Ancient baobab silhouetted against a Limpopo sunset.
← Glossary indigenous Adansonia Digitata Seed Oil

Baobab

Adansonia digitata

Cold-pressed, fatty-acid balanced, vitamin E rich carrier oil

The baobab tree (Adansonia digitata) is one of the most distinctive plants of the African savannah, with a thickset trunk that can store thousands of litres of water. The seeds inside the fruit yield an oil with an unusually balanced fatty acid profile and high vitamin E content.

Baobab seed pod cracked open — powdery white pulp surrounding dark seeds.

Baobabs live for thousands of years. The largest known specimens in Limpopo are over 1,000 years old. The trees are protected by both customary law and South African environmental legislation; only fallen or shed material can be commercially harvested.

The science

Baobab oil's fatty acid profile is roughly 30–40% oleic, 25–30% linoleic, 20–25% palmitic, with smaller fractions of stearic and arachidic acids. The balance between oleic (slip and softness) and linoleic (essential fatty acid for skin barrier) makes it complementary to oleic-dominant oils like marula. Vitamin E content is naturally high (up to 800 mg/kg), providing intrinsic oxidative stability.

Botanical illustration of baobab — Adansonia digitata.
Botanical illustration · Adansonia digitata
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