The rise of jojoba oil: Why it's becoming more popular in skincare formulas

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The rise of jojoba oil: Why it’s becoming more popular in skincare formulas

As consumers pay closer attention to what goes on their skin, jojoba oil has become one of the most trusted ingredients in modern skincare, valued for its versatility, compatibility with the skin, and ability to support hydration without heaviness.

Most shoppers today already carry a mental list of what they want on their skin and what they'd rather avoid. They're checking labels with the same attention they give to food packaging, scanning for ingredients they recognize and skipping past anything they can't pronounce.

Research shows interest in skincare topics has doubled over the past five years, and a growing part of that is people trimming their routines down to fewer products built around ingredients they understand and benefits they can see.

Dermatologist Dr. Emma Craythorne told Vogue that today's shopper has gotten a lot more specific about what they expect. "Consumers are no longer satisfied with vague promises of glow and hydration," she said. "They want to understand mechanisms, data and longevity."

Jojoba oil has become one of the ingredients consumers keep coming back to, and as Ogee, a Vermont-based certified organic beauty brand, explores below, the reasons behind it go deeper than good marketing.

What Makes Jojoba Oil Unique

Despite being called an oil, jojoba is technically a liquid wax, and that puts it in a class of its own among plant-based ingredients. Most plant-based oils are made up of fats, but jojoba's makeup closely mirrors the natural oils your skin already produces on its own.

Dermatologist Alok Vij of the Cleveland Clinic describes it as "very close in composition to your skin's normal sebum, or the normal oil secreted by your skin." Because of that natural compatibility, jojoba absorbs readily without leaving a heavy or greasy film behind, and that is what separates it from most other plant-based oils people are used to reaching for.

Why It Works Across Skin Types

Part of what makes jojoba oil so relevant to today's skincare conversation is how consistently it holds up across different skin types. Part of what makes jojoba oil so relevant to today's skincare conversation is how consistently it performs across different skin types. For people with dry skin, jojoba oil is valued for its ability to help reduce moisture loss and support the skin's natural barrier without the heavy or greasy feel associated with some other oils.

Oily skin tends to respond well for a different reason entirely. Dr. Vij has noted that jojoba won't overhydrate the skin or make it feel oilier, and because it doesn't clog pores, it holds up well even for those who are acne-prone.

Board-certified dermatologist Dr. Rachel Nazarian also points to how well it tends to be tolerated by people with more sensitive or reactive skin, which is part of why it continues to get recommended across so many different skin profiles.

A Multi-Functional Skincare Staple

Skincare enthusiasts and experts tend to agree that jojoba oil rarely gets put to just one use. It shows up in moisturizers and facial oils, where its ability to attract and hold moisture makes it a reliable base. It also works well in cleansing oils and makeup removers, where its mix of fatty acids helps lift away oil-based buildup without leaving the skin feeling stripped.

Beyond the face, it finds its way into lip treatments, body oils, and hair care, which is part of why consumers cutting down their routines keep returning to it.

Dr. Joshua Zeichner, director of cosmetic and clinical research in dermatology at Mount Sinai Hospital, describes it as "an emollient oil commonly used in moisturizers and cleansing oils" with hydrating and skin-soothing benefits that hold up across a wide range of uses.

The Role of Jojoba in Modern Formulations

Beyond what consumers see on the shelf, jojoba oil has become a go-to foundation for formulators building clean, plant-based products.

Its natural stability and long shelf life make it a reliable base, which is part of why brands working within certified organic standards tend to look to it first. It also pairs naturally with other botanical ingredients, helping carry their benefits into the skin rather than leaving them on the surface.

Dermatologist Dr. Tiffany Libby of Brown Dermatology notes that oils like jojoba, because of how closely they mirror the skin's own natural oils, can help support the skin's lipid balance, making it a strong fit for formulas built around how skin actually behaves.

Clean Beauty and the Appeal of Simplicity

Keeping a clean, simple skincare routine has become less of a lifestyle choice and more of a standard expectation.

Consumers are pushing back on long, unrecognizable ingredient lists and gravitating toward products built around things they can actually understand. Nearly half of consumers now say they prioritize 100% pure and natural ingredients, and 45% specifically seek out non-toxic or clean formulations when shopping.

Jojoba oil checks both of those boxes in a pretty direct way. It's a single, plant-based ingredient with a name people recognize, and it does enough on its own that consumers don't feel the need to stack it with a dozen other products to see results.

Given that the FDA still does not regulate terms like "clean" or "natural" in beauty, a verifiable, recognizable ingredient carries more weight than any marketing label.

What This Means for the Future of Skincare

Nobody reaches for a skincare product thinking about its chemistry, but more people than ever are thinking carefully about what's actually in it. Beauty has moved closer to wellness, and with that comes a level of personal investment that goes well beyond the bathroom shelf.

The global jojoba oil market is projected to reach $255.5 million by 2033, and the demand powering that growth is coming from people who are paying closer attention to their skin health than any generation before them.

Jojoba oil has earned that place because it delivers on what it promises, and for a consumer who now treats their skincare with the same care they give to everything else that touches their body, that kind of reliability is hard to walk away from.

