Water Activity and Preservation
Why Every Water-Containing Product Needs a Preservative
What Water Activity Actually Measures
Water activity (aw) is not the same as water content. It measures how available the water in a product is for chemical reactions and biological processes — including microbial growth. Pure water has an aw of 1.0. Completely dry ingredients sit near 0.
Two products can have identical water content but very different water activity. A saturated salt solution is about 75% water, but its aw is roughly 0.75 — the salt binds the water molecules and makes them unavailable to microorganisms. A plain lotion with 75% water has an aw of approximately 0.98.
This distinction matters because microorganisms do not care how much water is present in total — they need free water to survive and reproduce.
Microbial Growth Thresholds
| Microorganism Type | Minimum aw for Growth | Implication for Formulas |
|---|---|---|
| Most bacteria (Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus) | ≥ 0.90 | Standard lotion (aw ~0.97) fully supports growth |
| Gram-positive bacteria (Bacillus, Listeria) | ≥ 0.93 | Still active in most emulsions |
| Yeast (Candida, Saccharomyces) | ≥ 0.87 | Grows in products that bacteria cannot |
| Mold (Aspergillus, Penicillium) | ≥ 0.70–0.80 | Can survive in relatively dry products |
| Xerophilic molds | ≥ 0.60 | Edge cases: high-sugar scrubs, thick pastes |
A typical O/W lotion sits at aw 0.95–0.99. Without a preservative, it fully supports all three categories of microorganism.
Products by Water Activity Risk
High Risk — aw 0.90 to 1.0
Moderate Risk — aw 0.75 to 0.90
Low Risk — aw below 0.70
No Risk — aw ≈ 0
The Glycerin Myth
One of the most common misconceptions in DIY cosmetics is that adding enough glycerin will eliminate the need for a preservative. The idea has some theoretical basis — glycerin binds water molecules and can reduce aw — but the reality of cosmetic usage rates makes it irrelevant in practice.
The numbers don't work out
The same applies to honey, sorbitol, panthenol, hyaluronic acid, and other humectants. They are not preservation systems. They are conditioning agents.
Hidden Water Sources
Even if you do not add water directly, these ingredients bring water activity with them:
- Aloe vera juice or gel (typically 99%+ water)
- Hydrosols and floral waters (distillate, not oil)
- Water-soluble botanical extracts (glycerin or water-based)
- Commercially prepared aloe gels that contain water as a carrier
- Raw honey (aw ~0.6; processed honey can be lower)
- Fresh botanical infusions made with water
Pro Tip
Reducing Water Activity in Practice
There are legitimate ways to formulate at lower water activity — but they come with trade-offs:
| Method | How It Works | Trade-Off |
|---|---|---|
| High alcohol content (15%+) | Alcohol disrupts microbial cell membranes | Drying, strong scent, not suitable for sensitive skin |
| Saturated salt or sugar | Ions bind available water | Residue, tackiness, pH effects |
| Very high humectant (30%+) | Binds water molecules | Tacky feel, not cosmetically pleasant |
| Reduce water phase significantly | Less water = lower aw | Changed product texture and performance |
| Use anhydrous base entirely | No water = aw ≈ 0 | Different product category, different texture |
For most formulas targeting a lotion, cream, serum, or toner finish, none of these approaches are practical. A preservative is by far the simplest, most effective, and most cosmetically elegant solution.
Anhydrous Products: Different Rules
A product made entirely from oils, waxes, and butters — with no water-containing ingredient — has a water activity near zero. Microorganisms cannot survive without water, so these products do not need antimicrobial preservatives.
What they do need is an antioxidant. Oils rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) — like rosehip, hemp, and flaxseed — oxidize quickly when exposed to light and air. Vitamin E (tocopherol), rosemary oleoresin extract (ROE), and mixed tocopherols slow this process.
Antioxidants ≠ Preservatives
