Paste the ingredient list (INCI) of any product —even if it's not in our catalogue— and we'll tell you what's really in it: evidence-backed actives, composition and sensitivity flags.
Paste an INCI list above and hit Analyze.
INCI (International Nomenclature of Cosmetic Ingredients) is the international standard nomenclature every cosmetic is required to display. Ingredients are listed in descending order of concentration down to 1%; below that threshold, the order is free. That's why an active's position in the list says a lot: a "star active" at the very end is usually more marketing than formula.
Yes — 100% free, no sign-up. The analysis runs entirely in your browser: the list you paste is never sent or stored anywhere.
Any cosmetic in the world: INCI is a universal nomenclature. The active detector is specially tuned for common Korean-beauty ingredients (centella, snail mucin, adenosine…), but it recognizes Western classics just as well.
Ingredients that aren't dangerous but are worth knowing about if your skin is reactive: fragrance, essential oils or drying alcohols. Their presence doesn't make a product bad — it just means you know before you buy.
Not necessarily. What matters is which actives it contains, where they sit in the list, and whether there are flags for your skin type. A short list can be excellent — and so can a long one.