Quick Comparison
| Hemp Seed Oil | Vitamin E (Tocopherol) | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Apply 2-5 drops as a moisturizer or mix with other products. Cold-pressed, unrefined oil is dark green with a nutty scent. Suitable for oily and acne-prone skin. Comedogenic rating: 0 (non-comedogenic). Use within 3-6 months and store refrigerated. | Concentrations: 0.5-2% in formulations. Most commonly used at 1% alongside vitamin C (15%) and ferulic acid (0.5%). Higher concentrations can feel greasy and may cause breakouts in acne-prone skin. D-alpha-tocopherol (natural) is more potent than DL-alpha-tocopherol (synthetic). |
| Application | Topical (pure oil). Cold-pressed, unrefined. Can also be taken orally as a supplement. | Topical (serum, cream, oil). Best in combination with vitamin C and ferulic acid. Apply in the morning under sunscreen. |
| Research Papers | 7 papers | 10 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Hemp Seed Oil
Linoleic acid (55-60%) is key active — acne-prone skin has been shown to have 50% less in sebum compared to normal skin; deficiency may contribute to abnormal follicular keratinization and comedone formation. Topical supplementation normalizes sebum composition (linoleate is component of sebum triglycerides), reduces comedone formation, supports ceramide synthesis. GLA (gamma-linolenic acid, 2-4%) converts to DGLA, which inhibits pro-inflammatory leukotriene B4 synthesis (5-lipoxygenase competition) and is precursor to anti-inflammatory prostaglandin E1. 3:1 omega-6:omega-3 ratio considered optimal for skin. Natural vitamin E provides antioxidant protection. Comedogenic rating 0. Contains 0% THC/CBD. Ideal for acne-prone, inflamed, eczema-prone skin. Goes rancid within 3-6 months — store refrigerated.
Vitamin E (Tocopherol)
Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) is the skin's primary lipid-soluble antioxidant, concentrated in stratum corneum and sebum. Donates hydrogen from chromanol ring to neutralize lipid peroxyl radicals (LOO•), preventing peroxidation chain reaction in cell membranes. After donating, becomes tocopheroxyl radical, regenerated by vitamin C via ascorbate-tocopherol cycle — why C+E+ferulic is synergistic. Modulates UV-induced inflammation: inhibits protein kinase C, NF-kappa B activation, reduces PGE2 synthesis. Inhibits 5-lipoxygenase, decreasing leukotriene production. Accumulates in sebaceous glands, delivered via sebum as first-line antioxidant defense. Protects polyunsaturated fatty acids from oxidative damage.
Risks & Safety
Hemp Seed Oil
Common
Can feel slightly heavy for very oily skin. Goes rancid quickly if not stored properly.
Serious
None.
Rare
Very rare allergic reaction.
Vitamin E (Tocopherol)
Common
Can feel heavy/greasy at high concentrations. May cause breakouts in acne-prone skin.
Serious
Contact dermatitis (uncommon).
Rare
Allergic reactions. Pure vitamin E oil on wounds may worsen scarring in some people.
Full Profiles
Hemp Seed Oil →
Cold-pressed from Cannabis sativa seeds, hemp seed oil has an ideal 3:1 ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids — the ratio considered optimal for skin health. It is rich in linoleic acid (which acne-prone skin is deficient in), gamma-linolenic acid (GLA, a potent anti-inflammatory), and natural vitamin E. Does not contain THC or CBD. One of the best oils for acne-prone, inflamed, or eczema-prone skin.
Vitamin E (Tocopherol) →
A fat-soluble antioxidant that protects cell membranes from oxidative damage. In skincare, vitamin E is most effective when combined with vitamin C — each regenerates the other, creating a sustained antioxidant defense. It also provides moisturizing and anti-inflammatory effects. Alpha-tocopherol is the most biologically active form. Found naturally in sebum, where it serves as the first line of antioxidant defense.