Resources

Decode the confusing parts — side by side.

The fastest way to feel less overwhelmed is to see things compared clearly. Use these tables and answers to settle the questions that trip up almost everyone at the start.
Know the difference

Allergy vs. sensitivity vs. intolerance

These words get used interchangeably, but they mean different things — and knowing which is which changes how you respond.

Allergy

An immune-system response that can be immediate and, in some cases, serious. Worth professional testing and a clear action plan.

Sensitivity

A non-allergic reaction — think headaches or skin irritation from fragrance — that\u2019s real but works differently from an allergy.

Intolerance

Usually digestive and dose-related. Often about how much, not whether — and different again from the two above.

Read labels with confidence

Fragrance-free vs. unscented

They sound identical on the shelf. For sensitive skin, the distinction can be the whole story.

Fragrance-free

Generally means no fragrance ingredients were added. Usually the safer starting point if scent is your trigger.

Unscented

Often means a masking scent was added to cover other smells — so it can still contain fragrance chemicals.

Quick skill

How to read a product label in under a minute

You don\u2019t need to memorize chemistry. A few habits cover most of what matters for sensitive skin.
Plain-language glossary

Terms you\u2019ll see a lot, in everyday words

Hypoallergenic

A marketing term, not a guarantee — it suggests fewer common allergens but isn\u2019t strictly regulated.

Polysensitization

Reacting to more than one substance. Common, manageable, and easier with organized notes.

Contact dermatitis

Skin irritation or inflammation from something it touched — a frequent culprit behind mystery rashes.

Patch testing

Applying a small amount to a small area first, to check for a reaction before full use.

Fragrance / parfum

An umbrella label that can hide many individual scent chemicals under one word.

Sensitive skin

Skin that reacts more readily to products or environment — a description, not a diagnosis.

Frequently asked

Questions we hear all the time

It suggests a product is formulated to cause fewer allergic reactions, but the term isn\u2019t strictly regulated — so treat it as a helpful hint, not a guarantee.

Not always. “Unscented” can include a masking fragrance. If scent is your trigger, “fragrance-free” is usually the safer starting point.

Stop using it, note the product and ingredients, and consider a patch test before trying anything new. If it\u2019s severe or persistent, see a clinician.

Look for “fragrance-free” (not just “free & clear” marketing) and fewer additives. We focus on how to evaluate options rather than pushing a single brand.

No — we\u2019re educational only. We help you get informed and organized, and we encourage working with a qualified professional for your specific situation.

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