Tirabeauty · 🇮🇳 India

Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep

15 ingredients
What's in it

Below is every ingredient in Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep explained, its standout actives, and the side effects reported in research for those actives — analysed for Indian skin.

Suitability at a glance — for Indian skin

🍄 May trigger fungal acne
7 ingredient(s) can feed Malassezia — relevant in humid Indian weather
Pore-clogging risk: Low
Highest comedogenic rating 0/5 — matters for oily, acne-prone skin
Fragrance-free
No fragrance or EU-declared allergens

Flags derived from the ingredient list using dermatology reference data (fungal-acne substrate, comedogenicity, EU allergens). General guidance, not a diagnosis.

Your questions, answered from the ingredient list

Is Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep fungal-acne safe?
Based on its listed ingredients, Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep contains 7 ingredient(s) reported to feed Malassezia (the yeast behind fungal acne): Cholesteryl Hydroxystearate, Peg-3 Distearate, Potassium Behenate, Potassium Laurate, Potassium Myristate. If you are fungal-acne prone, you may want to avoid these.
Does Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep contain fragrance?
No fragrance ingredients or EU-declared allergens were detected in the listed ingredients of Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep.
Will Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep clog pores?
The highest comedogenic rating among its listed ingredients is 0/5 (low). Comedogenicity matters most for oily, acne-prone skin in humid Indian weather; it is a property of ingredients in lab tests, not a guarantee either way.
Is Clinique All About Clean Rinse Off Foaming Cleanser 30Ml Qhfrwyj1Ep safe to use in pregnancy?
None of its listed ingredients are flagged for pregnancy caution in our reference data — but always confirm your full routine with your own doctor.

Answers are derived from the printed ingredient list and dermatology reference data — general guidance, not a diagnosis or a therapeutic claim.

Key actives

No standout actives — this is a basic/support formula.

Side effects reported in research

Aggregated from the active ingredients in this product.

Reported effectHow oftenNotes
Irritation or sensitivityVery rarePurified water itself is essentially non-irritating; rare reactions relate to impurities or hardness minerals rather than water itself
Transepidermal water loss from excess evaporationUncommonWater-heavy products without occlusives may evaporate and contribute to skin dryness in some individuals
Skin dryness and tightnessCommonAlkaline soap-based surfactant can strip skin lipids and disrupt the barrier with repeated use.
Skin irritationUncommonMore likely on sensitive or already compromised skin due to elevated pH.
Allergic or contact dermatitisRareSensitization to fatty acid soaps is infrequent but reported.
Eye irritationUncommonCan cause stinging or redness on accidental ocular contact.
Mild transient stinging or irritationUncommonMore likely at high concentrations or on compromised/broken skin.
Tacky or sticky skin feelCommonA cosmetic sensation rather than an adverse reaction, more noticeable at higher concentrations.
Contact dermatitis or allergic reactionRareTrue allergy to glycerin is uncommon; patch-test positivity is infrequent.
Skin dehydration in very low humidityRareIn very dry environments humectants may draw water from deeper skin layers if not paired with an occlusive.
Mild skin irritationRareOccasional transient redness or stinging, generally in sensitive or compromised skin.
Allergic contact dermatitisVery rareIsolated sensitization reports; fatty acid salts are generally considered low-allergenicity.
Comedogenicity/clogged poresVery rarePossible in acne-prone individuals at higher concentrations, though data are limited.
Mild skin or eye irritationUncommonMore likely at higher concentrations or with prolonged contact; generally considered low-irritation.
Skin dryness or tightnessUncommonPossible with frequent washing, though less than with harsher surfactants.

