Tirabeauty · 🇮🇳 India

The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml

9 ingredients
What's in it

Below is every ingredient in The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml 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
1 ingredient(s) can feed Malassezia — relevant in humid Indian weather
Pore-clogging risk: Moderate
Highest comedogenic rating 2/5 — 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 The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml fungal-acne safe?
Based on its listed ingredients, The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml contains 1 ingredient(s) reported to feed Malassezia (the yeast behind fungal acne): Oil Free. If you are fungal-acne prone, you may want to avoid these.
Does The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml contain fragrance?
No fragrance ingredients or EU-declared allergens were detected in the listed ingredients of The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml.
Will The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml clog pores?
The highest comedogenic rating among its listed ingredients is 2/5 (moderate). 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 The Body Shop Vitamin E Intense Moisture Cream 50Ml 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
Comedogenicity / clogged poresUncommonMay contribute to pore congestion in acne-prone individuals due to its rich, occlusive nature.
Allergic contact dermatitisRareReported infrequently despite tree-nut origin; sensitization is uncommon as allergenic proteins are largely removed during processing.
Skin irritation or rednessRareOccasional mild irritation, often related to other formulation components rather than shea itself.
Irritant contact dermatitisUncommonSome natural extracts and oils may irritate sensitive or compromised skin.
PhotosensitivityRareCertain natural components such as citrus or furocoumarin-containing botanicals can increase UV sensitivity.
Anaphylaxis or severe allergic reactionVery rareReported with potent botanical allergens in highly sensitized individuals.
No inherent side effects attributable to the label itselfVery rareAs a descriptor rather than a substance, it has no pharmacological or irritant profile; any reactions stem from the actual formulation ingredients.
Skin dryness or tightnessUncommonLack of occlusive oils may leave dry or dehydrated skin feeling tight in some users.
Irritation from substitute ingredientsRareSilicones, alcohols, or synthetic emollients used in place of oils can occasionally cause irritation.

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

Full ingredient breakdown

IngredientWhat it does
Shea Butter
Emollient / occlusive moisturizer
Shea butter is a plant-derived fat extracted from the nuts of the African shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa), rich in triglycerides and unsaponifiable compounds. It is widely used in skincare to soften skin, reduce transepidermal water loss, and provide an occlusive barrier.
Natural
Marketing/labeling term
"Natural" is not a defined cosmetic ingredient but a marketing descriptor implying derivation from plant, mineral, or animal sources rather than synthetic processes. It has no regulatory standard in most regions and provides no inherent indication of safety, efficacy, or skin compatibility.
Vegetarian
Not an ingredient (descriptive/marketing label)
"Vegetarian" is not a skincare ingredient but a label indicating a product contains no meat-derived components; it is not a defined active or functional compound and may still include other animal-derived substances such as dairy, beeswax, lanolin, or honey.
Oil Free
Formulation descriptor
"Oil Free" is not an active ingredient but a marketing/formulation label indicating a product contains no added oils, typically to reduce greasiness and pore-clogging potential. The actual base may rely on water, silicones, or other emollients instead of traditional oils.
Ground Floor
Unknown / not a recognized skincare ingredient
"Ground Floor" is not a recognized cosmetic or dermatological ingredient and does not correspond to any documented compound in standard ingredient references (e.g., INCI). No verifiable data on its function, composition, or safety exists.
City Pulse
Unknown/unrecognized ingredient
"City Pulse" is not an established or recognized cosmetic ingredient in dermatology or cosmetic-chemistry references; it does not correspond to a standardized INCI name. It may be a proprietary product or marketing name rather than a defined active or base ingredient.
Narain Singh Circle
Unknown / not a skincare ingredient
"Narain Singh Circle" is not a recognized dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry ingredient; it appears to be a place name (a road junction/landmark) rather than a substance used in skincare formulations. No data on its function, safety, or activity exists in cosmetic literature.
Tonk Road
Unverified/unrecognized ingredient
"Tonk Road" is not a recognized cosmetic or dermatological ingredient and does not appear in standard ingredient databases (INCI, CIR, or peer-reviewed dermatology literature). No verifiable data exists regarding its composition, function, or safety profile.
Jaipur
Unknown / not a recognized skincare ingredient
"Jaipur" is not an established dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry ingredient; it is a place name (a city in India) rather than a defined cosmetic compound. No standardized function, INCI listing, or peer-reviewed safety data exists for it as a skincare active or base ingredient.

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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