Overview #
Cleanser formulation looks straightforward until it isn’t. We get more troubleshooting calls on cleansers than on any other category — more than serums, more than sunscreens. The failure modes are predictable, but they keep catching brands off guard because most of the problems don’t show up until scale-up or after six months on shelf. This guide covers the five failures we see most often, what’s actually causing them, and how we fix them.
The Five Failure Modes: Root Cause, Diagnosis, and Fix #
Before we go deep on each one, here’s the summary table. We’ll unpack each row below.
| Failure Mode | Root Cause | Diagnostic Test | Corrective Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase separation / emulsion break | Surfactant HLB mismatch or electrolyte sensitivity | Centrifuge at 3000 rpm / 30 min; visual phase split | Rebalance HLB to 10–12 range; reduce salt load |
| Viscosity drift (too thin or gelling) | Carbomer over-neutralization or salt interference | Brookfield viscosity at 25°C, T=0 vs. T=4 weeks | Adjust NaOH titration to pH 5.8–6.2; switch to HPMC |
| Microbial failure (OOS at PCT) | Preservative depletion by surfactant micelles | ISO 11930 challenge test at week 4 and week 8 | Increase phenoxyethanol to 0.8–1.0%; add chelator |
| Foam collapse or over-foam | Incorrect SCI/SLES ratio or hard water interaction | Ross-Miles foam test; 300 ppm hardness water | Reformulate SCI:SLES to 1:3 ratio; add betaine 3–5% |
| Skin barrier disruption (consumer complaints) | Surfactant irritation at pH > 6.5 or high SLES load | TEWL measurement; patch test panel (n≥20) | Lower pH to 5.0–5.5; replace partial SLES with APG |
Failure 1: Phase Separation #
This one usually surfaces at the 200 kg batch stage. At 5 kg lab scale, the emulsion looks fine. You get to production, the mixing shear profile changes, and by week 3 of stability you’re looking at a clear oil ring sitting on top of the product.
The root cause is almost always HLB mismatch. We formulate with a target HLB of 10–12 for oil-in-water cleansing emulsions. When a brand asks us to add a new emollient — say, a high-MW silicone or a plant-derived ester — without adjusting the emulsifier blend, the system tips. The other thing we see is electrolyte sensitivity. Some surfactant systems, particularly ether sulfates, are extremely sensitive to sodium chloride. A salt load above 1.5% can destabilize the lamellar structure entirely.
Diagnostic is simple: centrifuge at 3000 rpm for 30 minutes. If you see phase separation, you have your answer before committing to a full stability run.
Fix: rebalance the emulsifier HLB, reduce any incidental salt from raw material impurities, and if you’re using a fragrance with ionic components, test it in isolation first. We’ve rejected fragrance submissions from three different suppliers in the past two years specifically because of electrolyte load.
Failure 2: Viscosity Drift #
Carbomer-thickened cleansers are the worst offenders here. The system is pH-sensitive by design — that’s how it works — but it means a 0.2-unit pH shift can drop viscosity by 30–40%. We’ve seen batches leave the line at 18,000 cP and arrive at the brand’s warehouse at 9,000 cP six weeks later.
Why does pH drift? Usually CO₂ absorption from the headspace, or a slow reaction between the carbomer and a cationic ingredient that wasn’t caught in compatibility screening. Sometimes it’s just over-neutralization at the batch level — the operator adds NaOH too fast and overshoots.
Our target for carbomer-based cleansers is pH 5.8–6.2, neutralized slowly with 18% NaOH solution, not 30%. We measure viscosity at 25°C using a Brookfield RV spindle 6 at 10 rpm. If T=0 and T=4 weeks diverge by more than 15%, we investigate before releasing.
For brands that want a more robust system, we often switch to HPMC or a combination of xanthan and hydroxyethylcellulose. Less elegant rheology, but it doesn’t care about pH.
Failure 3: Microbial Failure #
Honestly, this is the one that surprises brands the most. They see phenoxyethanol at 0.8% on the formula and assume it’s fine. It’s not always fine.
