Diisopropyl Adipate

Good

Emollient

Diisopropyl Adipate at a glance

  • Fatty acid ester of isopropyl alcohol and adipic acid
  • Best known for emollient/skin conditioning benefits
  • Also works to help improve formula aesthetics
  • Safe as used in current concentrations

Diisopropyl Adipate description

Diisopropyl adipate is a skin-conditioning, emollient and film-forming agent. It’s a fatty acid ester formed from isopropyl alcohol and the fatty acid adipic acid. When added to cosmetic formulas, this fatty acid ester can accomplish quite a few things. As an emollient and skin-conditioning ingredient, diisopropyl adipate helps trap moisture within skin, preventing trans epidermal water loss and dryness. Diisopropyl adipate runs counter to heavy emollients like mineral oil since it’s known for having a light texture and a non-greasy feel. Formulators sometimes use this fatty acid ester alongside other emollients to help decrease their heavy feel on skin. Beyond its emollient benefits, diisopropyl adipate also serves as a solvent, film-former and texture enhancer. Essentially, this ingredient helps dissolve and disperse other ingredients in a formula so they’re evenly distributed while also improving a formula’s texture and ability to stay on skin. The Cosmetic Ingredient Review Expert Panel reviewed diisopropyl adipate and deemed it safe as used in current products and concentration levels (0.005%-8.0%). As a raw material, diisopropyl adipate presents as a clear-to-light-yellow/white liquid.

Diisopropyl Adipate references

  • ULProspector, Accessed January 2025, Webpage
  • International Journal of Toxicology, August 2012, pages 5S-76S

Peer-reviewed, substantiated scientific research is used to assess ingredients in this dictionary. Regulations regarding constraints, permitted concentration levels and availability vary by country and region.

Ingredient ratings

Best

Proven and supported by independent studies. Outstanding active ingredient for most skin types or concerns.

Good

Necessary to improve a formula's texture, stability, or penetration.

Average

Generally non-irritating but may have aesthetic, stability, or other issues that limit its usefulness.

Bad

There is a likelihood of irritation. Risk increases when combined with other problematic ingredients.

Worst

May cause irritation, inflammation, dryness, etc. May offer benefit in some capability but overall, proven to do more harm than good.

unknown

We couldn't find this in our ingredient dictionary. We log all missing ingredients and make continuous updates.

Not rated

We have not yet rated this ingredient because we have not had a chance to review the research on it.