
Glycerin
Time-tested humectant. Pregnancy-safe with a multi-decade safety record across cosmetics and food.
Quick answer
Glycerin is fully pregnancy-safe. Long pregnancy-use safety record across cosmetics, OTC drugs, and food. Works by drawing water from the dermis and atmosphere to the upper skin layers. One of the most-used cosmetic ingredients globally; gentle enough for sensitive and infant skin.
INCI name
Glycerin
CAS number
56-81-5
Also known as
Glycerol, 1,2,3-propanetriol, glycyl alcohol
Formula
C3H8O3
What is Glycerin?
What glycerin is
Glycerin (also called glycerol) is a simple sugar alcohol — a three-carbon molecule with three hydroxyl groups. It’s naturally produced by the body during normal fat metabolism, occurs naturally in plant and animal fats, and is also produced synthetically and from vegetable oils for commercial use1.
Glycerin is among the most-used cosmetic ingredients globally — appearing in lotions, creams, soaps, shampoos, toothpaste, food, and pharmaceutical formulations. It’s GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe) by the FDA for food use.
Why glycerin is pregnancy-safe
Glycerin’s safety case is exceptionally strong:
- Endogenous compound. Your body naturally produces glycerin during normal metabolism. Topical or low-dose oral exposure is not introducing a foreign molecule.
- FDA GRAS. Generally Recognized as Safe for food use — the highest safety designation2.
- Multi-decade cosmetic record. Used in cosmetic and pharmaceutical preparations for over a century with no developmental or systemic safety signals.
- Used in infant products. Common in baby lotions, diaper creams, and pediatric topicals — an indirect indicator of low-risk profile.
- Used in pregnancy-approved medications. Glycerin is the base for many topical and oral pharmaceuticals used safely during pregnancy.
The Cosmetic Ingredient Review panel and the European SCCS both consider glycerin safe at all current cosmetic-use concentrations3.
How glycerin works on skin
Glycerin is a humectant — it draws water molecules to itself. On skin, this means it pulls water from both the deeper dermis and from atmospheric humidity into the upper layers, providing hydration. Unlike occlusive moisturizers (petroleum jelly, mineral oil) that block water loss, glycerin actively adds water.
It also has mild barrier-supporting effects, helping skin maintain its natural lipid barrier function.
Where glycerin appears
Almost universally in:
- Moisturizers and body lotions
- Cleansers (especially “gentle” or “sensitive skin” formulations)
- Toners and essences
- Serums (often as a co-humectant with hyaluronic acid)
- Toothpaste, mouthwash, and oral care
- Lip balms and lipsticks
- Shaving creams
- Foods (as a sweetener and texture modifier)
Practical pregnancy use
Glycerin pairs well with every other pregnancy-safe ingredient. Particularly effective combinations:
- Glycerin + hyaluronic acid — complementary humectants targeting different water-binding mechanisms
- Glycerin + ceramides — humectant + barrier lipid combination
- Glycerin + niacinamide — hydration + tone evening4
Is Glycerin safe while breastfeeding?
Glycerin is fully pregnancy-safe. Long pregnancy-use safety record across cosmetics, OTC drugs, and food. Works by drawing water from the dermis and atmosphere to the upper skin layers. One of the most-used cosmetic ingredients globally; gentle enough for sensitive and infant skin.
When to talk to your OB
If you used a product containing Glycerin 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
- U.S. National Library of Medicine. Glycerol. PubChem. View source →
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Glycerin (GRAS substance). FDA. View source →
- Cosmetic Ingredient Review Expert Panel. (2014). Safety assessment of glycerin as used in cosmetics. International Journal of Toxicology. View source →
- Fluhr JW, Darlenski R, Surber C. (2008). Glycerol and the skin: holistic approach. British Journal of Dermatology. View source →