Sodium Saccharin

TL;DR. It functions mainly as a high-intensity sweetener and taste-masking agent, especially in toothpaste, mouthwash, and lip products. It helps make bitter, salty, or medicinal-tasting formulas more acceptable without adding sugar.

What does Sodium Saccharin do in a cosmetic formula?

It functions mainly as a high-intensity sweetener and taste-masking agent, especially in toothpaste, mouthwash, and lip products. It helps make bitter, salty, or medicinal-tasting formulas more acceptable without adding sugar.

Is Sodium Saccharin clean?

From a clean beauty lens, it is a synthetic additive with a long safety record at cosmetic-use levels and low irritation potential. The main friction is standards-based, since many natural-leaning frameworks do not accept this type of synthetic sweetener.

Is Sodium Saccharin sustainable?

This material is synthetically produced, typically from petrochemical feedstocks, rather than renewable plant or mineral sources. It is water-soluble and used at very low levels, but its sourcing profile is not a strong fit for renewable-material goals.

Is Sodium Saccharin COSMOS-approved?

It is generally not permitted under COSMOS-natural or COSMOS-organic because it is a fully synthetic sweetening agent without a natural-origin pathway accepted by the standard. Its Green Chemistry fit is limited by petrochemical sourcing, although its very low use level reduces formula-level material intensity.

How does Sodium Saccharin work chemically?

The molecule is an anionic, water-soluble salt of a sulfonimide sweetener, with very high perceived sweetness compared with sucrose. In oral-care formulas it is commonly used around 0.05% to 0.3%, and it is stable across the typical pH range of toothpaste and mouthwash.

Last updated 2026-05-13