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The ingredients most likely to break you out

If you have spent any time on skincare forums, you have seen the lists: coconut oil is comedogenic 4 out of 5, isopropyl myristate is a 5, lanolin is a 4 to 5, fragrance ruins everything. The lists are not exactly wrong, but they are not exactly right either. Comedogenicity ratings come from a 1972 rabbit ear assay, concentration matters enormously, and a 5 out of 5 ingredient at 0.1% in a great formula may sit on your skin without incident.

The honest answer is that "pore-clogging" is a category bigger than comedogenic ratings alone. Ingredients can worsen breakouts in three different ways: by physically clogging follicles, by feeding the malassezia yeast that drives fungal acne, or by damaging your barrier so badly that your skin overreacts. The eight ingredients in this guide are the ones most often implicated in research and dermatology clinics, with the strongest mechanistic case for why they are worth watching.

What follows is a tour of the comedogenicity scale, the three ways an ingredient can worsen acne, and short profiles of the eight ingredients you will see most often in cautionary lists. Each profile points to a deeper article so you can decide whether the ingredient is worth eliminating from your own routine, and at the end you will see how ClearSkin turns this from a guessing game into a personal correlation.

How comedogenic ratings actually work

0 to 5
Kligman and Fulton's 1972 comedogenicity scale, originally tested on rabbit ears, not human skin

The comedogenicity scale most skincare guides reference traces back to a 1972 paper by Albert Kligman and James Fulton, the dermatologists who developed the rabbit ear assay. They applied concentrated ingredients to the inner ear of New Zealand white rabbits, waited two weeks, then biopsied the follicles to score how many microcomedones had formed. Each ingredient got a rating from 0 (no comedones) to 5 (severe follicular plugging). The list became the foundation for nearly every "comedogenic ingredient" chart you see today.

The rabbit ear model was useful for its time, but it has serious limitations. Rabbit follicles are far more sensitive than human follicles. The test was usually run at 100% concentration, which almost no real product contains. It ignored vehicle effects: the same ingredient behaves differently in a water-based serum versus an occlusive balm. And it ignored individual variation entirely. Two humans can use the same product and get opposite results, because pore size, sebum chemistry, and microbiome composition all differ.

Modern dermatology treats comedogenicity ratings as a starting hypothesis, not a verdict. A 5 out of 5 ingredient at 0.1% buried in a thoughtful formula can be fine. A 2 out of 5 ingredient at 25% in an occlusive cream can absolutely break you out. The label "non-comedogenic" on a finished product is not regulated in the United States, so it carries no guarantee. The most reliable way to know whether an ingredient is a problem for you is still to track your routine and your skin together over time, which is exactly what this guide is built around.

Journal of the Society of Cosmetic Chemists, 1972
Kligman and Fulton, the original rabbit ear assay that produced the comedogenicity scale still cited today
Read the study

Three ways an ingredient can worsen acne

Most "pore-clogging" lists conflate three very different mechanisms. Untangling them helps you read ingredient labels more usefully and avoid eliminating ingredients that are not actually your problem.

The first mechanism is direct comedogenicity. The ingredient sits in the follicle and physically blocks normal sebum flow, which lets dead skin and oil pile up behind it. Classic offenders here are isopropyl myristate, lanolin, coconut oil, and certain heavy butters. These tend to score high on the rabbit ear assay because the assay specifically measures follicular plugging.

The second mechanism is fungal-acne feeding. Malassezia is a yeast that lives on everyone's skin, and under the right conditions it overgrows inside follicles and produces the small uniform bumps people call fungal acne or pityrosporum folliculitis. Malassezia metabolizes specific fatty acids with carbon chains between roughly C11 and C24. Ingredients that supply these substrates (coconut oil and its derivatives, algae extract, many essential oils, fatty acid esters) can feed a malassezia bloom even though the ingredient itself does not directly clog follicles.

The third mechanism is barrier damage and irritation. When a cleanser, solvent, or fragrance compromises your stratum corneum, your skin enters a state of low-grade inflammation. Inflamed skin overproduces sebum, sheds keratinocytes irregularly, and is far more vulnerable to comedone formation. Sodium lauryl sulfate, denatured alcohol, fragrance, and some essential oils sit in this category. They do not clog pores directly, but they create the conditions where pores clog more easily. Knowing which mechanism you are dealing with changes how you fix it.

The 8 ingredients to watch

C11 to C24
The fatty acid chain-length range that feeds malassezia, the yeast behind fungal acne

What follows is a short profile of each of the eight ingredients most often flagged in research, dermatology textbooks, and patch-test data. Each one has its own deep-dive article on this site if you want the full mechanism, the studies, and the substitution options.

