Formaldehyde-Releasing Preservatives: Why They Matter in Pregnancy

Answer
No, avoid formaldehyde-releasing preservatives (DMDM hydantoin, quaternium-15, imidazolidinyl urea, diazolidinyl urea) during pregnancy. They slowly release formaldehyde, an IARC Group 1 human carcinogen. Switch to phenoxyethanol- or sodium-benzoate-preserved products.
Formaldehyde is on every regulator’s worst-actor list — a known human carcinogen and a respiratory irritant. So why does it show up on the ingredient labels of perfectly mainstream shampoos, body washes, and lotions? It usually doesn’t, by name. Instead, a family of formaldehyde-releasing preservatives slowly release small amounts of formaldehyde over time to keep the product from spoiling. In pregnancy, these are worth knowing about — both for skin sensitization and for cumulative exposure.
The 7 names to spot on a label
- DMDM hydantoin — most common in shampoos
- Quaternium-15 — historically common; flagged repeatedly for sensitization
- Imidazolidinyl urea
- Diazolidinyl urea
- Sodium hydroxymethylglycinate
- 2-bromo-2-nitropropane-1,3-diol (Bronopol)
- Glyoxal (less common in personal care; more in hair-smoothing treatments)
Why pregnancy makes this more relevant
Three reasons formaldehyde-releasing preservatives are worth specifically watching during pregnancy:
- Skin sensitivity increases in pregnancy. Contact dermatitis from these preservatives becomes more likely as the skin barrier responds differently.
- Inhalation exposure adds up from products used in steamy bathrooms — shampoo, conditioner, body wash that all release formaldehyde as you use them.
- Some hair-smoothing treatments (Brazilian blowouts, certain keratin treatments) release significant formaldehyde during application. These should be paused for pregnancy.
Where you’ll commonly find them
- Drugstore shampoos (especially “value” brands) — DMDM hydantoin is everywhere
- Body washes and bubble baths
- Some hand sanitizers and liquid hand soaps
- Mascara and eyeliner
- Some baby products (which is exactly why you’d want to know before stocking the nursery)
- Hair-smoothing salon treatments — declared in the salon under OSHA, not on the bottle
Pregnancy-safer preservative alternatives
Look for products preserved with:
- Phenoxyethanol — workhorse preservative, generally considered fine in pregnancy at typical concentrations (≤1%)
- Sodium benzoate / potassium sorbate — food-grade, gentle
- Ethylhexylglycerin — often paired with phenoxyethanol
- Caprylyl glycol, gluconolactone — newer multifunctional preservatives
As we cover in parabens during pregnancy, “paraben-free” doesn’t automatically mean safer — it sometimes means a formaldehyde-releaser was used instead. Always read the full preservative line, not just the front-of-bottle claim.
A two-minute label scan
Flip to the back of any product you use daily. Skim for the seven names above. If you find one in a leave-on product (lotion, foundation, mascara), prioritize replacing it. Rinse-off products are lower priority but worth checking the shampoo and body wash you use most. The SafeMom ingredient checker flags formaldehyde-releasers automatically.
Skip the label-reading guesswork. The SafeMom ingredient checker tells you in seconds whether a product is pregnancy-safe — across thousands of cosmetics, foods, and household items. Open SafeMom →
This article is informational and not medical advice. Always talk to your OB-GYN before changing medications, treatments, or supplements during pregnancy.
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