Turmeric Root

TL;DR. It functions mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning ingredient and antioxidant, with secondary use as a natural yellow colorant in masks, cleansers, and body products.

What does Turmeric Root do in a cosmetic formula?

It functions mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning ingredient and antioxidant, with secondary use as a natural yellow colorant in masks, cleansers, and body products.

Is Turmeric Root clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well accepted and not a common restricted-list concern. The main formulation caveats are possible staining, batch-to-batch variation, and occasional sensitivity in people reactive to aromatic botanicals.

Is Turmeric Root sustainable?

This material is plant-derived, renewable, and readily biodegradable. Its footprint depends on agricultural practices, drying, milling, and extraction method, with simpler powders and approved solvent extracts having the clearest sustainability profile.

Is Turmeric Root COSMOS-approved?

This plant-derived material is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when produced with approved extraction and processing methods. It aligns well with Green Chemistry when sourced from renewable agriculture, minimally processed, and extracted with benign solvents such as water, ethanol, or plant oils.

How does Turmeric Root work chemically?

This material is a botanical mixture rich in yellow diarylheptanoid polyphenols, starches, and sesquiterpene-containing volatile fractions rather than a single defined molecule. Typical cosmetic use is often around 0.1% to 2% depending on extract strength and color impact, and the pigment fraction can fade with UV, oxidants, and alkaline pH while staining skin, fabric, or packaging at higher loadings.

Last updated 2026-05-13