Benzoyl peroxide acne spot treatment
Active Use with caution

Benzoyl Peroxide

Topical acne treatment. Minimal systemic absorption (~5%); considered probably safe in pregnancy. Limited human data so labeled cautious.

Quick answer

Benzoyl peroxide is generally considered safe in pregnancy at low topical concentrations (under 5%, applied to small areas). Systemic absorption is around 5%. For larger or daily use, azelaic acid and glycolic acid are stronger-evidence first-line picks.

Reviewed by Jamie G, Founder & Researcher · Last reviewed May 27, 2026 · 4 sources cited · 2 min read

INCI name

Benzoyl Peroxide

CAS number

94-36-0

Also known as

Dibenzoyl peroxide, BPO, peroxide of benzoyl

Formula

C14H10O4

What is Benzoyl Peroxide?

What benzoyl peroxide is

Benzoyl peroxide (BPO) is an organic peroxide compound used topically since the 1960s as an antibacterial and keratolytic agent for acne. It kills Propionibacterium acnes (the acne bacterium) via oxidative damage and helps unblock pores by promoting mild exfoliation1.

Available OTC at 2.5%, 5%, and 10% concentrations, and by prescription in combination products with antibiotics or retinoids.

Why benzoyl peroxide is caution-rated in pregnancy

The caution rating is largely conservative — the pharmacology is actually reassuring:

  • Low systemic absorption. About 5% of applied BPO is absorbed through skin, where it’s rapidly metabolized to benzoic acid — a compound naturally present in the body and considered safe2.
  • No documented teratogenicity. Animal studies haven’t shown developmental harm. Human cohort data, while limited, hasn’t revealed an increased risk of birth defects.
  • Mainstream guideline acceptance. The American Academy of Dermatology and ACOG both list benzoyl peroxide as an acceptable option for acne in pregnancy, with the typical caveat that the lowest effective concentration should be used3.

The “caution” label reflects the absence of large-scale pregnancy-specific safety trials — not affirmative evidence of risk.

Practical pregnancy guidance

  • OK: 2.5–5% BPO spot-treatment products or limited-area cleansers, used once or twice daily.
  • Cautious: 10% leave-on BPO products for whole-face daily use. Higher absorption potential.
  • OK with caveats: Combination BPO + clindamycin products (Duac, BenzaClin). The topical antibiotic component is also generally accepted in pregnancy (Category B).
  • Avoid: Combination BPO + retinoid products (Epiduo) due to the retinoid component.

If you want a stronger-evidence alternative

Azelaic acid (FDA Category B) has the most reassuring pregnancy data among acne actives. It addresses both active acne and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. Many OBs and dermatologists default to azelaic acid for pregnancy acne4. Low-concentration salicylic acid (≤2%) is another option.

When to talk to your OB

If you used a product containing Benzoyl Peroxide before learning you were pregnant, mention it at your next prenatal visit — but most topical cosmetic exposures are not a cause for panic. For prescription exposures or specific concerns, contact your OB or midwife directly.

Sources

  1. U.S. National Library of Medicine. Benzoyl peroxide. PubChem. View source →
  2. Yang Z, Zhang Y, Mosler EL, et al. (2020). Topical benzoyl peroxide for acne. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. View source →
  3. American Academy of Dermatology. Acne in pregnancy. AAD. View source →
  4. Pugashetti R, Shinkai K. (2013). Treatment of acne vulgaris in pregnant patients. Dermatologic Therapy. View source →

Jamie G

Founder & Researcher, SafeMom

Jamie founded SafeMom after researching the ingredient-regulations gap that leaves expecting parents without a single trustworthy answer source. She has spent two years on pregnancy-safety research focused on cosmetic, food, and household-product chemistry. Not a medical professional — all medical questions should be directed to your OB or midwife.

Reviewed May 27, 2026 4 sources cited Editorial standards Suggest a correction

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