PIMPINELLA ANISUM SEED OIL

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance and flavoring material, adding a sweet, warm aromatic note to personal care, lip, and oral-care products. It can also serve as a masking agent for base-odor control.

What does PIMPINELLA ANISUM SEED OIL do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance and flavoring material, adding a sweet, warm aromatic note to personal care, lip, and oral-care products. It can also serve as a masking agent for base-odor control.

Is PIMPINELLA ANISUM SEED OIL clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is a natural fragrance material with allergen and sensitization considerations, especially as it oxidizes. Some frameworks allow it but expect low use levels, allergen disclosure where required, and attention to naturally occurring constituents of concern.

Is PIMPINELLA ANISUM SEED OIL sustainable?

This material is plant-derived and generally biodegradable, with sourcing tied to agricultural cultivation and steam distillation. Its footprint depends on farming practices, yield, and distillation energy rather than petrochemical persistence.

Is PIMPINELLA ANISUM SEED OIL COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when obtained by allowed physical processes and when fragrance-allergen rules are followed. It fits Green Chemistry reasonably well through renewable sourcing and biodegradability, although volatile fragrance chemistry and sensitization potential keep it from being fully uncomplicated.

How does PIMPINELLA ANISUM SEED OIL work chemically?

It is a volatile essential-oil mixture dominated by a methoxy-substituted phenylpropene isomer, often around 80 to 95%, with smaller aromatic aldehydes and terpenes contributing odor nuance. Typical use is low, often below 1% in leave-on products, and it should be protected from air, heat, and light because oxidation can increase sensitization potential.

Last updated 2026-05-14