Body & Beauty / Compounds / Eugenol

Eugenol on your skin: a safety profile

Context-dependent

Safety profile for Eugenol relevant to people.

What is eugenol?

Also known as: 4-Allyl-2-methoxyphenol, 4-Allylguaiacol, Eugenic acid, Allylguaiacol.

CAS number
97-53-4
Molecular formula
C10H12O2
Molecular weight
164.20 g/mol
SMILES
COC1=C(C=CC(=C1)CC=C)O
PubChem CID
3314

Risk for people

Context-dependent

Regulatory consensus

1 regulatory bodyhas classified Eugenol.

AgencyYearClassificationNotes
EDC AssessmentSuspected endocrine disruptor

Regulators apply different standards of evidence — animal-data weighting, exposure-pattern assumptions, epidemiological power thresholds — which is why two scientific bodies can review the same data and reach different conclusions. The disagreement is the data.

Where you encounter eugenol

  • Personal Careperfume, soap, cosmetics
  • Consumer Productscleaning products, candles

Safer alternatives

Lower-risk approaches that achieve a similar outcome to Eugenol:

  • Lower-sensitization structural analog; Unscented formulation
    Trade-offs: Eliminates allergen risk entirely; consumer acceptance varies (some associate scent with cleanliness/efficacy); growing market segment; regulatory advantage in EU (no IFRA compliance needed).
    Relative cost: 1.2-2×

Frequently asked questions

What products contain eugenol?

Eugenol appears in: perfume (Personal care); soap (Personal care); cleaning products (Consumer products); candles (Consumer products).

See Eugenol in the body app

Look up products containing eugenol, compare to alternatives, and explore the full data record.

Open in body View raw API data

Sources (1)

  1. PubChem (2026) — database

Reference data, not professional advice. Aggregates publicly available regulatory and scientific data; not a substitute for veterinary, medical, legal, or regulatory advice. Why we built ALETHEIA →