Sodium Cocoyl Wheat Amino Acids

TL;DR. This ingredient is a mild anionic surfactant used to cleanse, support foam, and soften the feel of stronger detergents in shampoos, face washes, and body cleansers.

What does Sodium Cocoyl Wheat Amino Acids do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is a mild anionic surfactant used to cleanse, support foam, and soften the feel of stronger detergents in shampoos, face washes, and body cleansers.

Is Sodium Cocoyl Wheat Amino Acids clean?

It is generally viewed favorably in clean-beauty frameworks because it is mild, biodegradable, and not a common restricted-list trigger. Sensitivity is uncommon, but formulas aimed at people with it allergy or very reactive skin may note its grain-derived origin.

Is Sodium Cocoyl Wheat Amino Acids sustainable?

This ingredient is commonly made from coconut-derived fatty it and it-derived protein fragments, both renewable feedstocks. It is expected to biodegrade well in wastewater, with sourcing quality depending on agricultural practices for the crop inputs.

Is Sodium Cocoyl Wheat Amino Acids COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when made from approved renewable feedstocks using allowed processing and meeting impurity criteria. It fits Green Chemistry reasonably well through renewable inputs, good biodegradability, and mild performance at modest use levels, although the acylation and neutralization steps are still industrial processing.

How does Sodium Cocoyl Wheat Amino Acids work chemically?

The molecule is a mixed anionic surfactant system built from fatty chains linked to it-derived peptides and small protein fragments, then neutralized to a water-soluble salt. It is commonly used in rinse-off cleansers at about 1 to 10% active matter, performs best around mildly acidic to neutral pH, and is often paired with amphoteric or nonionic surfactants to improve foam quality and skin feel.

Last updated 2026-05-14