Saccharide Hydrolysate

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily a humectant and skin-conditioning agent, helping bind water in the formula and on the skin surface. It can also support a smoother feel in leave-on products without acting as an active preservative or emulsifier.

What does Saccharide Hydrolysate do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily a humectant and skin-conditioning agent, helping bind water in the formula and on the skin surface. It can also support a smoother feel in leave-on products without acting as an active preservative or emulsifier.

Is Saccharide Hydrolysate clean?

It is generally viewed as well-tolerated and low-friction in clean beauty frameworks when supplied with standard impurity and preservation documentation. Sensitivity is more likely to come from the preservative system in the supplier blend than from the material itself.

Is Saccharide Hydrolysate sustainable?

This material is commonly derived from renewable plant-based feedstocks and is expected to be readily biodegradable. Its sustainability profile depends on the crop source, processing inputs, and whether the commercial grade is supplied in a preserved aqueous blend.

Is Saccharide Hydrolysate COSMOS-approved?

It is typically compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic formulations when made from approved renewable feedstocks through accepted hydrolysis processes. From a Green Chemistry perspective, it aligns well because it is water-soluble, biodegradable, and usually made through relatively simple conversion chemistry.

How does Saccharide Hydrolysate work chemically?

The molecule profile is a broad mixture of water-soluble small and larger hydroxyl-rich fragments, which bind water through hydrogen bonding and contribute mild film-like skin feel. Typical use is often around 0.5% to 5%, with good compatibility across common cosmetic pH ranges, although higher levels can add tack or affect viscosity.

Last updated 2026-05-13