babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena

shampoo & bodywash & conditioner • For 6-12 month old babiesSkin contact 🧴

shampoo & bodywash & conditioner

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Ingredient List

babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena - Ingredients

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Can older babies use babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena?

⚠️
USE WITH CAUTION
Danger Score: 5 (Lower is safer)
Quick Answer: babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena contains 23 ingredients. 4 caution. Use with Caution ⚠️ Monitor for any reactions in older babies.

Check for Different Age (6 available)

Ingredients Analysis (23 found)

plant-derived fragrance
⚠️5/10
Plant derived fragrance may contain allergens or irritants and is not well defined. Use with caution in baby products due to potential sensitivity in 6-12 month olds.
Confidence: HIGH
glycerint
⚠️4/10
Cannot understand what glycerint is it might be a misreading or a typo of glycerin which is safe
Confidence: HIGH
capryl
⚠️4/10
Cannot understand what capryl is it might be a misreading or typo no clear ingredient matches this name
Confidence: HIGH
capramido-propyl betaine
⚠️4/10
Cannot understand what capramido-propyl betaine is it might be a misreading or a typo of cocamidopropyl betaine a common mild surfactant
Confidence: HIGH
chamomilla recutita
3/10
For a 6–12 month old baby (older infant), German chamomile extract is usually low risk when used in small amounts on the skin. It can help calm and soothe, but some babies may have sensitive skin or develop a contact allergy.
Confidence: MEDIUM
ethylhexylglycerin
3/10
For babies 6–12 months old, this ingredient is usually low risk when used in small amounts in creams and lotions. However, it can sometimes cause skin irritation or a rare allergic reaction, and it can irritate the eyes.
Confidence: HIGH
propanediol
3/10
For babies 6–12 months (infant, baby, toddler), propanediol is usually low risk when used at the levels found in baby lotions and wipes. But it can sometimes irritate sensitive skin and can make skin absorb other ingredients more easily, so we remain careful.
Confidence: MEDIUM
aloe barbadensis leaf juice
2/10
For babies 6 to 12 months old, aloe vera leaf juice used on the skin is usually safe when it is part of a product made for baby skin and used in small amounts. It helps moisturize and soothe, but a small number of babies may be sensitive.
Confidence: MEDIUM
citric acid
2/10
For babies 6–12 months (infants), citric acid in small amounts in wipes and baby lotions is usually low risk. It can cause stinging if it gets in the eyes and can bother very sensitive or broken skin.
Confidence: HIGH
disodium cocoamphodiacetate
2/10
For a 6–12 month old baby this ingredient is usually safe when used in normal baby cleansers or wipes. It has only low, limited signs of causing skin or eye irritation in testing.
No Known Risk - Government and cosmetic safety reviewers evaluated this ingredient and did not find evidence of serious harms for normal topical use. A Canadian regulator said it is not expected to be toxic or to build up in the body. European and industry reviewers noted only limited, low evidence for mild skin or eye irritation. No clear links were found to cancer, reproductive harm, organ damage, or environmental toxicity. Because the reported concerns are low or limited, there are no known significant risks for typical use on skin.
Confidence: HIGH
matricaria flower extract
2/10
For babies 6–12 months (older infants), chamomile (Matricaria recutita) flower extract is usually safe when used on normal, unbroken skin. Most babies won’t have problems, but a small number can get a skin allergy.
No Known Risk - Major safety reviews and a small number of human case reports show only low or unclear concerns. Experts have judged the ingredient safe for topical use when used with normal concentration limits, and reported allergic or nerve-related cases are rare and not clearly linked to the ingredient. Because there is no clear, above-low evidence of harm, no specific risks are flagged.
Confidence: HIGH
polyquaternium-10
2/10
For babies 6–12 months old, this ingredient is generally considered low risk, but direct safety testing in infants is limited. Because related chemicals have shown possible effects in animal and lab studies, we stay cautious for babies and keep the safety score low but not zero.
Confidence: MEDIUM
undecylenoyl glycine
2/10
For babies 6–12 months (infants), this ingredient is generally low risk when used on the skin in products made for topical use. It is not thought to cause cancer or developmental problems, and allergic reactions are uncommon.
No Known Risk - Published safety reviews and regulatory assessments find this ingredient safe for use on skin in cosmetics when used as directed. There is no clear evidence showing it causes hormone disruption, cancer, or long-term harm to a child at normal topical use. Notes of mild irritation and environmental toxicity are limited and not shown to cause health problems when the ingredient is used as intended.
Confidence: MEDIUM
avocado fruit extract
1/10
For babies 6–12 months old, avocado fruit extract is generally safe to use on the skin. It is a gentle, moisturizing ingredient and the available safety information shows low concerns for health effects.
No Known Risk - Safety reviews from established cosmetic-ingredient sources show only low-level concerns (for cancer, allergies/immune effects, developmental or reproductive effects, and use restrictions) for topical use of avocado fruit extract. No hazards above low were identified, so no specific health risks are flagged for typical topical use.
