Polyglyceryl-10 Laurate

TL;DR. This ingredient is a nonionic emulsifier and solubilizer, used to disperse oils, fragrance components, and lipid-soluble actives into water-based formulas. It can also support mild cleansing and foam quality in rinse-off products.

What does Polyglyceryl-10 Laurate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a nonionic emulsifier and solubilizer, used to disperse oils, fragrance components, and lipid-soluble actives into water-based formulas. It can also support mild cleansing and foam quality in rinse-off products.

Is Polyglyceryl-10 Laurate clean?

This ingredient is generally well accepted in clean-beauty frameworks because it is non-ethoxylated, mild, and not a common sensitizer. Quality depends on good manufacturing controls for residual glycerin, free fatty acids, and processing byproducts.

Is Polyglyceryl-10 Laurate sustainable?

This material is commonly made from glycerin and plant-derived fatty acids, often from coconut or palm-family feedstocks. It is expected to be readily biodegradable, with the main sourcing question being traceability of the vegetable oil supply chain.

Is Polyglyceryl-10 Laurate COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic formulas when the feedstocks and processing route meet the standard’s requirements. It fits Green Chemistry principles reasonably well through renewable inputs, ester chemistry, and good biodegradability.

How does Polyglyceryl-10 Laurate work chemically?

The molecule is an amphiphilic ester with a hydrophilic polyglycerin head group and one medium-chain fatty acyl tail, giving it strong oil-in-water solubilizing behavior. Typical use levels are often about 0.5% to 5%, and it is usually stable in mildly acidic to neutral systems, while very high or low pH can gradually cleave ester bonds.

Last updated 2026-05-13