What a 3/5 rating means
On the comedogenic scale, a 3 is the moderate midpoint: tolerated by many, a possible trigger for congestion-prone skin. That puts Murumuru Butter squarely in the judgement-call zone, where your skin type and the product's formula decide the outcome.
This rating is disputed. Credible sources land on different numbers for Murumuru Butter, so we publish the range (3) rather than a false single figure. When sources disagree this openly, your own experience carries real weight.
One thing the number cannot tell you is concentration. Ingredients are listed in descending order, so Murumuru Butter near the end of a label is present in tiny amounts and matters far less than the same ingredient near the top.
About Murumuru Butter
It is a rich plant butter that melts at skin temperature, prized for cushiony moisture. A hard palm-family butter high in lauric acid, so it is frequently flagged as pore-clogging in the moderate-to-high range.
On a label it can read as Murumuru Butter, Astrocaryum Murumuru Seed Butter — worth knowing when you scan an ingredient deck.
Murumuru Butter in makeup and skincare
You'll meet it in stick foundations, cream products, and rich lip colour, as well as body and face creams. Its irritancy is rated separately at 0/5, which is low.
If you deal with fungal acne (malassezia folliculitis) rather than ordinary clogged pores, note that Murumuru Butter is among the fatty-acid or ester-type ingredients that community sources commonly avoid — a separate concern from its comedogenic score, and one with weaker evidence behind it.
Lower-rated alternatives to Murumuru Butter
If you want a similar role with a friendlier comedogenic score, consider:
- Squalane — comedogenic rating 1/5 (Low risk).
- Mango Butter — comedogenic rating 2/5 (Low risk).