Active Ingredient

Beste

New ingredients

Active Ingredient at a glance

  • Regulated ingredients approved to perform a specific drug- or drug-like skin care function
  • Listed with their concentration and a short description of how they work
  • Must also be accompanied by instructions detailing how to apply
  • Examples include benzoyl peroxide and salicylic acid for acne

Active Ingredient description

The United States Food and Drug Administration defines an active ingredient as “any component that provides pharmacological activity or other direct effect in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or to affect the structure or any function of the body of man or animals.” In skin care, actives are indicated on the product’s label and must be approved to perform a specific drug- or drug-like function. Examples include titanium dioxide and other UV filters for sun protection and benzoyl peroxide or salicylic acid for acne. In essence, these are regulated ingredients that have active functionality to prevent, heal or improve a specific present or future (think sunburn) condition Active ingredients are listed with their concentration and a short description of how they work in a product. Active ingredients must also be accompanied by instructions detailing how and how often the product that contains them should be applied. The “inactive” ingredients that make up the rest of a skin care formulas aren’t really inactive per se, as they provide support for the active ingredient or lend cosmetic functions to the formula. Additionally, you may hear someone refer to powerful ingredients in their skin care products as “active” or “bio-active”—however this is a subjective and interpretational way of describing ingredient efficacy or potency. This verbiage is not the same thing as the regulated term. Note: Outside of the U.S., definitions of active ingredients vary by each country’s regulatory criteria.

Active Ingredient references

  • FDA.gov, Accessed June 2022, ePublication

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.

Beoordelingen van ingrediënten

Beste

Bewezen en ondersteund door onafhankelijk onderzoek. Uitstekend actief ingrediënt voor de meeste huidtypen of huidproblemen.

Goed

Noodzakelijk om de textuur, stabiliteit of doordringbaarheid van een formule te verbeteren.

Gemiddeld

Doorgaans niet-irriterend maar kan esthetische, stabiliteits- of andere problemen hebben die het nut ervan beperken.

Slecht

De kans op irritatie is aanwezig. Het risico wordt vergroot als het gecombineerd wordt met andere problematische ingrediënten.

Slechtste

Kan irritatie, ontsteking, droogheid, enz. veroorzaken. Kan in sommige gevallen voordelen bieden, maar over het algemeen is bewezen dat het meer kwaad dan goed doet.

onbekend

We konden dit niet vinden in onze Ingredient Dictionary. We registreren alle ontbrekende ingrediënten en werken ze regelmatig bij.

Geen beoordeling

We hebben dit ingrediënt nog niet beoordeeld omdat we het onderzoek ernaar nog niet hebben bekeken.