Oligopeptide-68

TL;DR. This ingredient is a skin-conditioning and tone-evening signal molecule used in serums, creams, and spot-focused products. Its main formulation role is to support a more even-looking complexion rather than to preserve, cleanse, or emulsify the formula.

What does Oligopeptide-68 do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a skin-conditioning and tone-evening signal molecule used in serums, creams, and spot-focused products. Its main formulation role is to support a more even-looking complexion rather than to preserve, cleanse, or emulsify the formula.

Is Oligopeptide-68 clean?

This ingredient is generally accepted in clean-beauty programs because it is used at low levels, has a low sensitization profile, and is not a common restricted-list material. The main caveat is that it is lab-made, so strict natural-origin standards may not treat it as a natural ingredient.

Is Oligopeptide-68 sustainable?

This material is typically produced by synthetic amino-acid-chain chemistry rather than direct plant extraction. It is expected to break down into smaller amino-acid fragments, but its manufacture can be solvent- and purification-intensive.

Is Oligopeptide-68 COSMOS-approved?

This ingredient is not a straightforward fit for COSMOS-organic or COSMOS-natural formulas because it is generally made as a synthetic bioactive rather than a minimally processed natural-origin material. From a Green Chemistry lens, its low use level and likely biodegradability are positives, while specialty synthesis and solvent demand are the main limitations.

How does Oligopeptide-68 work chemically?

This molecule is a short chain of amino acids designed to influence pathways involved in melanogenesis, including signaling upstream of MITF expression. It is commonly supplied in dilute aqueous or glycol-based blends, used at very low active levels, and best added during cool-down in mildly acidic to neutral formulas to reduce hydrolysis risk.

Last updated 2026-05-13