Cetearyl Alcohol. Ceterayl Olivate ●
TL;DR. This ingredient functions as a fatty structurant and co-emulsifier, helping creams and conditioners build viscosity, improve slip, and stabilize oil-water systems.
What does Cetearyl Alcohol. Ceterayl Olivate do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient functions as a fatty structurant and co-emulsifier, helping creams and conditioners build viscosity, improve slip, and stabilize oil-water systems.
Is Cetearyl Alcohol. Ceterayl Olivate clean?
Clean-beauty frameworks generally treat this material as low-concern and well-tolerated, with low irritation potential compared with many surface-active emulsifiers. Sensitivity is uncommon and is usually tied to an individual formula rather than the material itself.
Is Cetearyl Alcohol. Ceterayl Olivate sustainable?
This material is commonly made from plant-derived fatty feedstocks, often including olive and coconut or palm fractions depending on the supplier. It is expected to be readily biodegradable, with the main sustainability caveat being traceable sourcing for any palm-derived inputs.
Is Cetearyl Alcohol. Ceterayl Olivate COSMOS-approved?
It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made from approved renewable feedstocks and processed according to the standard. It fits Green Chemistry well through renewable carbon content, biodegradability, and a comparatively simple processing profile.
How does Cetearyl Alcohol. Ceterayl Olivate work chemically?
The molecule set is based on long-chain fatty alcohols and olive-derived fatty acid esters, which organize at oil-water interfaces and can form lamellar liquid-crystal structures for texture and emulsion stability. It is typically used around 1 to 5 percent in creams and lotions, is stable across common cosmetic pH ranges, and pairs well with other nonionic emulsifiers, waxes, oils, and conditioning agents.
Last updated 2026-05-15