Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes

baby wipes • For 5+ year old childrenSkin contact 🧴

baby wipes

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Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes - Front

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Ingredient List

Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes - Ingredients

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Is this kid-friendly to use Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes?

⚠️
USE WITH CAUTION
Danger Score: 4 (Lower is safer)
Quick Answer: Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes contains 22 ingredients. 1 caution. Use with Caution ⚠️ Kids may have different tolerance levels.

Check for Different Age (6 available)

Ingredients Analysis (22 found)

Glyceryl Polyacrylate
⚠️4/10
Glyceryl Polyacrylate is not a recognized cosmetic or baby product ingredient it may be a misreading or typo of Glyceryl Acrylate or Polyacrylate
Confidence: HIGH
Sodium Sulfite
3/10
For children 5 years and older (school-age kids), sodium sulfite on the skin is generally considered low risk when it’s used in properly formulated products. However, some kids with sensitive skin may get irritation or an allergic reaction.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Citric Acid
2/10
For children 5 years and older (school-age kids, tweens, teens), citric acid in everyday skincare like wipes, shampoos and lotions is usually safe when used at the low levels found in those products. It may sting if it gets in the eyes or is placed on sore or broken skin.
Confidence: HIGH
Coco-Glucoside
2/10
For kids 5 years and older, Coco-Glucoside is usually safe. It’s a gentle cleanser made from coconut and sugar. Most children won’t have trouble with it, but a small number of people can get a skin reaction.
Confidence: HIGH
Lauryl Glucoside
2/10
For children aged 5 and up, lauryl glucoside is generally a gentle, low-risk cleanser used in rinsing products like shampoos and body washes. Most kids tolerate it well.
Confidence: HIGH
Potassium Sorbate
2/10
Safety information not properly formatted for easy understanding
Confidence: MEDIUM
Sodium Benzoate
2/10
For school-age kids (5 years and up), sodium benzoate is usually safe in the small amounts used in lotions, wipes and creams. It helps stop bacteria and mold. Serious problems like cancer or widespread allergies are not expected, but some safety groups and countries set limits on how much can be used.
Confidence: HIGH
Sodium Hydroxide
2/10
For school-age children (5 years and older): when sodium hydroxide is in regular skin products it is usually at very low levels and is safe if the product is made for skin and has a skin-friendly pH. Sodium hydroxide itself is a strong chemical that can burn if concentrated.
Confidence: HIGH
Aloe Barbadensis Leaf Juice
1/10
For children 5 years and older (school-age kids, older children, teens), aloe vera leaf juice used on the skin is generally safe and low risk. It is commonly used to soothe and hydrate skin in lotions and wipes.
Confidence: HIGH
Ascorbyl Dipolyhydroxystearate
1/10
Ascorbyl Dipolyhydroxystearate is a stable vitamin C derivative used as an antioxidant and skin conditioning agent. It is generally safe in topical baby products for 5 plus years.
No Known Risk - Ascorbyl Dipolyhydroxystearate is a vitamin C derivative commonly used in topical products. Current research and safety assessments do not indicate any specific health risks for babies, including irritation, hormone disruption, or long-term effects. It is considered safe for use in baby products based on available data.
Confidence: HIGH
Caprylyl Glycol
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older), caprylyl glycol is generally safe when used on the skin in normal products like lotions and wipes. It has a low reported risk for cancer, developmental harm, and most allergies, and regulators consider it unlikely to build up in the body or the environment.
No Known Risk - Government and industry safety reviews found no clear health hazards for skin use. Tests say it is not likely to build up in the body, not persistent in the environment, and not harmful to organs. Industry reviewers do note limits on how much can be used and some data gaps, but overall the ingredient is rated low concern for topical use.
Confidence: HIGH
Carbomer
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older) carbomer is usually safe when used on normal, unbroken skin. Most safety checks show low risk for cancer, allergies or effects on growth, but there are notes about possible impurities from manufacturing.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Glycerin
1/10
For children 5 years and older (kids, school-age children, teens), glycerin is usually safe when used in regular lotions, cleansers or wipes. It helps skin hold on to moisture and is not linked to major health risks.
Confidence: HIGH
Glyceryl Oleate
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older) glyceryl oleate is usually safe when used in normal lotions and creams. It’s commonly used to help mix oil and water in products and to make skin feel soft. Most big safety checks find low long-term health concerns.