1. Fragrance (parfum)

Fragrance is not a single ingredient, it is a regulatory category that can hide dozens of individual aroma chemicals behind a single label. The North American Contact Dermatitis Group has consistently ranked fragrance mix as one of the top cosmetic allergens, and a meaningful share of "sensitive skin" reactions trace back to it. Fragrance does not directly clog pores, it works through the third mechanism, barrier damage and inflammation. Repeated exposure can cause low-grade contact dermatitis that looks like adult acne, redness, and uneven texture. It hides in moisturizers, cleansers, sunscreens, and even products labeled "unscented" (which often use masking fragrance to cover raw-ingredient odor). If you are trying to stabilize a reactive skin barrier, fragrance-free is the cleanest baseline. Read more: /fragrance-and-acne

2. Coconut oil

Coconut oil is the textbook example of why ingredient lists alone do not tell the whole story. It is rated 4 out of 5 on the comedogenicity scale, and its dominant fatty acid (lauric acid, C12) is a known substrate for malassezia, which means it can hit you through both mechanism one (direct comedogenicity) and mechanism two (fungal-acne feeding). It became popular as a "natural" face oil and oil cleanser, and it lives on in lip balms, body butters, hair masks that drip onto the back, and "clean beauty" makeup removers. People with oily, acne-prone, or fungal-acne-prone skin almost universally do worse with coconut oil on the face. People with very dry skin sometimes tolerate it body-only without issue. Read more: /coconut-oil-and-acne

3. Isopropyl myristate

Isopropyl myristate (IPM) is one of the few ingredients that scored a clean 5 out of 5 on the original Kligman assay. It is an ester of isopropyl alcohol and myristic acid, used as an emollient and penetration enhancer because it has a very light, dry, silky finish. That same property is what makes it a problem: it slips into follicles easily and is highly comedogenic at typical use concentrations. You will find it hiding in lightweight moisturizers, primers, sunscreens (especially the cosmetically elegant ones), and pre-shave oils. The "-myristate" suffix is the giveaway, and so are its cousins isopropyl palmitate, isopropyl isostearate, and myristyl myristate, which behave similarly. Read more: /isopropyl-myristate-and-acne

4. Algae extract

Algae extract is the surprise entry on most fungal-acne sufferers' avoidance lists. It rarely shows up on traditional comedogenicity charts because it does not directly plug follicles. The problem is mechanism two: many algae extracts and seaweed-derived ingredients carry fatty acids in the C11 to C24 range that malassezia metabolizes, plus traces of free fatty acids from cell-wall lipids. It is increasingly common in "clean," "marine," and "hydrating" skincare, especially serums and sheet masks marketed for plumping or barrier repair. If you have small uniform bumps on the forehead, chest, or hairline that do not respond to benzoyl peroxide, an algae extract in your routine is worth investigating. Read more: /algae-extract-and-fungal-acne

5. Sodium lauryl sulfate

Sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) is a sulfate surfactant prized for producing thick, satisfying foam. It is also one of the most thoroughly documented barrier-disrupting ingredients in dermatology. It is the standard positive control in irritancy patch tests, which is to say, researchers literally use it as the benchmark for "this irritates skin." On the face, SLS is a mechanism-three ingredient: it strips intercellular lipids, raises transepidermal water loss, and primes skin for inflammation. It is most common in foaming face washes, shampoos that drip down the face and back, and toothpaste (a frequent trigger of perioral dermatitis). The closely related sodium laureth sulfate (SLES) is gentler but still worth noting. Read more: /sodium-lauryl-sulfate-and-acne

6. Lanolin

Lanolin is the waxy substance secreted by sheep to waterproof their wool, and humans have been smearing it on skin for centuries because it is an exceptional emollient and humectant. It is also rated 4 to 5 out of 5 for comedogenicity, and the North American Contact Dermatitis Group has tracked it as a top-tier contact allergen for decades, particularly in atopic patients. Modern "purified" lanolin is somewhat better tolerated than older grades, but it still triggers breakouts and rashes in a non-trivial percentage of users. It is most often encountered in lip balms (where lip-area cystic acne is the giveaway), nipple creams, hand and foot balms, and "natural" multipurpose ointments. Read more: /lanolin-and-acne

