Solanum Lycopersicum Fruit/Leaf/Stem

TL;DR. This ingredient is primarily a botanical skin-conditioning and antioxidant material, used to add plant-derived carotenoids, phenolics, and other minor compounds to a formula. It may also contribute a subtle natural color depending on extraction type and concentration.

What does Solanum Lycopersicum Fruit/Leaf/Stem do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is primarily a botanical skin-conditioning and antioxidant material, used to add plant-derived carotenoids, phenolics, and other minor compounds to a formula. It may also contribute a subtle natural color depending on extraction type and concentration.

Is Solanum Lycopersicum Fruit/Leaf/Stem clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well accepted and is not a common restricted-list concern. Sensitivity risk is usually low at cosmetic use levels, though leaf and stem fractions make supplier controls for glycoalkaloids, pesticide residues, and extraction residues worth checking.

Is Solanum Lycopersicum Fruit/Leaf/Stem sustainable?

This ingredient comes from renewable agricultural biomass and can fit well into upcycling programs when crop byproducts are used. It is expected to be biodegradable, with the main sustainability variables being farming practices, traceability, and extraction solvent choice.

Is Solanum Lycopersicum Fruit/Leaf/Stem COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when the plant source and extraction process meet the standard, with organic status dependent on certified agricultural sourcing. It aligns well with Green Chemistry when processed using water, ethanol, glycerin, vegetable oil, or other approved low-impact solvents.

How does Solanum Lycopersicum Fruit/Leaf/Stem work chemically?

This material is a complex botanical mixture rather than a single molecule, typically containing carotenoids, flavonoids, phenolic acids, sugars, amino acids, minerals, and small amounts of glycoalkaloids depending on plant part and extraction. Carotenoid-rich fractions are sensitive to light and oxygen, so they are often paired with antioxidants and opaque packaging, while typical cosmetic use is often in the 0.1% to 5% range according to supplier guidance.

Last updated 2026-05-14