Coconut Oil ●
TL;DR. This ingredient functions primarily as an emollient and occlusive conditioning lipid, adding slip, softness, and a smoother after-feel to skin and hair products. It also helps reduce water loss from the skin surface in balms, creams, masks, and anhydrous formulas.
What does Coconut Oil do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient functions primarily as an emollient and occlusive conditioning lipid, adding slip, softness, and a smoother after-feel to skin and hair products. It also helps reduce water loss from the skin surface in balms, creams, masks, and anhydrous formulas.
Is Coconut Oil clean?
This ingredient is broadly accepted in clean-beauty frameworks and is generally well tolerated, with low irritation potential for most users. The main practical caveat is that its rich lipid profile can feel heavy and may be pore-clogging for some acne-prone skin types.
Is Coconut Oil sustainable?
This ingredient is plant-derived, renewable, and readily biodegradable. Sustainability quality depends on agricultural practices and supply-chain controls, especially around tropical land use, biodiversity, and labor standards.
Is Coconut Oil COSMOS-approved?
This ingredient is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic standards when sourced and processed according to the standard. It aligns well with Green Chemistry when mechanically pressed or simply refined, since it comes from renewable feedstock and has good biodegradability.
How does Coconut Oil work chemically?
This material is a triglyceride blend rich in saturated medium-chain fatty acids, especially C12 and C14 chains, which gives it a semi-solid texture around room temperature and relatively good oxidative stability. It is commonly used from about 1 to 20% in emulsions and higher in anhydrous balms, with pH largely irrelevant because it is not water-soluble.
Last updated 2026-05-13