Lycium Barbarum Extract

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a botanical antioxidant and skin-conditioning agent, adding polyphenols, polysaccharides, and amino-acid-rich solids to water-based formulas. It supports soothing, hydration-feel, and antioxidant-positioning claims rather than acting as a primary preservative or drug active.

What does Lycium Barbarum Extract do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as a botanical antioxidant and skin-conditioning agent, adding polyphenols, polysaccharides, and amino-acid-rich solids to water-based formulas. It supports soothing, hydration-feel, and antioxidant-positioning claims rather than acting as a primary preservative or drug active.

Is Lycium Barbarum Extract clean?

It is generally well accepted in clean-beauty standards when supplied in a permitted solvent system and preserved appropriately. Main watchpoints are normal botanical variability, potential sensitivity in reactive users, and residues from extraction or agriculture rather than the plant material itself.

Is Lycium Barbarum Extract sustainable?

This material is renewable and agricultural, with impact tied to farming, irrigation, drying, and solvent choice. It should be readily biodegradable as a dilute botanical extract, though concentrated supply chains benefit from pesticide, heavy-metal, and traceability testing.

Is Lycium Barbarum Extract COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and can count toward COSMOS-organic when the agricultural feedstock is certified and extraction uses approved solvents such as water, ethanol, glycerin, or plant oils. It fits Green Chemistry best when made by low-energy aqueous or hydroalcoholic extraction and supplied without non-approved preservatives.

How does Lycium Barbarum Extract work chemically?

Chemically, this is a complex botanical mixture dominated by water-soluble carbohydrates, phenolic compounds, organic acids, minerals, and small amounts of amino acids, depending on extract ratio and solvent. Typical cosmetic use is often about 0.1 to 5% in the water phase, and formulators should monitor color, odor, microbial quality, and compatibility with low-pH systems.

Last updated 2026-05-13