Fragrance ●
TL;DR. This ingredient provides the product’s intended odor profile and can also mask base-ingredient odors. It is usually aesthetic rather than a primary cleansing, moisturizing, emulsifying, or preserving component.
What does Fragrance do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient provides the product’s intended odor profile and can also mask base-ingredient odors. It is usually aesthetic rather than a primary cleansing, moisturizing, emulsifying, or preserving component.
Is Fragrance clean?
From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is a yellow flag because it can represent an undisclosed mixture and may include regulated allergen constituents that require labeling in some regions. DARE treats it as context-dependent, with more confidence when allergen disclosure and IFRA compliance are clear.
Is Fragrance sustainable?
This ingredient can be plant-derived, petroleum-derived, biotechnology-derived, or a blend, so its sustainability profile depends on the specific constituents and sourcing controls. Biodegradability varies, and some long-lasting fixative molecules raise more environmental persistence questions than simple volatile components.
Is Fragrance COSMOS-approved?
It is permitted under COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic only when the individual constituents meet the standard’s natural-origin and processing requirements. Conventional synthetic blends generally do not align, while compliant natural materials fit better with Green Chemistry when they use renewable feedstocks and readily biodegradable constituents.
How does Fragrance work chemically?
This material is typically a complex blend of small volatile molecules such as esters, terpenes, aldehydes, ketones, alcohols, and fixatives selected for evaporation profile and odor character. Use levels often sit around 0.1% to 2% in leave-on products and can be higher in rinse-off formats, while terpene-rich blends may benefit from antioxidants and low-oxygen packaging to limit oxidation.
Last updated 2026-05-13