ANISE ALCOHOL

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily used as a fragrance material, adding a sweet, floral, it-like note and helping round out scent profiles. It can also function as a mild masking agent for base odors in a formula.

What does ANISE ALCOHOL do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily used as a fragrance material, adding a sweet, floral, it-like note and helping round out scent profiles. It can also function as a mild masking agent for base odors in a formula.

Is ANISE ALCOHOL clean?

This ingredient has clean-standard friction because it is a recognized fragrance allergen that requires EU/UK label disclosure above set thresholds. It is generally managed through allergen labeling and IFRA-style concentration limits rather than broad restricted-list status.

Is ANISE ALCOHOL sustainable?

This material can come from natural aromatic sources or be made synthetically, so its sustainability profile depends on sourcing route and supplier documentation. It is expected to be biodegradable, but fragrance supply chains can vary in traceability.

Is ANISE ALCOHOL COSMOS-approved?

It may be permitted in COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic products when it is part of a compliant natural fragrance system or obtained through allowed processes. From a Green Chemistry view, the best fit is a renewable, naturally derived grade with good biodegradability and transparent sourcing.

How does ANISE ALCOHOL work chemically?

The molecule is a small aromatic alcohol with a methoxy group and a primary alcohol side chain, which gives it both scent character and moderate polarity. It is typically used at very low fragrance levels, often well below 0.1%, and can slowly oxidize in air, so antioxidants, tight packaging, and good fragrance-compound handling are relevant.

Last updated 2026-05-13