beta-Caryophyllene on your skin: a safety profile
Context-dependentSafety profile for beta-Caryophyllene relevant to people.
What is beta-caryophyllene?
Also known as: Caryophyllene, (-)-trans-Caryophyllene, L-Caryophyllene, trans-beta-caryophyllene.
- CAS number
- 87-44-5
- Molecular formula
- C15H24
- Molecular weight
- 204.35 g/mol
- SMILES
- CC1=CCCC(=C)C2CC(C2CC1)(C)C
- PubChem CID
- 5281515
Risk for people
Context-dependentRegulatory consensus
1 regulatory bodyhas classified beta-Caryophyllene.
| Agency | Year | Classification | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unknown | — | — |
Regulators apply different standards of evidence — animal-data weighting, exposure-pattern assumptions, epidemiological power thresholds — which is why two scientific bodies can review the same data and reach different conclusions. The disagreement is the data.
Where you encounter beta-caryophyllene
- Personal Care — perfume, soap, cosmetics
- Consumer Products — cleaning products, candles
Safer alternatives
Lower-risk approaches that achieve a similar outcome to beta-Caryophyllene:
-
Lower-sensitization structural analog; Unscented formulation
Trade-offs: Eliminates allergen risk entirely; consumer acceptance varies (some associate scent with cleanliness/efficacy); growing market segment; regulatory advantage in EU (no IFRA compliance needed).Relative cost: 1.2-2×
Frequently asked questions
What products contain beta-caryophyllene?
beta-Caryophyllene appears in: perfume (Personal care); soap (Personal care); cleaning products (Consumer products); candles (Consumer products).
See beta-Caryophyllene in the body app
Look up products containing beta-caryophyllene, compare to alternatives, and explore the full data record.
Open in body View raw API dataSources (1)
- PubChem (2026) — database
Reference data, not professional advice. Aggregates publicly available regulatory and scientific data; not a substitute for veterinary, medical, legal, or regulatory advice. Why we built ALETHEIA →