What is betaine?
A naturally derived active ingredient from sugar beet molasses (Beta vulgaris). Chemically, it is trimethylglycine, an amino acid derivative that acts as an osmolyte: it regulates the flow of water in and out of cells and helps them maintain their water balance even when the environment becomes harsh, cold, windy, dry, or exposed to environmental stress.
But there's an important nuance that needs to be clarified from the outset: there's beet betaine and coco betaine, and while they share a name and part of their structure, they do different things. The former hydrates. The latter cleanses.
Beet Betaine and Coco Betaine
Beet betaine (Betaine) is a pure humectant. It doesn't foam, it doesn't cleanse. Its function is to attract and retain water, regulate cellular hydration, and provide comfort to the skin. This is the one found in creams, lotions, and serums.
Coco betaine (Cocamidopropyl Betaine) is an amphoteric surfactant derived from coconut oil. It cleanses, generates soft foam, and improves the tolerability of cleansers, softening the effect of other harsher surfactants. This is the one found in shampoos, gels, and cleansing products.
Coco betaine has a hybrid structure: the fatty part comes from coconut, and the base structure is inspired by natural beet betaine. Hence the shared name and frequent confusion.
How it works
Beet betaine acts as a cellular osmolyte: it regulates the water balance of skin cells, helping them resist osmotic stress. It can associate with several water molecules at once, functioning as a small hydration reservoir. It strengthens the skin barrier, reduces transepidermal water loss, and decreases the irritating potential of other ingredients in the formula.
Coco betaine, in its role as an amphoteric surfactant, can behave as an acid or a base depending on the product's pH. This allows it to stabilize formulas, soften harsher cleansers, and provide an antistatic effect on hair, reducing static electricity and frizz.
Properties and benefits
- Long-lasting hydration without a sticky feeling. Beet betaine keeps the skin supple and comfortable for hours, with a smooth, silky texture that enhances the user experience of any formula.
- Soothing and protective. Especially useful for sensitive, dry, or irritated skin. It reduces the inflammatory response and improves the skin's tolerance to external aggressors.
- Protection against environmental stress. By stabilizing cellular water balance, it helps prevent premature aging caused by external factors.
- Gentle cleansing with coco betaine. It generates creamy foam without damaging the skin barrier, is compatible with the most delicate skin types, and enhances the feel of cleansing products without being aggressive.
- High compatibility. It works well with virtually all active ingredients: hyaluronic acid, panthenol, niacinamide, ceramides.
Usage and integration into your routine
Beet betaine primarily appears in creams, body lotions, and hydrating serums, where it acts as a supporting humectant. It doesn't require special use; it's in the formula and does its job.
Coco betaine appears in cleansing products: shampoos, shower gels, and facial cleansers. Its presence usually indicates that the product has a gentle and respectful cleansing profile.
Curiosities and facts
Discovered in beets in 1866
Scheibler first isolated betaine from sugar beet. In plants, it acts as a natural protector against drought or salinity stress, exactly the same function it performs in human skin. Nature reuses its solutions.
The tear-free shampoo revolution
In the 1950s and 60s, the cosmetic industry sought alternatives to traditional soaps that irritated babies' eyes. Betaines made the first "tear-free" baby shampoos possible, a milestone that forever changed the infant hygiene category.
Biodegradable and green
It degrades easily in the environment and is compatible with green chemistry principles. One of those ingredients that work well and leave no trace.
It appears in the INCI as: Betaine, Cocamidopropyl Betaine
Other active ingredients you might be interested in
Hyaluronic acid: deep humectant, a natural complement to betaine in hydration routines.
Beta-glucan: soothing and repairing, same philosophy of respect and comfort for the skin.
Syndets: to better understand how gentle surfactants work in cleansing products.
Aloe Vera: soothing and hydrating, combines very well with betaine in formulas for sensitive skin.