Alcohol

Average

Emollient

Alcohol description

“Alcohol” refers to a group of organic compounds with a vast range of forms and uses in cosmetics and in other types of products and solutions. For skin, there are good alcohols and bad alcohols, corresponding to high-molecular-weight alcohols and low-molecular-weight alcohols, respectively, which can have emollient properties (cetyl alcohol) or act as detergent cleansing agents like isopropanol. There also are benign forms, including glycols, which are used as humectants to help hydrate and deliver ingredients into skin’s uppermost layers. Alcohols with low molecular weights - the bad-for-skin kind - can be drying and sensitising. The alcohols to be concerned about in skin care products are *ethanol or ethyl alcohol, denatured alcohol, methanol, isopropyl alcohol, SD alcohol, and benzyl alcohol*. The concern is when one or more of these are listed among the main ingredients; tiny amounts in an otherwise good formula aren’t a problem. In addition to being drying and sensitising, these alcohols can disrupt skin’s surface layers. Alcohol helps ingredients like retinol and vitamin C penetrate into the skin more effectively, but it does that by breaking down the surface layers of skin - destroying the very substances that keep your skin feeling healthier and looking younger over the long term. Alcohols like SD and “denatured” immediately harm the skin, starting a chain reaction of damage that continues long after it has evaporated. A 2003 study published found that with regular exposure to alcohol-based products, cleansing becomes a damaging ordeal - skin is no longer able to keep water and cleansing agents from penetrating into it, thus further eroding its surface layers. It also destroyed the substances in skin that help to naturally soothe and defend it against visible effects of environmental damage. If that weren’t bad enough, exposure to alcohol causes healthy substances in skin to literally self-destruct. The research also showed that these destructive, ageing effects on skin’s substances increased the longer the exposure to alcohol; that is, two days of exposure was dramatically more harmful than one day, and that is only from exposure to a 3% concentration (most skin care products with denatured alcohol contain greater amounts than that). In short, for the healthy appearance of skin at any age, avoiding products that contain high amounts of the drying, sensitising types of alcohol is a non-negotiable skin care must.

Alcohol references

  • Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, May 2012, issue 4, page 1410
  • Aging, March 2012, issue 3, pages 166-175
  • Chemical Immunology and Allergy, March 2012, pages 77-80
  • Dermato-Endocrinology, January 2011, issue 1, pages 41-49
  • Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology, November 2008, issue 3
  • Experimental Dermatology, June 2008, issue 6, pages 542-551
  • Clinical Dermatology, September-October 2004, issue 5, pages 360-366
  • The Journal of Hospital Infection, December 2003, issue 4, pages 239-245
  • Alcohol Journal, April 2002, issue 3, pages 179-190

Peer-reviewed, substantiated scientific research is used to assess ingredients in this dictionary. Regulations regarding constraints, permitted concentration levels and availability vary by country and region.

Ingredient ratings

Best

Proven and supported by independent studies. Outstanding active ingredient for most skin types or concerns.

Good

Necessary to improve a formula's texture, stability, or penetration.

Average

Generally non-irritating but may have aesthetic, stability, or other issues that limit its usefulness.

Bad

There is a likelihood of irritation. Risk increases when combined with other problematic ingredients.

Worst

May cause irritation, inflammation, dryness, etc. May offer benefit in some capability but overall, proven to do more harm than good.

unknown

We couldn't find this in our ingredient dictionary. We log all missing ingredients and make continuous updates.

Not rated

We have not yet rated this ingredient because we have not had a chance to review the research on it.