2-hydroxypropanoic acid.
AHA exfoliant, pH adjuster or humectant context.
Exfoliating products, body lotions, cleansers, moisturizers.
role in formula, concentration clues, leave-on use, and irritation history.
What it usually tells you
Lactic Acid can be a useful label signal, but it does not summarize the whole product. Start by identifying the product category and whether the formula is rinse-off, leave-on, sunscreen, makeup, scalp, eye-area, or family-use oriented.
How to read it on an ingredient list
Look at where the name appears, what sits around it, and whether the brand makes a specific claim. Early-list placement often points to a base or texture role. Later-list placement can still matter for preservation, fragrance, color, pH, or a targeted active.
Product patterns
| Where you see it | What to ask | Next check |
|---|---|---|
| Cleanser or wash-off product | Is it part of cleansing, texture, or comfort? | Contact time and after-wash feel. |
| Moisturizer or serum | Is it supporting hydration, texture, active positioning, or barrier feel? | Humectants, emollients, film formers, and fragrance. |
| Sunscreen or makeup | Does product category change the role? | Regulatory label, pigments, film formers, and wear context. |
Common reading mistakes
- Reading one name as a full product reviewIngredient lists are partial evidence, not performance testing.
- Ignoring product typeThe same ingredient can mean different things in a cleanser, balm, serum, or sunscreen.
- Turning personal preference into universal adviceYour own sensitivity, acne pattern, fragrance preference, or family context should be recorded as a personal rule.
Limits
The label usually does not show exact percentage, raw material quality, processing, stability, preservative testing, or your personal tolerance. Use the ingredient name as a starting point for better questions, not as a verdict.
After reading the method, open the iOS app to review product records, ingredient tables, source notes, and personal preference profiles.