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Women's Health GLOW 3 min read

Urea in skincare: the moisturizer that also exfoliates

Urea in skincare is a humectant at low doses and an exfoliant at higher ones. Here's what urea does for skin, how concentration changes its job, and cautions.

Urea in skincare: the moisturizer that also exfoliates

Urea in skincare: the moisturizer that also exfoliates

A plain-English guide to one ingredient that does two different jobs.

TL;DR

  • Urea in skincare is a humectant at low doses and an exfoliant at higher doses.
  • It is part of the skin’s own natural moisturizing factor, so it works with skin, not against it.
  • Concentration decides the job: about 10% or less hydrates; 15 to 30% also exfoliates.

What urea in skincare is

Urea in skincare is a small, water-loving molecule that helps skin hold moisture. Think of a sponge that grabs and keeps water near the surface. Your skin already makes urea as part of its natural moisturizing factor, abbreviated NMF (the skin’s built-in blend that keeps the surface hydrated). So a urea cream tops up something your skin uses anyway. It is one of the most common moisturizing and softening ingredients in dermatology.

How it works

Urea works in two ways, and concentration is the switch. At low strength it acts as a humectant (in plain English: a substance that draws water in and holds it). It binds water in the top layer, the stratum corneum, and softens the cells there. At higher strength it acts as a keratolytic (in plain English: an agent that loosens hardened skin). It breaks up thick, scaly keratin so it can shed.

What does urea do for skin

Urea hydrates skin and, at higher doses, helps slough off rough patches. A 2021 dermatology review describes urea as a leading moisturizer and keratolytic that also supports the skin barrier (Dermatology and Therapy, 2021). It is hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs water, which is why it eases dryness so reliably.

What concentration of urea should I use

The right concentration depends on your goal. Low concentrations of about 10% or less mainly hydrate. Medium concentrations of roughly 15% to 30% add an exfoliating, keratin-loosening effect (Journal of Drugs in Dermatology, 2020). Higher strengths are more active and slightly more likely to sting on sensitive skin.

Who asks about it

People ask when they see “urea” on a moisturizer and wonder if it is the same urea found in the body. It also comes up for anyone managing dry, flaky, or rough skin who wants a gentle, well-studied option.

What to know before considering it

Urea is generally well tolerated, but side effects are more common at high concentrations and can include mild stinging. Broken or very sensitive skin may react. Patch testing a new product is sensible. For any persistent skin condition, a licensed clinician or dermatologist should guide treatment.

The Halftime POV

We like ingredients that pull double duty and have decades of evidence behind them. Urea fits: it is humble, familiar, and well studied. Knowing how concentration changes its job lets you match the product to what your skin actually needs.

Related reading:


FAQ

what does urea do for skin Urea pulls water into the upper skin layer at low doses, acting as a humectant. At higher doses it loosens hardened keratin, acting as an exfoliant. It is also part of the skin’s own moisturizing factor.

is urea good for dry skin Urea is widely used for dry, scaly skin. Trials show urea creams improve hydration in conditions like eczema, ichthyosis, and general dryness. It is generally well tolerated, with milder side effects at lower concentrations.

what concentration of urea should i use Low concentrations of about 10 percent or less mainly hydrate. Medium concentrations of roughly 15 to 30 percent add an exfoliating effect. Higher strengths are stronger and more likely to cause mild irritation.

Disclaimer

This article is educational and is not medical advice. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. Clinical outcomes depend on individual factors and require physician evaluation. Results vary. Halftime Health is launching soon — join the waitlist to get updates.

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Sources

Sources & references

  1. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34596890/
  2. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33249708/