Black Cumin Seed Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily an emollient and skin-conditioning oil, adding slip, softness, and lipid replenishment in creams, balms, facial oils, and hair products. It can also support barrier-focused formulas because it is rich in unsaturated fatty acids.

What does Black Cumin Seed Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily an emollient and skin-conditioning oil, adding slip, softness, and lipid replenishment in creams, balms, facial oils, and hair products. It can also support barrier-focused formulas because it is rich in unsaturated fatty acids.

Is Black Cumin Seed Oil clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well tolerated and has no major restricted-list friction when it is pure and properly refined or filtered. As with many botanical oils, quality matters because residual proteins, natural aromatic compounds, or oxidation products can raise sensitivity potential for some users.

Is Black Cumin Seed Oil sustainable?

This ingredient is plant-derived, renewable, and readily biodegradable, with a lighter environmental profile than persistent synthetic emollients. Sustainability depends mainly on agricultural practices, traceable sourcing, and oxidation control during storage and transport.

Is Black Cumin Seed Oil COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic frameworks when produced from compliant agricultural material using accepted physical processes such as pressing and filtration. It fits Green Chemistry well through renewable sourcing, low-processing intensity, and biodegradability, although antioxidant protection is important to reduce rancidity and waste.

How does Black Cumin Seed Oil work chemically?

This material is a triglyceride-based fixed oil, typically high in linoleic acid, often around 50 to 60 percent, with oleic, palmitic, and stearic acids making up much of the remaining fatty-acid profile. It is commonly used around 1 to 5 percent in emulsions and up to much higher levels in anhydrous oils or balms, and it benefits from tocopherols, air-limiting packaging, and moderate processing temperatures because its unsaturated lipids can oxidize.

Last updated 2026-05-13