbons, by examining the effects of com. catalysts (i.e., Al2O3, HZSM-5 (SiO2/Al2O3: 50, 80), and HY (SiO2/Al2O3: 60, 80)) and mixed catalysts (i.e., 1CaO/1HY (80), 1MgO/1HY (80), 1CeO2/1HY (80)) on product distribution.The use of catalysts significantly enhanced wax conversion compared to non-catalytic test by facilitating the cracking of long-chain polymers.HY (80) achieved the highest performance with 92.2 wt% wax conversion and 57.2 wt% oil yield, producing oil with the lowest aromatic content (38.6 %) and significant naphtha (45.4 %) and diesel-range (14.7 %) hydrocarbons.This can be attributed to its moderate acidity and well-developed structure among zeolite catalysts.Mixed catalysts, especially 1CeO2/1HY (80), showed improved performance by reducing aromatic selectivity to 20.4 % and increasing the diesel fraction to 23.6 %, while maintaining comparable wax conversion, oil yield, and naphtha production to HY (80).This improvement is attributed to the alk. and redox properties of CeO2.The enhanced wax conversion and oil yield compared to the theor. values obtained using binary catalysts, especially 1CeO2/1HY (80), confirmed the synergistic effect of combining metal oxides with HY (80) in producing low-aromatic oil.Examining of various CeO2-to-HY ratios identified 2/1 as the optimal ratio to produce low-aromatic oil.The use of inexpensive and readily available metal oxides with zeolites as mixed catalysts for PW pyrolysis to produce low-aromatic oils provides a com. viable solution for PW management.