Anisaldehyde

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily a fragrance component, used to add sweet, almond-like, powdery notes and to help mask base odors in a formula.

What does Anisaldehyde do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily a fragrance component, used to add sweet, almond-like, powdery notes and to help mask base odors in a formula.

Is Anisaldehyde clean?

From a clean beauty perspective, it sits in the watch-and-assess category because it is a fragrance molecule, and fragrance materials are commonly screened for sensitization and irritation potential. It is generally used at low levels and is handled through fragrance safety limits rather than broad clean-standard rejection.

Is Anisaldehyde sustainable?

This material may be made from plant-derived aromatic feedstocks or through synthetic routes, so sourcing matters. It is not known for high persistence or bioaccumulation, but fragrance supply chains can vary in renewable content and traceability.

Is Anisaldehyde COSMOS-approved?

It fits COSMOS only when the fragrance material is natural-origin and compliant with COSMOS fragrance rules. Petrochemical or nature-identical synthetic versions are not aligned with COSMOS-organic or COSMOS-natural principles, although the molecule can still score reasonably on Green Chemistry when renewable sourcing and biodegradability are documented.

How does Anisaldehyde work chemically?

The molecule is a small methoxy-substituted aromatic aldehyde, which makes it oil-soluble and effective at trace to low-tenths-of-a-percent fragrance levels in finished products. Like many aldehydes, it can slowly oxidize and may react with primary amines, so formulators check odor stability, discoloration, and packaging compatibility.

Last updated 2026-05-13