7. Essential oils

Essential oils are concentrated plant aromatics, and their reputation in skincare oscillates between miracle and menace. The reality is mixed. Tea tree oil at low concentrations has decent evidence for inflammatory acne. Most others (lavender, peppermint, citrus, rose, ylang ylang, eucalyptus) are at best neutral and at worst significantly irritating. Citrus oils contain furocoumarins that cause photosensitization, which means sun exposure after application can trigger a burn-like reaction or persistent hyperpigmentation. Many essential oils also carry fatty acids that feed malassezia, so they hit through both mechanism two and mechanism three. They are common in "natural" and "aromatherapy" skincare, deodorants, and DIY recipes. Read more: /essential-oils-and-acne

8. Alcohol denat

This is where ingredient literacy matters most, because not all "alcohol" is the same thing. Denatured alcohol (also called alcohol denat, SD alcohol, or ethanol) is the drying kind: small-molecule solvents that flash off the skin and take water and lipid with them. They are often used to make a product feel light and fast-absorbing, especially in toners, gel sunscreens, mists, and astringents. Used heavily, they damage the barrier and trigger mechanism three. The fatty alcohols (cetyl alcohol, stearyl alcohol, cetearyl alcohol, behenyl alcohol) are completely different. They are waxy emollients used to thicken and stabilize moisturizers, and they are not drying or comedogenic for most people. If your sunscreen lists "alcohol denat" in the top five and your skin has been getting tight and reactive, that is your prime suspect. Read more: /alcohol-denat-and-acne

How to read an ingredient list

Ingredient lists in the United States and EU are sorted by concentration down to about 1%, after which the order is flexible. That means the top five ingredients matter far more than the bottom twenty, both for what is helping you and for what might be hurting you. A comedogenic ingredient at position 23 in a serum is rarely the source of your breakouts. The same ingredient at position 3 in a moisturizer is a different conversation.

Skim the top five entries first. Watch for "fragrance" or "parfum" near the top, which signals a heavily scented formula even if the marketing says "lightly scented." Watch for "alcohol denat," "SD alcohol 40," or "ethanol" near the top, which signals a drying base. Watch for ingredient names ending in "-myristate," "-palmitate," "-stearate," "-isostearate," and "-oleate," which are fatty acid esters that often score moderately to highly comedogenic. Watch for any oil whose name you recognize from the comedogenic lists (coconut, cocoa butter, shea, wheat germ, flaxseed) appearing in the top portion of the list.

Conversely, do not panic over fatty alcohols. Cetyl, stearyl, cetearyl, and behenyl alcohol are waxy thickeners, not solvents, and they are well tolerated by most acne-prone skin. Do not panic over "alcohol" appearing inside a longer ingredient name (benzyl alcohol, phenoxyethanol) at the bottom of a list, those are preservatives at small concentrations. And do not assume "non-comedogenic" on the front of the bottle has been verified by anyone, the term is not regulated in the United States. Fungal-acne-safe ingredient checkers exist online and are useful as a starting filter if you suspect malassezia involvement, but no list replaces tracking your own skin's response.

How to track ingredients in ClearSkin

Generic comedogenicity charts answer a generic question: across a population of rabbit ears in 1972, did this ingredient produce follicular plugging? The question you actually want answered is different: across the past three months of your specific routine, your specific stress and sleep, and your specific skin, which ingredients line up with your breakouts? That is a correlation problem, and the only way to solve it is with day-by-day data on what you used and how your skin responded.

ClearSkin is built around exactly this loop. You log every product in your routine and the ingredients in each product (you can scan a barcode where supported, or paste an INCI list, or pick from existing entries). Each day you log skin status: new lesions, location, redness, oiliness, any inflammation. You also log the things that interact with skin from the inside: sleep, stress, diet, cycle phase, supplements. Everything stays on your device. There is no account, no cloud, no telemetry, no ad targeting, and no paywall.

What you get back is a personal correlation map. If isopropyl myristate appears in three products in your current routine and your jawline lesions cluster in the days after you use those products, ClearSkin shows you that pattern. If you stop using a product and the bumps fade over the next three weeks, the timeline makes that obvious. The point is not to demonize any single ingredient, formulators put isopropyl myristate or coconut oil in products for real reasons, and plenty of people tolerate them well. The point is to stop arguing with rabbits from 1972 and start listening to your own skin. Most users find their first ingredient-level insight within two to three weeks of consistent logging.

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Key takeaways

1

The comedogenicity scale (0 to 5) comes from a 1972 rabbit ear assay by Kligman and Fulton, useful as a starting hypothesis but not a verdict on human skin.

2

Ingredients can worsen acne in three distinct ways: direct follicular plugging, feeding malassezia (fungal acne), or damaging the barrier and driving inflammation.