Confidence: HIGH
capryloyl glycine
1/10
For babies 6–12 months (infants), capryloyl glycine is generally low risk when it’s in products made for babies. It is not linked to serious long-term harms in the available data, but expert reviewers note it should be used within certain limits and can sometimes cause irritation.
No Known Risk - A cosmetic safety review found this ingredient safe for use in products with some use limits, and other checks show only low or unclear signs of irritation. No higher-than-low health concerns (like cancer, hormone or developmental effects) were identified, so there are no real risks for children when the ingredient is used as intended.
Confidence: MEDIUM
caprylyl glycol
1/10
For babies 6–12 months (infants), Caprylyl Glycol is usually low risk when used in small amounts in baby lotions and wipes. It is not thought to cause cancer or long-term harm based on government and industry reviews.
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: MEDIUM
cucumber fruit extract
1/10
For babies 6 to 12 months old, cucumber fruit extract is usually safe on the skin. It helps calm and hydrate skin and has very low safety concerns in the research.
No Known Risk - Available safety information shows no health concerns above a low level. An industry safety review notes only use or manufacturing limits (such as concentration or impurity guidance), while endpoints like cancer, allergy/immunity, and reproductive effects were all rated low. Because no concern was flagged above low, there are no specific risks identified for typical topical use.
Confidence: HIGH
cucumis sativus
1/10
Cucumis Sativus is cucumber extract commonly used for soothing skin generally safe for baby topical use
No Known Risk - Cucumber extract is generally considered safe for topical use, including on baby skin. There is no strong evidence linking it to irritation, allergies, or any of the listed health risks in babies. It is commonly used in baby skincare products without reported adverse effects.
Confidence: HIGH
hydrolyzed jojoba esters
1/10
For infants aged 6–12 months (babies, half-year to one-year old), hydrolyzed jojoba esters are usually safe when used on the skin in normal baby lotions and creams. Safety reviews show low risk for cancer, allergies, or effects on growth and development. There are some industry recommendations about limiting how much is used and limited data about exact safe concentrations.
No Known Risk - Reviews by cosmetic safety panels found only low-level concerns and note gaps in data and limits on how much can be used in products. There is no clear evidence showing real harm from normal topical use of this ingredient, so no specific health risks are identified.
Confidence: MEDIUM
persea gratissima
1/10
Persea Gratissima Oil is avocado oil used as a moisturizer generally safe for baby skin with low allergy risk
No Known Risk - Avocado oil is generally considered safe for topical use on babies. There is no strong evidence linking it to irritation, allergies, hormone disruption, or other health risks in infants. It is not banned or restricted, and is not associated with long-term or systemic health effects. As with any oil, rare allergic reactions are possible, but these are not common or specific to avocado oil.
Confidence: HIGH
sodium lauroyl oat amino acids
1/10
For infants aged 6–12 months (baby, little one), this oat-based cleansing ingredient is generally low risk and is often used in gentle baby cleansers. Overall safety reviews rate it as having low concern for cancer, allergies, and effects on growth or reproduction.
No Known Risk - Available safety reviews did not find any health concerns above a low level. A cosmetic ingredient safety panel evaluated this ingredient and judged it safe for use in cosmetics with some concentration or use limits; reports of skin, eye, or lung irritation are limited or not fully assessed. For normal topical use on children, no specific hazards were identified.
Confidence: HIGH
sodium phytate
1/10
For a baby aged 6–12 months, sodium phytate is generally low risk when used in normal amounts in baby skin products. It is commonly used to help keep formulas stable. There is a small chance it can cause mild irritation, and regulators note limited concerns about absorption and non-reproductive organ effects at higher exposures.
No Known Risk - The available safety summary for this topical ingredient shows only low or limited concerns. Reports note occasional, limited eye/skin/respiratory irritation and one animal study that found tumors only at very high doses; a regulatory review lists low non‑reproductive organ toxicity and some product-use restrictions. No moderate or high level hazards were identified, so no real risks were found in the provided data.
Confidence: HIGH
water
0/10
For babies 6-12 months (infants, older babies), plain water used on the skin is safe when it’s clean and part of a baby product. Official assessments say plain water is not expected to cause harm.
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 babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena

Safe for older babies? babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena

Use caution with babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena for 6-12 month old babies. Some ingredients may pose concerns.

What ingredients should I watch out for?

We analyzed 23 ingredients in babyganics foaming shampoo & body wash chamomile verbena. 4 caution. Check the detailed analysis above for specific concerns.

Is this appropriate for older babies to using shampoo & bodywash & conditioner?

The appropriate age depends on the specific ingredients. This analysis is for 6-12 month old babies. 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.