Copernicia Cerifera Cera / Carnauba Wax / Cire De Carnauba

TL;DR. This ingredient is a hard structuring wax that raises melting point, adds stiffness, and improves gloss in sticks, balms, mascaras, and creams. It also helps form a protective, water-resistant film on skin, lips, lashes, or hair.

What does Copernicia Cerifera Cera / Carnauba Wax / Cire De Carnauba do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a hard structuring wax that raises melting point, adds stiffness, and improves gloss in sticks, balms, mascaras, and creams. It also helps form a protective, water-resistant film on skin, lips, lashes, or hair.

Is Copernicia Cerifera Cera / Carnauba Wax / Cire De Carnauba clean?

This ingredient is generally well tolerated and has little clean-standard friction, with low sensitization potential because it is an inert wax rather than an active sensitizer. In eye and lip products, comfort is usually driven more by total wax load and texture than by a specific safety concern.

Is Copernicia Cerifera Cera / Carnauba Wax / Cire De Carnauba sustainable?

It is a renewable plant wax harvested from palm leaves, usually without cutting down the tree. It is biodegradable, but responsible sourcing matters because supply chains can carry labor, traceability, and habitat-management concerns.

Is Copernicia Cerifera Cera / Carnauba Wax / Cire De Carnauba COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural standards, and can contribute to COSMOS-organic content when sourced from certified organic agriculture and processed with allowed methods. Its Green Chemistry fit is strong because it uses renewable feedstock, simple physical refining, low environmental persistence, and limited need for aggressive solvent chemistry in typical cosmetic-grade production.

How does Copernicia Cerifera Cera / Carnauba Wax / Cire De Carnauba work chemically?

This material is a complex mixture dominated by long-chain aliphatic esters, with smaller amounts of free fatty alcohols, fatty acids, hydrocarbons, and resinous components. It has a high melting range, typically about 82 to 86°C, and is often used around 0.5 to 10% depending on whether the goal is light slip modification or firm stick structure.

Last updated 2026-05-13