Common question Short answer: yes

Bakuchiol vs retinol: which is safer during pregnancy?

Pregnancy-safe bakuchiol serum vs retinol skincare comparison

Answer

Yes, swap retinol for bakuchiol during pregnancy. Bakuchiol is fully pregnancy-safe (not a retinoid, no teratogenicity risk) and a 2018 head-to-head trial showed it matched retinol's improvements in fine lines and pigmentation with fewer side effects. Use 0.5–2% bakuchiol morning or evening.

Reviewed by Jamie G, Founder & Researcher · Last reviewed May 28, 2026 · 3 sources cited · 2 min read

Why the swap matters

Topical [retinol](/ingredients/retinol/) is precautionarily avoided during pregnancy because vitamin A derivatives in oral form are known teratogens, and the topical class has been grouped under the same caution. [Bakuchiol](/ingredients/bakuchiol/) is the leading pregnancy-safe alternative — structurally unrelated to vitamin A and with comparable anti-aging effects1.

The head-to-head trial

The 2018 Dhaliwal et al. study (published in the British Journal of Dermatology) compared 0.5% bakuchiol twice daily to 0.5% retinol nightly over 12 weeks. The results:

  • Both groups showed statistically significant improvements in wrinkle depth and hyperpigmentation
  • The differences between groups were NOT statistically significant — bakuchiol effectively matched retinol
  • The retinol group reported more scaling, stinging, and irritation than the bakuchiol group2

This is the strongest comparative evidence supporting bakuchiol as a legitimate retinol substitute, not just a “natural” marketing claim.

Mechanism comparison

AspectRetinolBakuchiol
SourceVitamin A derivativePlant (babchi seed)
Pregnancy safetyAvoidSafe
Sun sensitivityYes (PM only)No (AM or PM)
IrritationModerate-highLow
Onset of results8–12 weeks8–12 weeks
Stability in formulationUnstable (degrades in light)Stable
CostLower (commodity)Higher (specialty)

How to switch routines

If you were using retinol nightly before pregnancy:

  1. Stop retinol immediately upon learning of pregnancy
  2. Wait 1–2 weeks to let your skin barrier recover (retinol thins the stratum corneum)
  3. Introduce bakuchiol at 0.5% concentration, 3–4x/week initially
  4. Increase to nightly (or twice daily if tolerated) over 2–3 weeks
  5. Pair with [niacinamide](/ingredients/niacinamide/) and [hyaluronic acid](/ingredients/hyaluronic-acid/) for additional benefits

Popular bakuchiol products

  • Ole Henriksen Goodnight Glow Retin-Alt Sleeping Crème
  • Herbivore Bakuchiol Retinol Alternative Serum
  • The Inkey List Bakuchiol Moisturizer
  • Versed Press Restart Gentle Retinol Alternative
  • Paula’s Choice Clinical 0.3% Retinol + 2% Bakuchiol Treatment (note: this contains BOTH; pregnancy-safe versions are bakuchiol-only)
  • Biossance Squalane + Phyto-Retinol Serum (uses bakuchiol)

Other pregnancy-safe alternatives to retinol

Bakuchiol isn’t the only swap. Depending on what you wanted retinol to do:

  • For acne: [Azelaic acid](/ingredients/azelaic-acid/) (FDA Category B)
  • For brightness: [Vitamin C](/ingredients/vitamin-c/)
  • For texture and pores: [Niacinamide](/ingredients/niacinamide/)
  • For hydration: [Hyaluronic acid](/ingredients/hyaluronic-acid/) + [ceramides](/ingredients/ceramides/)

Many pregnancy-safe routines combine bakuchiol with one or two of these for a multi-targeted approach3.

Related ingredients

Sources

  1. Chaudhuri RK, Bojanowski K. (2014). Bakuchiol: a retinol-like functional compound revealed by gene expression profiling. International Journal of Cosmetic Science. View source →
  2. Dhaliwal S, Rybak I, Ellis SR, et al. (2019). Prospective, randomized, double-blind assessment of topical bakuchiol and retinol for facial photoaging. British Journal of Dermatology. View source →
  3. Adarsh A, Chettiar K, Singh G, et al. (2022). Bakuchiol: A Newer Nature-Based Alternative to Retinol. Indian Dermatology Online Journal. 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. Not a medical professional — all medical questions should be directed to your OB or midwife.

Reviewed May 28, 2026 3 sources cited Editorial standards Suggest a correction

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