Hemp Heavy Duty Lip Care
The Body Shop Hemp Heavy Duty Lip Care is a lip care. Our analysis of its 15 ingredients (6 low-risk) rates it Excellent (87/100). Based on its ingredients, it looks well-suited to dry skin.
The Body Shop Hemp Heavy Duty Lip Care is a lip care. Our analysis of its 15 ingredients (6 low-risk) rates it Excellent (87/100). Based on its ingredients, it looks well-suited to dry skin.
Summarised from our ingredient analysis — not brand marketing copy.
The evidence
| EWG | CIR | Ingredient Name & Cosmetic Functions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
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Hydrogenated Coconut Oil
(Emollient, Skin Conditioning) |
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Olea Europaea Fruit Oil
(Fragrance, Perfuming, Skin Conditioning) |
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Cera Alba
(Film Forming, Perfuming, Skin Conditioning Emollient, Surfactant Emulsifying) |
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Candelilla Cera
(Emollient, Film Forming) |
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Cannabis Sativa Seed Oil
(Emollient, Skin Conditioning) |
Fungal Acne Trigger
|
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Butyrospermum Parkii Butter
(Skin Conditioning, Viscosity Controlling) |
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Tocopheryl Acetate
(Antioxidant, Skin Conditioning) |
Bad for Oily Skin
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Salvia Sclarea Oil
(Fragrance, Tonic) |
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Water
(Solvent) |
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Panthenol
(Antistatic Agent, Hair Conditioning, Skin Conditioning) |
Good for Dry Skin
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Retinyl Palmitate
(Skin Conditioning, Skin Conditioning Miscellaneous) |
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TOCOPHEROL
(Antioxidant, Fragrance, Skin Conditioning) |
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Linalool
(Fragrance, Deodorant, Masking) |
Allergens
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Limonene
(Deodorant, Perfuming, Solvent) |
Allergens
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Geraniol
(Fragrance, Masking, Tonic) |
Allergens
|
No personal ingredient notes yet. Save ingredients to your profile to get good/bad alerts here.
EWG flags hazard, not real-world risk — ratings don't account for how much of an ingredient a product contains. Treat these as things to research, not verdicts. How we score →
How to use
General guidance from this product's category and active ingredients — always follow the directions on the package.
Trust & honesty
Contains ingredients some choose to avoid or double-check while pregnant or nursing.
Topical retinoids (retinol, retinaldehyde, retinyl esters) are widely advised against in pregnancy as a precaution. The strongest evidence is for ORAL retinoids; topical absorption is low, but most clinicians err on the side of caution.
This is general information, not medical advice. Pregnancy guidance varies and depends on concentration and your individual situation — always check with your doctor, midwife or pharmacist. How we flag this.
The concentrations these actives are typically effective at in research — not a measurement of this product.
Most studied between 0.1% and 1%. Higher is not automatically better — irritation climbs with dose, so a well-formulated lower strength is often the sweet spot.
Retinyl Palmitate
INCI lists don't disclose amounts, and we don't claim to know this product's levels — these are the ranges these ingredients are usually effective at, so you can tell a real formula from "fairy-dusting" a marketed active. How we estimate this.
From the community
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