Butylated Hydroxyanisole vs Homosalate: which is worse?
Quick answer: Butylated Hydroxyanisole carries the heavier risk profile. Butylated Hydroxyanisole is — in the EU and — in the US; Homosalate is restricted in the EU and allowed in the US.
| Property | Butylated Hydroxyanisole | Homosalate |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | — | Restricted |
| US status | — | Allowed |
| Risk level | — | medium |
| Banned in | Japan (banned for foods containing fats and oils) | — |
| Restricted in | European Union (restricted; banned in baby food), United Kingdom | European Union |
| Category | additive | uv filter |
| Where it hides | — | sunscreen, SPF moisturizer, SPF foundation |
What is Butylated Hydroxyanisole?
Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) is a synthetic phenolic antioxidant preservative derived from petroleum (see also bha entry). It is a mixture of 2-BHA and 3-BHA isomers, used to prevent oxidative rancidity in fats, oils, and fat-containing foods. Chemical formula C11H16O2.
What is Homosalate?
Homosalate is an organic UV filter that absorbs UVB radiation.
Documented risks
Butylated Hydroxyanisole: IARC classifies BHA as Group 2B (possible human carcinogen) based on forestomach tumor studies in rodents at high doses. The NTP lists it as 'reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.' EFSA's 2012 review found endocrine-disrupting potential. Japan banned it for food use. The FDA permits it at 0.02% of fat content. Concerns about estrogen-receptor interaction have been documented in animal studies. Contact dermatitis from cosmetic use is reported.
Homosalate: A suspected endocrine disruptor; the EU limits it to 7.34% in face products (2025), well below typical US concentrations.
Scan a barcode and we'll flag both Butylated Hydroxyanisole and Homosalate (plus 200+ other ingredients banned overseas).
Scan free →