Propanediol is a plant-derived-or-synthetic humectant and solvent, often chosen as a gentler-feeling alternative to propylene glycol.
✓ Widely used
The essentials
- A humectant and solvent, often marketed as plant-derived.
- Made by fermenting corn sugar or petrochemically — chemically the same either way.
- Common in “naturally-derived” lubes and skincare.
- Generally well-tolerated.
Function at a glance
| Function | Humectant & solvent |
| Also found in | Skincare, cosmetics |
| Common in | “Naturally-derived” lubes |
| Sensitivity | Generally well-tolerated |
| Free-from option? | See sensitive-skin lube |
Is propanediol safe?
Propanediol is widely used in cosmetics and personal-care products, and regulators permit it (as of 2026). It’s a humectant and solvent, often marketed as plant-derived. It’s generally well-tolerated; as always, individual sensitivity varies — check the label and talk to your doctor with concerns.
Is propanediol natural?
It can be made by fermenting corn sugar or produced petrochemically — and the resulting ingredient is chemically the same either way. “Plant-derived” describes the source, not a different or inherently safer molecule.
Propanediol vs propylene glycol?
They’re closely related. Propanediol (1,3-propanediol) is often chosen as a plant-derived, sometimes gentler-feeling option; propylene glycol (1,2-propanediol) is longer-established and a recognised contact allergen for a small number of people.
Prefer to avoid it? Shop the sensitive skin lube →
The chemistry, for the curious ↓
Sources: 1,3-Propanediol — Wikipedia · 1,3-Propanediol — PubChem
This page gives general information about a cosmetic/personal-care ingredient for education — it is not medical advice, and it is not a statement about the safety, performance, or regulatory clearance of any specific product. Regulatory status and science change over time; this reflects public sources as of 2026. Individual tolerance varies. Properties like pH, osmolality, condom or toy compatibility, and any “fertility-friendly” status are determined by the finished product and its label, not by single ingredients. If you’re pregnant, nursing, have allergies or sensitive skin, or a medical condition, talk to your doctor or pharmacist. Always read the product’s full ingredient list and label. Written in-house from open references (Wikipedia, CC BY-SA; PubChem, public domain). How we research →