3

The eight ingredients most often flagged are fragrance, coconut oil, isopropyl myristate, algae extract, sodium lauryl sulfate, lanolin, essential oils, and alcohol denat.

4

Concentration and position on the ingredient list matter enormously: a problem ingredient at position 3 is very different from the same ingredient at position 23.

5

Drying alcohols (alcohol denat, SD alcohol, ethanol) are not the same as fatty alcohols (cetyl, stearyl, cetearyl), the second group is waxy and well tolerated.

6

The most reliable test is your own routine over time, ClearSkin correlates the ingredients in your products with your daily skin status to surface what your skin specifically reacts to.

Frequently asked questions

Are comedogenic ratings reliable?

Comedogenic ratings are useful as a starting hypothesis, but they are not a verdict. The ratings most lists reference come from a 1972 rabbit ear assay developed by Kligman and Fulton. Rabbit follicles are far more sensitive than human follicles, the test was usually run at 100% concentration (almost no real product contains an ingredient at 100%), and the assay ignored vehicle effects, formulation, and individual variation.

Modern dermatology treats the ratings as a flag to investigate, not as a diagnosis. A 5 out of 5 ingredient at 0.1% in a thoughtful formula can be fine for most people. A 2 out of 5 ingredient at 25% in an occlusive cream can absolutely cause breakouts. The most reliable signal is whether your own skin responds badly when you use a product containing the ingredient, which is what daily ingredient and skin tracking is designed to surface.

Does "non-comedogenic" on a label mean anything?

In the United States, the term "non-comedogenic" is not regulated by the FDA. Any brand can put it on any product. There is no required testing protocol, no third-party verification, and no enforcement. Some brands use the term responsibly, screening their formulas against known comedogenic ingredients and avoiding problem combinations. Other brands use it as marketing language with no internal testing.

This does not mean every "non-comedogenic" claim is empty, but it does mean the label cannot be your only filter. Read the actual ingredient list, focus on the top five entries, and pay attention to how your skin responds over the first two to four weeks of use. That last step is where personal tracking becomes more reliable than any label.

Can I just avoid all the ingredients on this list?

You can, but for most people it is overkill and it makes shopping unnecessarily painful. The eight ingredients in this guide are the ones with the strongest mechanistic case for being worth watching, but only some of them will actually be a problem for any given person. Plenty of people use products containing isopropyl myristate or coconut oil with no issue at all.

A more proportionate approach is to start with the lowest-cost eliminations: fragrance and alcohol denat are easy to avoid and benefit almost everyone with reactive skin. If your acne pattern fits fungal acne (small uniform bumps, often on forehead or chest), eliminating coconut oil, algae extract, and essential oils is a high-yield next step. For the rest, track your routine and your skin in ClearSkin and let the correlations show you which ingredients are your specific problem instead of guessing.

What is the difference between comedogenic and fungal-acne triggers?

They are two different mechanisms with two different fixes. Comedogenic ingredients physically clog follicles. Sebum and dead skin pile up behind the plug, eventually forming a comedone (whitehead or blackhead) that may or may not become inflamed. Classic comedogens include isopropyl myristate, lanolin, and coconut oil.

Fungal-acne triggers (also called pityrosporum folliculitis triggers) feed malassezia, a yeast that already lives on your skin. Malassezia metabolizes fatty acids with carbon chains roughly C11 to C24. When products supply those substrates, the yeast overgrows in follicles and produces small, uniform, often itchy bumps that look like acne but do not respond to benzoyl peroxide or salicylic acid. Fungal acne responds to antifungals (zinc pyrithione, ketoconazole, sulfur) and to removing the substrates from your routine. Some ingredients (coconut oil) hit both mechanisms, which is why they show up on both kinds of avoidance list.

How long until I see results from removing an ingredient?

Plan for four to eight weeks before drawing a conclusion. Existing inflamed lesions need time to resolve on their own (typically two to four weeks for a moderate papule, longer for cystic lesions), and your follicles need time to clear the backlog of microcomedones that were already forming when you stopped using the product. If you stop today, do not expect a transformation by Friday.

The cleanest way to test an elimination is to remove one ingredient at a time, hold the rest of your routine constant, and track daily for at least a month. ClearSkin's timeline lets you compare the four weeks before the change to the four weeks after, side by side, with your own skin data. If a clear improvement is going to show up, you will see it in that window. If the timeline is flat, the ingredient was probably not your trigger and the next candidate is worth testing.

Stop guessing. Start tracking.

ClearSkin logs every product, every ingredient, and every breakout, then shows you which ingredients in your real routine line up with your real skin.

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