Non-GMO Tocopherol

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily an oil-phase antioxidant, used to slow rancidity and color or odor changes in oils, butters, and lipid-rich formulas. It can also support skin-conditioning claims because it is lipid-soluble and compatible with the skin barrier.

What does Non-GMO Tocopherol do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily an oil-phase antioxidant, used to slow rancidity and color or odor changes in oils, butters, and lipid-rich formulas. It can also support skin-conditioning claims because it is lipid-soluble and compatible with the skin barrier.

Is Non-GMO Tocopherol clean?

This ingredient is broadly accepted in clean-beauty frameworks and has low irritation potential at typical use levels. The main quality watchouts are oxidation state, residual processing solvents, and clear sourcing documentation for the non-genetically modified claim.

Is Non-GMO Tocopherol sustainable?

This material is commonly sourced from vegetable oil streams such as soy, sunflower, or rapeseed, so agricultural traceability matters. It is biodegradable and used at low levels, with a relatively favorable environmental profile when sourced from responsibly managed plant oils.

Is Non-GMO Tocopherol COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when the feedstock and processing route meet the standard, including non-genetically modified sourcing requirements. Its fit with Green Chemistry is strong when plant-derived, since it uses renewable feedstocks, functions at low dose, and helps extend formula shelf life.

How does Non-GMO Tocopherol work chemically?

The molecule is a lipid-soluble phenolic chromanol with a hydrophobic phytyl side chain, which lets it sit in the oil phase and donate hydrogen to interrupt lipid oxidation. Typical use is about 0.05% to 0.5% as an antioxidant, and it performs best in anhydrous or oil-rich systems protected from excess heat, light, and metal ions.

Last updated 2026-05-15