Characteristics
- INCI
- Cetearyl Glucoside
- CAS
-
246159-33-1
This is the substance number in the Chemical Abstracts Service registry. The CAS number uniquely identifies a substance regardless of language, trade name, or synonyms.
- Functions
- emulsifying, surfactant
Who it's for
Description
If your lotion feels silky instead of soapy, there’s a decent chance a humble emulsifier is doing the heavy lifting behind the scenes. Cetearyl Glucoside is one of those quietly useful ingredients that helps oil and water play nice together, which is no small feat when you remember they usually want absolutely nothing to do with each other. It’s a sugar-based emulsifier, made from fatty alcohols and glucose, and it’s especially popular in formulations that aim for a gentle, more “natural-leaning” profile.
Its main job is to keep creams, lotions, and milky sprays from separating into sad little layers over time. In practice, it can build stable emulsions at relatively low use levels, often around 1–1.5% for basic oil-in-water systems, though the exact amount depends on the rest of the formula. It’s particularly handy for low-viscosity lotions and lighter textures, where you want a fluid feel without giving up stability. Formulators also like it because it tends to give products a pleasantly elegant slip and a soft after-feel rather than a heavy, waxy finish.
What makes it a bit of a nerdy favorite is that it can contribute to a very nice sensory profile while still being mild. It’s often used in combination with other fatty alcohols or co-emulsifiers to improve texture, stability, and spreadability. In other words, it can help turn a runny mixture into a smooth cream that glides over your skin instead of dragging or pilling. That’s why you’ll often find it in face creams, body lotions, sunscreens, and cleansing milks, especially when the goal is a lightweight but polished formula.
And yes, the sugar part is real, not just marketing poetry. The glucoside portion comes from glucose, which is one reason this ingredient shows up so often in products marketed as more skin-friendly or eco-conscious. It doesn’t work miracles on its own, but as an emulsifier it’s a very solid performer: good stability, good spreadability, and a soft skin feel. Not bad for something most people will never notice unless it’s missing.
More detail
A sugar based emulsifier that's especially great for low viscosity lotions or even sprays. It's effective in small amounts, only 1-1.5% is needed to form an emulsion. The resulting cream or lotion has great cosmetic properties with good spreadability and an enhanced soft skin feel.
Products with Cetearyl Glucoside (4 842 total)
Most often found in Olay products (155 items)