The problem is micellar sequestration. Surfactant micelles — especially at concentrations above 10% total surfactant — can encapsulate phenoxyethanol and reduce its free aqueous concentration to below the minimum inhibitory level. The preservative is there on paper. It’s just not available where the bacteria are.
We ran into this on a foaming cleanser brief two years ago. Worked fine at 500 g lab scale. At 200 kg production, gram-negative organisms appeared at week 8 of preservative challenge testing. Same formula, same raw materials. The difference was mixing time — longer mixing at scale increased micelle formation and depleted free preservative faster than we expected.
The fix has two parts. First, increase phenoxyethanol to 0.8–1.0% and add a chelator — EDTA at 0.1% or sodium phytate if you’re going clean label. Second, run your ISO 11930 challenge test at both week 4 and week 8, not just at the end. The early time point catches depletion curves before they become a regulatory problem. EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 requires Category 2 preservation criteria for rinse-off products — that’s your minimum bar.
Failure 4: Foam Performance Issues #
Foam is emotional for consumers. Too little and they think the product isn’t working. Too much and it’s hard to rinse, leaves a film, and you get complaints about tightness. Both failure modes come from the same place: the SCI/SLES ratio and water hardness interaction.
Sodium cocoyl isethionate (SCI) gives dense, creamy foam. Sodium laureth sulfate (SLES) gives volume. The ratio matters enormously. We target SCI:SLES at roughly 1:3 for a balanced foam profile. Shift that to 1:5 and you get high volume, poor creaminess, and a foam that collapses in hard water. Shift to 1:1 and you get a paste that barely lathers.
Hard water is the variable most brands forget. A consumer in London is washing with 300–400 ppm calcium carbonate equivalent. That’s enough to precipitate calcium soap from fatty acid-based surfactants and kill your foam entirely. We test all foam systems using the Ross-Miles method at both 0 ppm and 300 ppm hardness water. If the 300 ppm result drops below 60% of the 0 ppm result, we reformulate.
Adding cocamidopropyl betaine at 3–5% stabilizes foam across hardness ranges and improves skin feel. It’s not cheap, but it’s the right call.
Failure 5: Skin Barrier Disruption #
This is usually where projects go sideways after launch, not before. The formula passes stability, passes safety assessment, ships — and then the brand starts getting returns and one-star reviews about tight, dry skin.
The root cause is almost always pH. Skin surface pH sits at 4.5–5.5. A cleanser at pH 6.5 or above disrupts the acid mantle and activates serine proteases that degrade the barrier. SLES is the main irritation driver at high concentrations, but pH amplifies it significantly. We’ve seen formulas with identical surfactant loads perform completely differently just by adjusting pH from 6.8 down to 5.2.
One clinical reference worth knowing: a randomized controlled trial (n=60, 4 weeks) comparing a pH 5.5 syndet bar against a conventional soap at pH 9.5 showed a 47% reduction in TEWL increase in the syndet group. That’s a dramatic difference, and it’s driven almost entirely by pH, not surfactant chemistry. The SCCS Scientific Opinion on surfactant safety reinforces this — irritation potential is concentration- and pH-dependent, not just ingredient-dependent.
Our corrective action: lower the formula pH to 5.0–5.5 using citric acid, and replace 20–30% of the SLES load with alkyl polyglucoside (APG). APG is milder, pH-stable, and increasingly preferred by clean beauty brands. It costs more — roughly 1.4× the raw material cost of SLES — but the consumer experience difference is real.
For brands building sensitive skin or barrier-repair positioning, we always recommend pairing the cleanser with a compatible moisturizer brief. See our work on barrier-repair formulation for how we approach the full regimen.
Where Most Brands Get This Wrong #
The single biggest mistake we see is treating cleanser development as a low-complexity brief. “It’s just a cleanser” is something we hear regularly. Then the brand is surprised when the foam doesn’t perform in hard water markets, or when the preservative fails in a high-surfactant system, or when consumers in humid climates report viscosity changes.
Cleansers are actually one of the harder formulation categories because you’re balancing five competing variables simultaneously: foam, viscosity, preservation, skin feel, and stability. Change one and you usually move two others. That’s why we require a full compatibility matrix before finalizing any cleanser formula — not just a basic stability run.
