All Ingredients
90

Silk Amino Acids

Low Concern

Quick verdict

Low risk

Silk Amino Acids skin safety dashboard

Silk Amino Acids scores 90/100 across 1 product analyses. The most important acne and irritation checks are summarized first.

Comedogenic rating

0/5

Low clogging risk signal in current analyses.

Fungal acne concern

Lower

No major fungal-acne warning is flagged by current data.

Pregnancy concern

Lower

No elevated pregnancy-specific concern is flagged here.

Skin types to avoid

None flagged

Based on pore-clogging and irritation risk signals.

What is Silk Amino Acids and why is it used?

We're still generating a detailed description for Silk Amino Acids. Check back shortly - or scan a product containing this ingredient to speed things up.

Will Silk Amino Acids clog my pores? (Comedogenic Rating)

Comedogenic Risk: 0/5

Silk Amino Acids has an estimated comedogenic risk of 0/5 based on GlowLens ingredient scoring across 1 product analyses. A higher number signals a stronger pore-clogging tendency for acne-prone skin. This is informational, not medical advice.

Known Side Effects and Allergies: how concerning is Silk Amino Acids?

Low Concern

Silk Amino Acids currently scores 90/100, which places it in a lower-concern band overall. The main practical consideration is skin irritation, sensitivity, or breakouts in formulas where it appears alongside other potentially irritating ingredients. This is informational, not medical advice.

Is Silk Amino Acids safe for pregnancy?

While our analysis gives Silk Amino Acids a safety score of 90/100 with a low concern level, we recommend consulting your healthcare provider about any cosmetic ingredients during pregnancy or nursing. GlowLens provides general safety assessments - pregnancy-specific advice should come from your doctor or midwife.

Final Verdict: who should be most cautious with Silk Amino Acids?

No specific skin type is automatically excluded for Silk Amino Acids, but a patch test is still useful for reactive skin. This is informational, not medical advice.

How we rate this ingredient

Provisional AI estimate - being verified against official sources.Confidence: LowLast reviewed Jun 13, 2026

We have not yet attached an official citation to this ingredient. The current rating is a provisional AI estimate and will be updated as authoritative sources are added.

1 products analyzed containing Silk Amino AcidsAnalyze a new product

Found in 1 Products

Showing all 1 of 1 products

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Silk Amino Acids and why is it used?
We're still generating a detailed description for Silk Amino Acids. Check back shortly - or scan a product containing this ingredient to speed things up. Across 1 products in our database, Silk Amino Acids appears in various formulations. Use our free skincare ingredient checker to see how it interacts with other ingredients in specific products.
Will Silk Amino Acids clog my pores? (Comedogenic Rating)
Silk Amino Acids has an estimated comedogenic risk of 0/5 based on GlowLens ingredient scoring across 1 product analyses. A higher number signals a stronger pore-clogging tendency for acne-prone skin. This is informational, not medical advice.
Known Side Effects and Allergies: how concerning is Silk Amino Acids?
Silk Amino Acids currently scores 90/100, which places it in a lower-concern band overall. The main practical consideration is skin irritation, sensitivity, or breakouts in formulas where it appears alongside other potentially irritating ingredients. This is informational, not medical advice.
Is Silk Amino Acids safe for pregnancy?
While our analysis gives Silk Amino Acids a safety score of 90/100 with a low concern level, we recommend consulting your healthcare provider about any cosmetic ingredients during pregnancy or nursing. GlowLens provides general safety assessments - pregnancy-specific advice should come from your doctor or midwife.
Final Verdict: who should be most cautious with Silk Amino Acids?
No specific skin type is automatically excluded for Silk Amino Acids, but a patch test is still useful for reactive skin. This is informational, not medical advice.