Confidence: HIGH
Hydrogenated Palm Glycerides Citrate
1/10
For children aged 5 and up (kids, school-age children, teens), this ingredient is generally safe when applied to the skin in normal products. It helps soften skin and keeps products stable. The safety information provided lists only low concerns for serious long-term effects.
No Known Risk - Available safety reviews for this topical ingredient report only low-level concerns across cancer, allergy/immune, reproductive/developmental, and use-restriction categories, and no other hazard flags are listed. In other words, current ingredient assessments do not identify meaningful health risks for typical topical use.
Confidence: HIGH
Lecithin
1/10
For children aged 5 and older, lecithin in creams and lotions is usually okay. It helps mix oil and water in products and conditions skin. Most kids won’t have a problem, but there are some risks to watch for.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Oat Kernel Extract
1/10
For children 5 years and older (kids, school-aged children, tweens), oat kernel extract is usually safe and is often used to calm and hydrate the skin. Overall risk is low when used in normal skin products.
No Known Risk - Safety reviews by cosmetic experts (Cosmetic Ingredient Review) find this oat kernel extract safe for topical use and list only low-level concerns. There is no strong evidence of cancer, hormone, organ, or developmental harm from using it on the skin. A small number of people with oat allergy could react, and some products may have concentration limits, but for most children this ingredient is considered low risk when used as directed.
Confidence: HIGH
Palmitate
1/10
Palmitate is a fatty acid ester commonly used as an emollient in baby wipes and lotions. It is very safe for topical use in children over 5 years.
No Known Risk - Palmitate (such as palmitic acid or its esters) is a fatty acid commonly found in both plant and animal fats and is widely used in topical products. Current research and regulatory reviews do not indicate any significant health risks for babies when used topically. There is no evidence linking topical palmitate to irritation, allergy, hormone disruption, or other health concerns in infants.
Confidence: HIGH
Polyglyceryl-2
1/10
Safety information not properly formatted for easy understanding
No Known Risk - Multiple safety reviews and a national chemical assessment find no clear hazards for topical use: it is not expected to be organ-toxic, is not likely to build up in the body or the environment, and is not identified as an environmental toxin. Reports on skin/eye/lung irritation are limited or unassessed, and common concerns such as cancer or reproductive harm are rated low. Based on these assessments, no specific health risks have been identified for this ingredient.
Confidence: HIGH
Tocopherol
0/10
For children 5 years and older, tocopherol (vitamin E) used on the skin is generally safe. Most kids tolerate it well. A few people can get skin irritation or an allergy, but that is uncommon.
Confidence: HIGH
Avena Sativa
0/10
For children 5 years and older (school-age kids, pre-teens, teens), oat extract is generally very safe when used on the skin. It is commonly added to lotions and creams to soothe and moisturize.
No Known Risk - Available safety reviews note only low-level concerns (small risk of allergic reaction and some limits on how it can be used) and say the ingredient is safe for skin products when used within set limits. No higher-risk findings were identified.
Confidence: HIGH
Aqua
0/10
For kids aged 5 and up (school-age children, children, older kids), water used on the skin is very safe. It’s the basic ingredient in cleansers, lotions and wipes and carries very low health concern when clean and used in normal products.
No Known Risk - Regulatory reviews (Environment Canada) find plain water is not expected to be toxic, not bioaccumulative, and not an environmental toxin. Safety summaries list no concerns above a low level for organ harm, reproductive effects, or other long‑term risks for topical use, so no specific health risks are identified for use on skin.
Confidence: HIGH

Common Questions About Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes

Kid-approved? Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes

Use caution with Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes for 5+ year old children. Some ingredients may pose concerns.

What ingredients should I watch out for?

We analyzed 22 ingredients in Aveeno baby daily care baby wipes. 1 caution. Check the detailed analysis above for specific concerns.

When can kids start using baby wipes?

The appropriate age depends on the specific ingredients. This analysis is for 5+ year old children. Use the age selector above to check other ages.

⚠️ Important Disclaimers

Product Recognition: Product names are identified programatically and may be incorrect. Always verify product identity yourself.

Safety Analysis: Evaluations are for research only - consult pediatricians for medical decisions. Do not rely solely on this analysis.

No Guarantees: Results may be incomplete or inaccurate. Do not rely solely on this analysis.