This story was produced by Ogee and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

 

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The rise of jojoba oil: Why it's becoming more popular in skincare formulas

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

The rise of jojoba oil: Why it’s becoming more popular in skincare formulas

As consumers pay closer attention to what goes on their skin, jojoba oil has become one of the most trusted ingredients in modern skincare, valued for its versatility, compatibility with the skin, and ability to support hydration without heaviness.

Most shoppers today already carry a mental list of what they want on their skin and what they'd rather avoid. They're checking labels with the same attention they give to food packaging, scanning for ingredients they recognize and skipping past anything they can't pronounce.

Research shows interest in skincare topics has doubled over the past five years, and a growing part of that is people trimming their routines down to fewer products built around ingredients they understand and benefits they can see.

Dermatologist Dr. Emma Craythorne told Vogue that today's shopper has gotten a lot more specific about what they expect. "Consumers are no longer satisfied with vague promises of glow and hydration," she said. "They want to understand mechanisms, data and longevity."

Jojoba oil has become one of the ingredients consumers keep coming back to, and as Ogee, a Vermont-based certified organic beauty brand, explores below, the reasons behind it go deeper than good marketing.

What Makes Jojoba Oil Unique

Despite being called an oil, jojoba is technically a liquid wax, and that puts it in a class of its own among plant-based ingredients. Most plant-based oils are made up of fats, but jojoba's makeup closely mirrors the natural oils your skin already produces on its own.

Dermatologist Alok Vij of the Cleveland Clinic describes it as "very close in composition to your skin's normal sebum, or the normal oil secreted by your skin." Because of that natural compatibility, jojoba absorbs readily without leaving a heavy or greasy film behind, and that is what separates it from most other plant-based oils people are used to reaching for.

Why It Works Across Skin Types

Part of what makes jojoba oil so relevant to today's skincare conversation is how consistently it holds up across different skin types. Part of what makes jojoba oil so relevant to today's skincare conversation is how consistently it performs across different skin types. For people with dry skin, jojoba oil is valued for its ability to help reduce moisture loss and support the skin's natural barrier without the heavy or greasy feel associated with some other oils.

Oily skin tends to respond well for a different reason entirely. Dr. Vij has noted that jojoba won't overhydrate the skin or make it feel oilier, and because it doesn't clog pores, it holds up well even for those who are acne-prone.

Board-certified dermatologist Dr. Rachel Nazarian also points to how well it tends to be tolerated by people with more sensitive or reactive skin, which is part of why it continues to get recommended across so many different skin profiles.

A Multi-Functional Skincare Staple

Skincare enthusiasts and experts tend to agree that jojoba oil rarely gets put to just one use. It shows up in moisturizers and facial oils, where its ability to attract and hold moisture makes it a reliable base. It also works well in cleansing oils and makeup removers, where its mix of fatty acids helps lift away oil-based buildup without leaving the skin feeling stripped.

Beyond the face, it finds its way into lip treatments, body oils, and hair care, which is part of why consumers cutting down their routines keep returning to it.

Dr. Joshua Zeichner, director of cosmetic and clinical research in dermatology at Mount Sinai Hospital, describes it as "an emollient oil commonly used in moisturizers and cleansing oils" with hydrating and skin-soothing benefits that hold up across a wide range of uses.

The Role of Jojoba in Modern Formulations

Beyond what consumers see on the shelf, jojoba oil has become a go-to foundation for formulators building clean, plant-based products.

Its natural stability and long shelf life make it a reliable base, which is part of why brands working within certified organic standards tend to look to it first. It also pairs naturally with other botanical ingredients, helping carry their benefits into the skin rather than leaving them on the surface.

Dermatologist Dr. Tiffany Libby of Brown Dermatology notes that oils like jojoba, because of how closely they mirror the skin's own natural oils, can help support the skin's lipid balance, making it a strong fit for formulas built around how skin actually behaves.

Clean Beauty and the Appeal of Simplicity

Keeping a clean, simple skincare routine has become less of a lifestyle choice and more of a standard expectation.

Consumers are pushing back on long, unrecognizable ingredient lists and gravitating toward products built around things they can actually understand. Nearly half of consumers now say they prioritize 100% pure and natural ingredients, and 45% specifically seek out non-toxic or clean formulations when shopping.

Jojoba oil checks both of those boxes in a pretty direct way. It's a single, plant-based ingredient with a name people recognize, and it does enough on its own that consumers don't feel the need to stack it with a dozen other products to see results.

Given that the FDA still does not regulate terms like "clean" or "natural" in beauty, a verifiable, recognizable ingredient carries more weight than any marketing label.

What This Means for the Future of Skincare

Nobody reaches for a skincare product thinking about its chemistry, but more people than ever are thinking carefully about what's actually in it. Beauty has moved closer to wellness, and with that comes a level of personal investment that goes well beyond the bathroom shelf.

The global jojoba oil market is projected to reach $255.5 million by 2033, and the demand powering that growth is coming from people who are paying closer attention to their skin health than any generation before them.

Jojoba oil has earned that place because it delivers on what it promises, and for a consumer who now treats their skincare with the same care they give to everything else that touches their body, that kind of reliability is hard to walk away from.

This story was produced by Ogee and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

 

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