This paper completes previous studies on the phase behaviour and microstructure of the quaternary microemulsion water – cyclohexane – n-octyl-β-D-glucoside (β-C8G1) – geraniol. The properties of this system are almost insensitive to temperature, while they can be tuned easily by adding an alcohol as co-surfactant. The addition of the alcohol changes the composition of the interfacial film, which, in turn, is the tuning parameter for the quaternary system. Studies of the phase behaviour together with SANS and NMR measurements allow drawing a quantitative picture of how the domain size ξ, the curvature H, and the interfacial tension σab depend on the composition of the interfacial film. The SANS data of both oil-in-water and water-in-oil droplet microemulsions recorded near the emulsification failure boundary were evaluated with the Generalised Indirect Fourier Transformation (GIFT), revealing a growth towards cylindrical structures when approaching the respective critical end point. We will show that the general behaviour of ternary and quaternary systems is equal if the appropriate tuning parameters are chosen. In addition, we will show that it is possible to apply the scaling description derived for temperature-dependent ternary systems to composition-dependent quaternary systems: plotting the reduced domain size, the reduced curvature and the reduced interfacial tension against the proper reduced tuning parameter, i.e., either the reduced temperature or the reduced interfacial composition, leads to one master curve for all systems.