The other thing brands underestimate is packaging interaction. A foaming pump with a tight dip tube can shear a carbomer network over time. We’ve seen viscosity drop 25% in foaming pump formats versus the same formula in a tube, purely from mechanical shear during dispensing. Test your formula in the final packaging, not in a jar.
For brands working on acne-targeting cleansers, the pH and surfactant decisions intersect with active ingredient stability in ways that need separate attention — our acid exfoliation formulation guide covers how we handle salicylic acid and AHA stability in rinse-off formats.
Regulatory compliance adds another layer. The FDA Cosmetics Guidelines and NMPA Cosmetic Regulation both have specific requirements for rinse-off product safety substantiation that differ from leave-on products. If you’re launching in multiple markets simultaneously, your safety dossier needs to address both, and the preservative efficacy requirements are not identical.
Formulation Notes for Brand Partners #
What market? What are you expecting on-pack? Those are the first two questions we ask on every cleanser brief, because the answers change almost every decision downstream.
A foaming gel for the US mass market needs to perform in hard water, survive a 12-month shelf life at ambient conditions, and hit a cost target that works at MOQ 3,000 units. A pH-balanced syndet bar for a European sensitive skin brand has a completely different constraint set — EU regulatory scrutiny on preservatives is tighter, the foam expectation is different, and the packaging format changes the stability profile entirely.
Tell us your target pH range upfront. If you want to make a “gentle” or “barrier-safe” claim, we need to be at pH 5.0–5.5, and that constrains your preservative options. If you want high foam, we need to know your target water hardness market. If you’re adding an active — niacinamide, salicylic acid, a peptide — tell us at brief stage, not after the base formula is locked.
Airless packaging for a cleanser adds $0.40–$0.80 per unit at MOQ 1,000. Most brands don’t need it for a rinse-off product. We’ll tell you if we think you do.
We can usually turn around a first prototype in 3–4 weeks from brief confirmation. Stability data to support a 24-month shelf life claim takes a minimum of 6 months of accelerated testing under ICH Stability Guidelines protocols. Plan accordingly.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q: Our cleanser passed stability at lab scale but failed microbial challenge at production. What happened?
Almost certainly micellar sequestration of your preservative — we see this constantly at high surfactant loads above 10%. Run your ISO 11930 challenge test at week 4 and week 8 on production-scale batches, not just lab batches. Add EDTA at 0.1% as a chelator and retest.
Q: We want a “sulfate-free” cleanser that still foams well — is that actually achievable?
Yes, but you’re paying for it. A sodium cocoyl glutamate and APG base can hit 80–90% of the foam volume of an SLES system, but raw material cost is roughly 2× higher. Betaine at 4–5% helps close the gap. Don’t expect identical performance — be honest with your marketing team about what “sulfate-free foam” actually delivers.
Q: How low can we go on pH for a foaming cleanser?
We don’t go below pH 4.5 for a foaming cleanser. Below that, most anionic surfactants start to lose charge and foam performance drops sharply. The sweet spot for skin compatibility and foam performance is pH 5.0–5.5. Drop below pH 3.5 and you’re in regulatory grey territory in the EU for rinse-off products.
Q: Can we add 2% niacinamide to a foaming cleanser and claim brightening benefits?
Technically yes, but we’re skeptical of the efficacy claim for a rinse-off format. Contact time is typically 30–60 seconds. Most of the clinical evidence for niacinamide at 2–5% is from leave-on formats with hours of skin contact. We’ll formulate it if you want it, but we’ll tell you the same thing we’re telling you now.
Q: What’s the minimum order quantity for a custom cleanser formula?
Our standard MOQ for a custom cleanser is 500 kg per batch, which typically yields 1,000–3,000 units depending on fill weight. For pilot batches during development, we run 50 kg minimum. Packaging tooling costs are separate and depend on format — a custom tube mold runs $2,000–$5,000 one-time.
Have a product concept in mind? Contact our formulation team to request a complimentary brief review.
© 2026 Mastracare.com. All rights reserved.
Unauthorized reproduction or distribution is prohibited.