Salvia Officinalis ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is used mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning and fragrance component, with astringent and deodorant support in some formulas. Its role depends on format, since an extract behaves differently from a volatile oil fraction.
What does Salvia Officinalis do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is used mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning and fragrance component, with astringent and deodorant support in some formulas. Its role depends on format, since an extract behaves differently from a volatile oil fraction.
Is Salvia Officinalis clean?
From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally acceptable but not friction-free because aromatic plant materials can contain listed fragrance allergens and sensitizing constituents. DARE would treat it as a context ingredient, where format, concentration, and allergen disclosure matter.
Is Salvia Officinalis sustainable?
This is a renewable plant-derived material, and its main organic constituents are expected to biodegrade more readily than persistent synthetics. Sustainability depends on agricultural inputs, distillation or extraction efficiency, and whether the supply chain uses verified organic or responsibly managed cultivation.
Is Salvia Officinalis COSMOS-approved?
It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made from the plant by approved physical processes or allowed extraction solvents, with organic status depending on certified sourcing. Its Green Chemistry fit is strongest when water, ethanol, glycerin, or low-impact distillation is used, and weaker when solvent-intensive processing or highly concentrated fragrance use is involved.
How does Salvia Officinalis work chemically?
This material is a complex botanical mixture that may contain phenolic acids, flavonoids, diterpenes, and volatile terpenes such as thujone, camphor, and 1,8-cineole, depending on whether it is an extract or oil fraction. Typical use ranges are often around 0.1% to 5% for extracts and much lower for volatile aromatic fractions, with oxidation control and fragrance-allergen labeling important in finished formulas.
Last updated 2026-05-13