Quick Comparison

UreaVitamin E (Tocopherol)
Typical ConcentrationMoisturizing: 2-10%. Mild exfoliation: 10-20%. Strong keratolytic: 20-40%. For face: stay at 5-10%. For body rough patches: 10-20%. For calluses/severely rough skin: 40%. Apply to damp skin and seal with cream.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).
ApplicationTopical (cream, lotion, gel). Apply to damp skin. Eucerin and CeraVe have well-known urea-containing lines.Topical (serum, cream, oil). Best in combination with vitamin C and ferulic acid. Apply in the morning under sunscreen.
Research Papers10 papers10 papers
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Mechanism of Action

Urea

At low concentrations (<10%), urea acts as a humectant — small molecule (60 Da) absorbing into stratum corneum, drawing water via hydrogen bonding to carbonyl and amine groups. Part of endogenous NMF (filaggrin degradation products with amino acids, lactate), highly biocompatible. Integrates into corneocyte envelope, supports aquaporin-3 water transport. At higher concentrations (>10%), denatures keratin (K1, K10) by disrupting hydrogen bonds in alpha-helical structure and disulfide bridges in cornified envelope, causing corneodesmosome degradation and desquamation. Keratolytic via direct protein denaturation, not enzymatic. Dual mechanism — humectant at low dose, keratolytic at high — versatile for hydration and hyperkeratotic conditions (psoriasis, keratosis pilaris).

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

Urea

Common

Stinging on broken or irritated skin (more likely at higher concentrations).

Serious

None.

Rare

Contact dermatitis (uncommon).

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.

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