Caprylyl Caprylglucoside ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily a nonionic surfactant and solubilizer, used to disperse oils, fragrance components, and oily actives into water-based formulas. It can also support mild cleansing and foam in washes, micellar products, and shampoos.
What does Caprylyl Caprylglucoside do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is primarily a nonionic surfactant and solubilizer, used to disperse oils, fragrance components, and oily actives into water-based formulas. It can also support mild cleansing and foam in washes, micellar products, and shampoos.
Is Caprylyl Caprylglucoside clean?
Clean frameworks usually view this ingredient as a well-tolerated, biodegradable nonionic surfactant with no common restricted-list profile. Like many cleansing materials, it can sting eyes or feel drying at higher use levels, so comfort depends on the total formula.
Is Caprylyl Caprylglucoside sustainable?
This material is typically made from plant-derived glucose and C8 to C10 fatty alcohols, often sourced from coconut or palm kernel supply chains. It is readily biodegradable, with the main sustainability question being responsible sourcing of the fatty alcohol feedstock.
Is Caprylyl Caprylglucoside COSMOS-approved?
It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when produced from approved renewable feedstocks and compliant processing. It fits Green Chemistry well because it uses sugar and fatty alcohol building blocks, is readily biodegradable, and can be made without ethoxylation.
How does Caprylyl Caprylglucoside work chemically?
The molecule pairs a glucose-derived head group with mainly C8 and C10 fatty chains, giving it high water compatibility plus strong wetting and solubilizing behavior. It is commonly used around 0.5 to 5% for solubilizing oils or as a secondary cleanser, remains broadly formulation-friendly across mildly acidic to neutral pH, and can reduce viscosity in some surfactant blends unless balanced with salts or thickeners.
Last updated 2026-05-13