Is Coconut butter comedogenic?

Coconut butter received a 4 in Fulton’s historical table, but the record should not be silently substituted for every coconut-derived ingredient.

Canonical nameCoconut butter
Categoryplant butter
Reviewed aliasesNone in launch dataset
Evidence modelHistorical rabbit-ear screen

01 · Evidence context

What the rating actually records

The 1989 source lists coconut butter as the tested material. It does not justify assigning the same grade to every ester, surfactant, extract, or derivative that happens to originate from coconut.

The number is retained as a historical observation. The site does not convert it into a current clinical probability or a complete-product grade.

02 · Formulation context

Why the complete formula can differ

This checker therefore matches the reviewed name exactly and does not treat all words containing 'coco' or 'coconut' as equivalent. Finished-product concentration, vehicle, and rinse-off behavior still matter.

03 · Practical takeaway

How to use this result proportionately

Use the result to ask a narrower question about the actual labeled material. Avoid broad ingredient-family bans based on name fragments, and seek professional help for persistent inflammatory acne.

If you compare products, change one routine variable at a time and use the label from the product currently in hand.

04 · Primary source

Comedogenicity and irritancy of commonly used ingredients in skin care products

Journal of the Society of Cosmetic Chemists, 40, 321-333 · Primary rabbit-ear screening study

Ingredients were generally tested at 10% in a rabbit-ear model. The paper calls the assay extremely sensitive, reports source and vehicle effects, and says the survey is not definitive or a substitute for finished-formula and human evidence.

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