{"title":"Lanolin","entity_type":"Ingredient","slug":"lanolin","canonical_url":"https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/lanolin","dates":{"date_modified":"2026-05-27","date_reviewed":"2026-05-27"},"mcp_eligible":true,"summary":"Lanolin skincare benefits, mechanism, evidence limits, INCI context, and tolerability guidance for realistic dry, sensitive, acne-prone, or aging-skin routines.","evidence_sources":[],"product_fact_sources":[],"related_entities":[{"title":"Allergic Contact Cheilitis","url":"https://skinknowledgebase.com/side-effects/allergic-contact-cheilitis"}],"body_sections":[{"heading":"Quick Summary","paragraphs":["Lanolin is a skincare ingredient used for chapped lips, dry skin routines. It is best judged by formula context, concentration, frequency, and skin tolerance rather than by the ingredient name alone."]},{"heading":"What It Is","paragraphs":["Lanolin is used in leave-on or rinse-off cosmetic formulas depending on the product type. In SKB it is framed as a cosmetic skincare ingredient, not a prescription treatment or a diagnosis tool."]},{"heading":"Mechanism","paragraphs":["Lanolin is an occlusive and emollient wax derived from sheep wool grease. It can reduce water-loss sensation on chapped lips, but it is also a recognized allergen for some users, making recurrent lip rash a patch-test conversation rather than a simple dryness problem.","The mechanism is practical, not magical: vehicle, pH where relevant, dose, frequency, and the rest of the routine decide whether the ingredient feels helpful or irritating. Results should be judged gradually, and sensitive users should introduce it separately from other strong actives."]}],"side_effects":[{"title":"Allergic Contact Cheilitis","url":"https://skinknowledgebase.com/side-effects/allergic-contact-cheilitis"}]}