Lauryl Laurate

TL;DR. This ingredient is a lightweight wax ester used as an emollient and texture modifier. It improves slip, softens the feel of creams, balms, sticks, and color cosmetics, and can add light body without a greasy finish.

What does Lauryl Laurate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a lightweight wax ester used as an emollient and texture modifier. It improves slip, softens the feel of creams, balms, sticks, and color cosmetics, and can add light body without a greasy finish.

Is Lauryl Laurate clean?

Clean-beauty frameworks generally treat it as low-concern, with low irritation potential and no common allergen status. The main quality considerations are purity, residual processing aids, and whether the fatty feedstocks are responsibly sourced.

Is Lauryl Laurate sustainable?

This material is commonly derived from coconut or palm-family fatty feedstocks, so sourcing transparency matters. It is expected to be readily biodegradable and is not known for environmental persistence.

Is Lauryl Laurate COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made from approved natural-source fatty feedstocks and compliant processing. Its Green Chemistry profile is favorable because it can be made from renewable lipids through relatively simple esterification and has good biodegradability.

How does Lauryl Laurate work chemically?

The molecule is a long-chain C12/C12 fatty ester with a waxy, low-polarity structure that helps reduce tack and improve glide in oil phases. It is typically used around 1 to 10 percent, is stable across normal cosmetic pH ranges in emulsions, and can hydrolyze under strongly acidic or alkaline conditions.

Last updated 2026-05-13