If you have spent any time online lately, you have probably seen someone warning that seed oils are toxic. The fear started with food, and now it is spilling into skincare, leaving a lot of people wondering whether the plant oils in their routine are secretly bad for them. Let us clear it up honestly, because the answer is more nuanced than the headlines.
Where did the seed oil fear come from?
It started as a dietary debate. The concern is about industrial seed oils that are heavily refined and used in processed foods, and whether eating large amounts of them contributes to inflammation. That is a food question, and it is genuinely still being debated. The problem is that a food argument got flattened into a scary slogan, seed oils are bad, and then applied to everything, including what you put on your skin.
Is putting seed oil on your skin the same as eating it?
No, and this is the key point. Eating large quantities of refined oil over years is a completely different situation from pressing a few drops of a pure oil onto your face. Your skin is not your digestive system. Topically, well-made plant oils have been used for centuries to nourish, soften, and protect the skin, and the evidence for that is long and reassuring. The dietary debate simply does not transfer to skincare in the way the slogans suggest.
So what actually matters in a skin oil?
Quality and processing, far more than the word seed. There is a real difference between a cheap, industrially refined, bleached, and deodorized oil and a pure, cold-pressed one. Cold-pressing keeps the oil intact, preserving the fatty acids and antioxidants that make it good for your skin in the first place. Even many critics of industrial oils agree that cold-pressed, minimally processed oils are a different thing entirely. The issue was never the plant. It was what industry did to it.
Which oils should you actually trust?
Look for two things: purity and processing. A single-ingredient oil with nothing added, that has been cold-pressed rather than chemically refined, is exactly what your skin can use. Rosehip and argan are perfect examples, rich in skin-loving fatty acids and antioxidants when they are kept pure. The label and the processing tell you everything. A long ingredient list and heavy refining are the real red flags, not the humble seed.
This is why we cold-press our oils and keep them to a single ingredient. The earth already made these oils good for your skin. The trouble only ever started when they were stripped and diluted. If you want to see what genuinely pure looks like, explore our oils here, or read why 100% pure actually means something to us.