Peg-7 Glyceryl Cocoate

TL;DR. It is a mild nonionic surfactant, solubilizer, and refatting agent used in cleansers to improve slip, soften after-feel, and help disperse oils or fragrance materials.

What does Peg-7 Glyceryl Cocoate do in a cosmetic formula?

It is a mild nonionic surfactant, solubilizer, and refatting agent used in cleansers to improve slip, soften after-feel, and help disperse oils or fragrance materials.

Is Peg-7 Glyceryl Cocoate clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it has friction because it is made through ethoxylation and may require controls for residual ethylene oxide and 1,4-dioxane. It is generally low-irritation in rinse-off use, but many stricter natural standards do not accept it.

Is Peg-7 Glyceryl Cocoate sustainable?

This material is commonly made from coconut-derived fatty material combined with a petrochemical-derived hydrophilic chain. It is expected to biodegrade, but its renewable content is only partial and coconut supply-chain traceability can vary.

Is Peg-7 Glyceryl Cocoate COSMOS-approved?

It is not permitted under COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic because ethoxylated ingredients are outside the allowed processing routes. Its Green Chemistry profile is mixed, with partial plant-derived feedstock and useful mildness balanced against petrochemical input and residue-control requirements.

How does Peg-7 Glyceryl Cocoate work chemically?

The molecule is an ethoxylated glyceride ester made from coconut fatty acids, giving it lipophilic fatty chains and a hydrophilic polyether segment for nonionic surface activity. Typical use is about 1–10% in rinse-off cleansers and lower levels as a solubilizer, with broad compatibility across anionic, amphoteric, and nonionic surfactant systems at mildly acidic to neutral pH.

Last updated 2026-05-13