Potassium Cocoyl Glycinate

TL;DR. This ingredient is a mild anionic surfactant used for cleansing, foaming, and improving rinse feel in facial cleansers, body washes, shampoos, and hand washes.

What does Potassium Cocoyl Glycinate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a mild anionic surfactant used for cleansing, foaming, and improving rinse feel in facial cleansers, body washes, shampoos, and hand washes.

Is Potassium Cocoyl Glycinate clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, it is generally well tolerated and favored in mild cleanser systems because it tends to be less stripping than many traditional anionic surfactants. Main watchpoints are formula context, concentration, and eye-area sting potential, not broad restricted-list friction.

Is Potassium Cocoyl Glycinate sustainable?

This material is commonly made from coconut-derived fatty acids and an amino-acid building block, giving it a partly renewable sourcing profile. It is expected to be readily biodegradable and does not raise the persistence concerns associated with silicone or fluorinated materials.

Is Potassium Cocoyl Glycinate COSMOS-approved?

It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made from compliant raw materials and processes. Its profile fits Green Chemistry reasonably well because it uses renewable feedstock inputs, has good biodegradability, and performs efficiently in rinse-off formulas.

How does Potassium Cocoyl Glycinate work chemically?

The molecule is an anionic amino-acid surfactant with a fatty acyl chain and a carboxylate head group, which gives it cleansing power with relatively mild skin feel. It is commonly used in cleanser blends at roughly 1 to 10% active matter, often alongside amphoteric or nonionic surfactants to tune foam, viscosity, and irritation profile.

Last updated 2026-05-13