Blood Orange Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a fresh citrus scent to perfumes, skin care, body care, and hair care. It can also contribute mild solvent and deodorizing effects because of its terpene content.

What does Blood Orange Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a fresh citrus scent to perfumes, skin care, body care, and hair care. It can also contribute mild solvent and deodorizing effects because of its terpene content.

Is Blood Orange Oil clean?

This ingredient is accepted by many clean-beauty frameworks as a natural fragrance material, but it carries fragrance-allergen considerations, especially when limonene and linalool oxidize. Its standing depends on allergen disclosure, freshness, antioxidant support, and use level.

Is Blood Orange Oil sustainable?

This material is usually obtained by cold pressing citrus peel, often from juice-processing side streams, which is a favorable sourcing point. It is biodegradable, but terpene-rich volatile oils need responsible handling in manufacturing wastewater and rinse-off products.

Is Blood Orange Oil COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when produced as a natural aromatic extract and when the source and processing meet standard requirements. It fits Green Chemistry best when mechanically expressed from renewable peel feedstock, with limited solvent use and controlled oxidation.

How does Blood Orange Oil work chemically?

This ingredient is a complex volatile mixture dominated by monoterpenes, especially limonene, with smaller amounts of aldehydes, alcohols, esters, and trace pigments that influence scent character. It is typically used at low fragrance levels, is prone to oxidation with air, heat, and light, and benefits from tight packaging plus antioxidant support such as tocopherol.

Last updated 2026-05-14