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Soap Math

Hyaluronic Acid in Cosmetics

Molecular weight, usage rates, how it actually works — and what the marketing gets wrong

What Hyaluronic Acid Actually Does

Hyaluronic acid (HA) is a glycosaminoglycan — a large sugar molecule — that occurs naturally in skin, connective tissue, and the fluid around joints. In the skin, it is concentrated in the dermis where it helps maintain tissue structure and binds water.

In topical cosmetics, HA functions as a humectant: it draws water from the environment (and from the water phase of your formula) and holds it at or near the skin surface. This reduces transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and creates a plumper, more hydrated surface feel.

HA can hold up to 1,000 times its weight in water — a claim you will see everywhere in marketing. This is a laboratory measurement, not a description of what happens on skin. In a finished product, HA is working alongside many other ingredients in an environment where it is not given the chance to reach that theoretical saturation point. The hydration benefit is real; the 1,000× figure is largely meaningless in context.

At a Glance

  • Humectant — draws and holds water at or near the skin surface
  • Effective at 0.1–2%; no benefit above 2%
  • High-MW stays on surface; low-MW penetrates outer skin layers
  • Works better when topped with an occlusive in dry climates
  • Most products use sodium hyaluronate, the stable salt form

Molecular Weight — What It Means and Why It Matters

HA is sold in a wide range of molecular weights (MW), and MW determines how deep the molecule can travel into the skin.

TypeMolecular WeightBehaviorTypical Use Rate
High-MW sodium hyaluronate1,000–1,800 kDaSurface film, moisture retention, visible plumping0.1–1%
Mid-MW sodium hyaluronate100–500 kDaSurface + shallow penetration0.1–0.5%
Low-MW sodium hyaluronate5–50 kDaDeeper penetration into outer skin layers0.1–0.3%
Hydrolyzed HA<10 kDaDeepest penetration, lower moisture-holding capacity0.1–0.2%

For most DIY and small-batch formulators, a single mid-range sodium hyaluronate at 0.1–0.5% is completely sufficient. Multi-weight blends are a legitimate approach if you want surface and shallow-penetration coverage. Hydrolyzed HA is a specialized ingredient worth using in serums targeting visible texture concerns.

Pro Tip

If you are on a budget, a single 500 kDa sodium hyaluronate at 0.2–0.3% in a well-made lotion or serum outperforms an expensive multi-weight blend at poor total usage rates. Formulation quality matters more than ingredient complexity.

Usage Rates by Product Type

Product TypeRecommended RateNotes
Serum / essence0.5–2%Works well at the lower end; no benefit above 2%
Lotion / cream0.1–0.5%Higher rates add cost without visible benefit
Gel moisturizer0.5–1%Gel base provides its own viscosity
Eye cream0.1–0.3%Lower rate preferred; avoid stinging
Toner / mist0.1–0.2%Very low rate — toners have high water content
Sheet mask0.5–2%Delivery vehicle is ideal for HA penetration

More Is Not Better

Above 2%, sodium hyaluronate makes formulas stringy, sticky, and difficult to spread. High concentrations do not translate to more hydration — they translate to worse texture and higher cost.

Formulating With HA

Sodium hyaluronate dissolves in the water phase of your formula. Add it to cool or warm water (below 40°C / 104°F) and allow time for full hydration — it can take 10–30 minutes to fully swell, especially at higher concentrations. Hydrating it separately in a small amount of distilled water before adding to the batch improves dispersion.

pH compatibility: HA is stable across a wide pH range (4–8) and is compatible with most cosmetic ingredients. It does not conflict with cationic, anionic, or nonionic systems. It is compatible with actives like niacinamide, vitamin C, and AHAs at the pH ranges those actives require.

Preservatives: Hyaluronic acid solutions are an excellent microbial growth medium. Any HA-containing product with a water phase needs adequate preservation — this is one of the places where under-preserving is most dangerous.

Dissolving Tip

For concentrations above 0.5%, sprinkle sodium hyaluronate powder slowly onto the surface of your water phase while stirring — do not dump it in all at once. It clumps and forms a gel skin that can take hours to dissolve if added too fast.

HA in Soap and Anhydrous Formulas

HA does nothing in anhydrous (no-water) formulas — lip balms, body butters, oil serums. It requires water to hydrate and function. Adding it to an anhydrous product wastes material and can introduce undissolved powder into the finished product.

In cold process soap, HA is typically added at trace as a water-phase additive or dissolved in a small amount of distilled water. At typical soap usage rates (0.1–0.5% of total batch weight), any skin benefit is likely washed off in use. The cosmetic claim value is low, but the ingredient is harmless in soap.

Frequently Asked Questions