Ingredient dossier

Lactic Acid

Lactic Acid is commonly read in the context of aha exfoliant, ph adjuster or humectant context. The ingredient name is useful, but product type, placement, concentration clues, and the surrounding formula decide what it means in practice.

Updated May 16, 2026Exfoliant contextEnglish default
Also known as

2-hydroxypropanoic acid.

Common roles

AHA exfoliant, pH adjuster or humectant context.

Often found in

Exfoliating products, body lotions, cleansers, moisturizers.

Read with

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 itWhat to askNext check
Cleanser or wash-off productIs it part of cleansing, texture, or comfort?Contact time and after-wash feel.
Moisturizer or serumIs it supporting hydration, texture, active positioning, or barrier feel?Humectants, emollients, film formers, and fragrance.
Sunscreen or makeupDoes 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.

Use it on a productCheck a real ingredient list in Formula Sift.

After reading the method, open the iOS app to review product records, ingredient tables, source notes, and personal preference profiles.

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