Hydrogenated Avocado Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as an emollient and skin-conditioning lipid, adding softness, slip, and a richer feel to creams, balms, sticks, and anhydrous products. It can also help structure formulas by increasing body and improving cushion.

What does Hydrogenated Avocado Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as an emollient and skin-conditioning lipid, adding softness, slip, and a richer feel to creams, balms, sticks, and anhydrous products. It can also help structure formulas by increasing body and improving cushion.

Is Hydrogenated Avocado Oil clean?

This ingredient is generally well tolerated and is not a common clean-standard restricted-list material. The main caveats are botanical-source trace impurities and rare sensitivity in people reactive to the source crop, although refined cosmetic grades contain very little protein residue.

Is Hydrogenated Avocado Oil sustainable?

This material is plant-derived and expected to be readily biodegradable as a modified natural lipid. Its sustainability profile depends on crop sourcing, since the underlying fruit-oil supply chain can carry regional water-use and land-pressure concerns.

Is Hydrogenated Avocado Oil COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic frameworks when made from permitted plant feedstock using allowed processing. From a Green Chemistry lens, it scores well for renewable carbon and biodegradability, with a small processing caveat from catalytic saturation.

How does Hydrogenated Avocado Oil work chemically?

The molecule profile is a triglyceride mixture whose carbon-carbon double bonds have been partly or fully saturated, which raises melting point and improves oxidative stability versus the starting oil. It is usually used around 1 to 20 percent depending on texture goals, is not meaningfully pH-active, and is best protected from excess heat during manufacturing.

Last updated 2026-05-16