Ingredient · 🇮🇳 India

Sodium Lauryl Ether Sulphate

Surfactant/cleansing agent Support / formulation
What it is

Sodium Lauryl Ether Sulphate (SLES) is an anionic surfactant widely used in cleansers, shampoos and body washes to produce foam and remove dirt and oil. It is generally milder than sodium lauryl sulphate due to its ethoxylated structure.

Side effects reported in research

Reported effectHow oftenNotes
Skin irritation and drynessCommonCan disrupt the skin barrier and cause dryness, especially at higher concentrations or with prolonged contact.
Eye irritationCommonStinging or redness if product contacts the eyes, relevant in shampoos and facial cleansers.
Contact dermatitisUncommonIrritant rather than allergic reaction in most cases; more likely on sensitive or compromised skin.
Allergic contact dermatitisRareTrue allergic sensitisation is uncommon and may relate to impurities.
1,4-dioxane contamination concernsVery rareA byproduct of ethoxylation; modern manufacturing typically reduces it to trace levels considered safe.

Frequencies reflect typical cosmetic use reported in the literature, not a guarantee for your skin.

From published literature

Peer-reviewed papers on this ingredient, via PubMed.

Found in these products

◆ CureSkin

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