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

Full ingredient breakdown

IngredientWhat it does
Water/Aqua/Eau
Solvent/vehicle
Water is the most common base ingredient in skincare formulations, serving as a solvent for water-soluble actives and as the continuous phase in emulsions. It is considered inert and non-active, providing hydration to the formula rather than direct therapeutic effect.
Potassium Myristate
Surfactant/cleansing agent
Potassium myristate is a potassium salt of myristic acid (a fatty acid soap) used as an anionic surfactant and emulsifier in facial cleansers and soap-based products. It produces foam and removes oil and debris but raises the product's pH to alkaline levels.
Glycerin
Humectant
Glycerin is a widely used humectant that attracts and retains water in the skin, helping to hydrate the stratum corneum and support barrier function. It is considered safe and well-tolerated across most skin types and concentrations.
Potassium Behenate
Emulsifier/Surfactant
Potassium behenate is the potassium salt of behenic acid (a long-chain fatty acid), used in cosmetic formulations as an emulsifier, surfactant, and thickening or stabilizing agent. It helps blend oil and water phases and improve texture rather than providing a direct therapeutic skin effect.
Sodium Methyl Cocoyl Taurate
Mild surfactant/cleansing agent
Sodium Methyl Cocoyl Taurate is a gentle, taurine-derived anionic surfactant used in cleansers and shampoos to provide foaming and cleansing while being milder than sulfate-based surfactants. It is generally well tolerated and often chosen for sensitive-skin formulations.
Potassium Palmitate
Surfactant/cleansing agent
Potassium palmitate is a potassium salt of palmitic acid (a fatty acid soap) used primarily as a surfactant, emulsifier, and cleansing agent in soaps and cleansers. It helps lift away dirt and oil while contributing to lather and product structure.
Potassium Laurate
Surfactant/cleansing agent
Potassium laurate is a potassium salt of lauric acid (a fatty acid soap) used primarily as a surfactant, emulsifier, and cleansing agent in skin care formulations. It is commonly produced in situ during the saponification process in cleansers and soap-based products.
Potassium Stearate
Emulsifier / surfactant (cleansing agent)
Potassium stearate is the potassium salt of stearic acid, used in skincare and cosmetics primarily as an emulsifier, surfactant, and cleansing agent that helps stabilize formulations and produce foam in soap-based products. It functions as a base/formulation ingredient rather than a therapeutic active.
Peg-3 Distearate
Emulsifier/thickener
PEG-3 Distearate is a polyethylene glycol diester of stearic acid used as a nonionic emulsifier, opacifier, and viscosity modifier in creams, lotions, and cleansers. It helps blend oil and water phases and stabilize formulations.
Cholesteryl Hydroxystearate
Emollient / skin-conditioning agent
Cholesteryl Hydroxystearate is an ester of cholesterol and hydroxystearic acid used in cosmetic formulations as an emollient and skin-conditioning agent. It helps soften skin, support the formulation's lipid structure, and can aid emulsion stability.
Butylene Glycol
Humectant / solvent
Butylene glycol is a small diol commonly used in skincare as a humectant, solvent, and viscosity-reducing agent that helps dissolve other ingredients and improve skin feel. It is widely regarded as safe and non-sensitizing for the majority of users at cosmetic concentrations.
Sodium Hyaluronate
Humectant / hydrator
Sodium hyaluronate is the sodium salt of hyaluronic acid, a glycosaminoglycan that attracts and binds water to the skin to improve hydration and surface plumpness. Its lower molecular weight allows better penetration than native hyaluronic acid.
Trisodium Edta
Chelating agent
Trisodium EDTA is a chelating agent used in cosmetic formulations to bind metal ions, improving product stability, preservative efficacy, and preventing discoloration or rancidity. It is a formulation aid rather than a treatment active.
Disodium Edta
Chelating agent
Disodium EDTA is a chelating agent used in cosmetics to bind metal ions, improving product stability, preventing rancidity, and enhancing the efficacy of preservatives. It is a formulation/base ingredient rather than a treatment active.
Phenoxyethanol
Preservative
Phenoxyethanol is a widely used broad-spectrum preservative that protects cosmetic and skincare formulations from bacterial and fungal contamination. It is typically used at concentrations up to 1% and serves as a formulation/base ingredient rather than an active treatment.

Key active = does the main work. Ingredient explanations are drawn from public databases & literature.

From published literature

Peer-reviewed papers on the active ingredients in this product, via PubMed.

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