Calendula Officinalis Flower Extract
Calendula officinalis flower extract is used mainly as a soothing/anti-inflammatory botanical at low concentrations, but it is a plant extract containing multiple potential sensitizing compounds. Clinical experience and patch-test literature document allergic contact dermatitis in a subset of users (notably those with Asteraceae/ragweed sensitivity), so while many tolerate it, reactive or eczematous skin can flare. Given this non-trivial sensitization risk despite its “gentle” marketing, I rate it as mild irritancy potential. Safety Notes: In mass-market leave-on creams/lotions, toners, and rinse-off cleansers, calendula extract is frequently used as a secondary soothing botanical at very low levels (often ~0.001–0.1%), especially when supplied as a dilute glycerin/propylene glycol extract. In more botanical-forward OTC products (calendula gels, barrier creams, baby/soothing balms, and “high botanical content” serums), finished-product levels commonly run ~0.5–2% with some formulations reaching ~3–5% when the supplier extract is standardized and used as a key claim ingredient. There is no specific EU/FDA maximum for the extract itself in cosmetics; practical upper use is typically limited by odor/color, solubility, and potential sensitization risk, with higher levels more common in leave-on than rinse-off products.
Identifiers
- CAS
- 84776-23-8
- CosIng
- 74929
- EC
- 283-949-5
Also known as
Calendula Extract · Marigold Extract