Lanolin Liquida/Lanolin Oil

TL;DR. This ingredient is a fluid emollient and skin-conditioning lipid that adds slip, gloss, and water-loss reduction in balms, creams, lip products, and hair care. It is especially useful where a formula needs rich cushion without the full heaviness of a solid waxy material.

What does Lanolin Liquida/Lanolin Oil do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a fluid emollient and skin-conditioning lipid that adds slip, gloss, and water-loss reduction in balms, creams, lip products, and hair care. It is especially useful where a formula needs rich cushion without the full heaviness of a solid waxy material.

Is Lanolin Liquida/Lanolin Oil clean?

Clean frameworks often allow it when highly refined, but it carries more allergen and sensitization discussion than many simple plant oils because residual alcohol fractions and trace agricultural contaminants can matter. It is also not vegan, which creates brand-standard friction rather than a direct safety issue.

Is Lanolin Liquida/Lanolin Oil sustainable?

It is animal-derived and recovered as a byproduct of sheep fleece processing, so sourcing depends on animal welfare, land use, and wastewater controls during scouring. The lipid material is expected to biodegrade, but residue testing and supply-chain transparency are important quality markers.

Is Lanolin Liquida/Lanolin Oil COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and can be used in COSMOS-organic formulas when sourcing, animal-origin rules, and processing requirements are met. Green Chemistry alignment is mixed: it uses a byproduct and relatively simple refining, but it depends on livestock supply chains and is not plant-derived.

How does Lanolin Liquida/Lanolin Oil work chemically?

This material is a complex lipophilic mixture dominated by long-chain esters, sterol esters, fatty alcohols, and fatty acids, with a liquid profile selected for lower melting and better spreadability. It is largely pH-independent in normal emulsions and is commonly used around 0.5% to 10%, with higher levels in anhydrous balms; antioxidants and chelators can help manage odor and oxidation in exposed systems.

Last updated 2026-05-13