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Fragrance ingredients some people react to (the EU requires listing these): Benzyl Alcohol
Will it clash with what you already use? Check it against a routine →
A quick read on the upsides and the watch-outs — each tied to where it comes from.
The ingredients doing the work — the reason you'd buy it.
Every ingredient in label order — what it does, how likely it is to clog pores, and how strong the research is. Expand a row for the plain-words read.
| Ingredient | What it does | Comedogenic | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
3Persea Gratissima OilAvocado oil | Avocado oil; a rich emollient oil.moreAvocado oil, a plant oil from avocado flesh that is high in oleic acid (around 70%) with smaller amounts of palmitic and linoleic acids, plus vitamins A, D, and E and the sterol beta-sitosterol. Full ingredient page → | 3 | limited |
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A lightweight, skin-identical oil that moisturizes without clogging.moreA lightweight, skin-identical emollient oil made by hydrogenating squalene, a lipid our own skin produces in sebum. Full ingredient page → | 1 | limited | |
A fatty acid that thickens and conditions.moreA saturated 18-carbon fatty acid and one of the most common workhorse ingredients in cosmetics, naturally found in skin and in cocoa and shea butter. Full ingredient page → | 2 | limited | |
One of the most reliable moisture-binding ingredients in skincare.moreThe gold-standard humectant in skincare: a small, water-loving (hygroscopic) molecule that is also part of skin's own natural moisturizing factor. Full ingredient page → | 0 | strong | |
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Comedogenic is a 0–5 pore-clogging likelihood — a contested measure, take it lightly. No marker = unremarkable or not yet researched — we never fake a rating.
Prices and availability come from each retailer — they may differ from the average above.
Independent signals from outside beautydew labs — retailer ratings and editorial recognition, each attributed to its source.
Its ingredients appear in 15 peer-reviewed studies we track.Start with Vitamin E →
Cheaper picks and higher-rated alternatives that share the same actives — better picks first.
In label order — earlier usually means more of it. Highlighted names are the evidence-backed actives.
Real experiences from people using this product.