Laundry Detergent and Sensitive Skin: What the Evidence Actually Says
A non-alarmist guide to irritant and allergic contact dermatitis, fragrance, residue and a sensible elimination routine.

The short version
- Irritation and allergy are different mechanisms
- Fragrance-free is more useful than vague sensitive wording
- Persistent dermatitis deserves medical assessment, not endless product switching
The internet often turns detergent into a villain. The evidence is less dramatic and more useful: soaps and detergents can irritate skin, and some ingredients can trigger allergic contact dermatitis in sensitised people. Dose, residue, skin-barrier health and individual allergy all change the picture.
Irritant versus allergic dermatitis
Irritant contact dermatitis happens when repeated exposure damages the skin barrier. Allergic contact dermatitis is an immune reaction to a specific substance after sensitisation. They can look similar, which is why guessing from a rash alone is unreliable.
Why fragrance-free is a cleaner test
Fragrance is not automatically harmful, but it adds a mixture of potential variables. If you are troubleshooting, a genuinely fragrance-free detergent removes those variables more cleanly than products labelled fresh, botanical or lightly scented.
A two-week laundry reset
- Choose one fragrance-free detergent and do not introduce other new skin products
- Measure the smallest effective dose
- Avoid overloading the drum
- Use an extra rinse for close-to-skin items
- Wash new clothes before wearing
- Record changes rather than relying on memory
When to ask for help
See a pharmacist or GP if a rash persists, recurs, spreads, disrupts sleep or shows signs of infection. Patch testing under specialist supervision can help identify allergic triggers. A detergent swap cannot diagnose eczema or contact allergy.
Sources and further reading
This guide draws on the following medical, regulatory and technical sources.
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