Ingredients
Panthenol: Why It’s in Everything — and What It Does at a Cellular Level
70 years of clinical data. Converts to a CoA cofactor. Rebuilds the barrier from the inside. The science is deeper than “it’s soothing.”
The Conversion That Makes It Work
Panthenol isn’t just a moisturizer that sits on top. It converts inside your skin into a cofactor that feeds the machinery that builds and maintains the barrier.
The Concentration That Matters
Most clinical trials use 1–5% dexpanthenol. 1% is the threshold for meaningful TEWL reduction; 5% is standard in barrier-repair ointments and the concentration behind the strongest recovery data.
Compatibility: Everything
Stable pH 4.0–7.5. Pairs with ceramides, niacinamide, hyaluronic acid, retinol (buffers irritation), vitamin C, centella. No photosensitivity. AM and PM. Especially valuable after cleansing and after actives that challenge the skin. Safe during pregnancy.
The Allergy Nuance
Historical allergy rate: 0.2–0.7%. Recent data: rising to ~1.2%. Many cases go undetected because panthenol is in products labeled “hypoallergenic.” If you keep reacting to “gentle” products, panthenol is worth patch-testing for. It’s rare — but it’s not zero.
Final Take
Panthenol is in everything because it genuinely works — and the evidence is unusually deep. At 1%+ it meaningfully reduces TEWL. At 5%, in irritant-damaged skin, it brings TEWL back to near-baseline within two weeks. The cellular mechanisms are specific: CoA synthesis, keratinocyte proliferation, lipid lamellae organization, wound-healing gene upregulation. Not glamorous, but one of the most reliably effective actives in skincare.