Cedryl Acetate

TL;DR. It is used as a fragrance material, mainly adding woody, amber, and dry notes while also helping scent last longer on skin or hair.

What does Cedryl Acetate do in a cosmetic formula?

It is used as a fragrance material, mainly adding woody, amber, and dry notes while also helping scent last longer on skin or hair.

Is Cedryl Acetate clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is usually assessed as part of a fragrance system rather than as a standalone treatment ingredient. It has some sensitization and usage-limit considerations, so responsible formulas rely on IFRA-compliant levels and clear fragrance disclosure.

Is Cedryl Acetate sustainable?

This material can come from wood-derived terpene feedstocks or from synthetic routes, so its sustainability profile depends heavily on sourcing and traceability. It is hydrophobic and not a simple readily biodegradable small molecule, which gives it a moderate environmental profile rather than a best-in-class one.

Is Cedryl Acetate COSMOS-approved?

It may fit COSMOS-natural fragrance requirements only when it is made from accepted natural feedstocks and allowed transformation routes. Synthetic versions are not aligned with COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic, and its Green Chemistry profile is mixed because renewable sourcing is possible but persistence and solvent use depend on the process.

How does Cedryl Acetate work chemically?

The molecule is a bicyclic sesquiterpene ester, which explains its low volatility and use as a long-lasting scent component. It is typically used at low fragrance-compound levels, is oil-soluble, and is generally more stable than the corresponding terpene alcohol, though finished-fragrance stability still depends on antioxidants, packaging, and the full perfume composition.

Last updated 2026-05-13