Ambroxide

TL;DR. This ingredient is a fragrance material used to create warm, ambery, woody, and musky notes. It also acts as a long-lasting fixative, helping a scent profile remain noticeable over time.

What does Ambroxide do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a fragrance material used to create warm, ambery, woody, and musky notes. It also acts as a long-lasting fixative, helping a scent profile remain noticeable over time.

Is Ambroxide clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this is a fragrance component, so it brings the usual transparency and sensitization considerations that apply to scent materials. It is generally used at low levels and should be assessed within IFRA limits and full allergen-disclosure requirements where applicable.

Is Ambroxide sustainable?

This material is commonly made by synthesis from plant-derived diterpene feedstocks, including clary sage-derived inputs, rather than from animal sources. Its sustainability profile is better when the feedstock is renewable and traceable, but its aquatic persistence profile can create some environmental friction.

Is Ambroxide COSMOS-approved?

It is not broadly aligned with COSMOS-organic or COSMOS-natural unless supplied in a compliant natural-fragrance form that meets the standard’s fragrance rules. From a Green Chemistry lens, renewable sourcing is a plus, while fragrance synthesis steps and aquatic persistence concerns keep it from being a clear green fit.

How does Ambroxide work chemically?

The molecule is a highly hydrophobic, bicyclic oxygen-containing fragrance compound with strong substantivity on skin, hair, and fabric. It is used at very low fragrance-compound levels, is generally stable across typical cosmetic pH ranges, and is usually pre-dissolved into the fragrance concentrate or an oil-compatible phase.

Last updated 2026-05-13