Home / Products / oil / Acure / The Essentials Moroccan Argan Oil
DERMFND VERIFIED
Acure The Essentials Moroccan Argan Oil in a clear glass bottle with dropper
Acure · oil

The Essentials Moroccan Argan Oil

Multi-Purpose MVP

clean beauty Fragrance Free Paraben Free Pregnancy Safe Cruelty Free Vegan
80/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
8.4
Value for money
8.2
Suitability breadth
6.2
Irritation risk
Low
$12.99
1 fl oz / 30ml
4.5
9,500 customer ratings (Amazon)
Data confidence
High confidence
9,500+ aggregated reviews · INCI confirmed
Made in
Morocco
Launched
2012
PAO
12 mo.
after opening
Certifications
EWG Verified
+2 more
Alex Brufsky
Alex Brufsky Founder & Editor
Analysis by DermFND · Last verified May 2026 · Methodology
Verified reviewer
01 · Quick read

Pros & cons.

What we love
  • +100% pure single-ingredient formulation
  • +Versatile use across face, hair, body, and cuticles
  • +Affordable price compared to luxury argan oils
  • +Pregnancy-safe and one of the simplest routines possible
  • +EWG Verified, vegan, and cruelty-free
  • +Light absorption with no greasy residue
  • +Absolutely no formulation-related irritation potential
What to know
  • Argan oil's oleic acid content can be heavy for oily skin
  • Not fungal-acne-safe
  • Faint nutty scent isn't to everyone's taste
  • Plastic dropper feels less premium than glass alternatives
  • Slight batch-to-batch variation in color and scent
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

There’s a particular pleasure in opening a skincare product and finding that the ingredient list is one line long. In an era when most facial oils have eight to fifteen ingredients — base oils, essential oils, vitamin E preservatives, antioxidant blends, botanical extracts — a 100% single-ingredient product feels almost defiant. No marketing complexity. No formulation hedging. Just one thing, and that one thing has to be good enough on its own.

Acure’s Essentials Moroccan Argan Oil is exactly that. The ingredient list reads, in full: Argania spinosa (argan) kernel oil. That’s it. No vitamin E added as a preservative (the natural tocopherols in argan oil handle that). No carrier oils to dilute it. No essential oils for fragrance. No botanical extracts for marketing color. Just argan oil in a glass dropper bottle for $13. In a market full of products that complicate themselves to justify their price tags, this one resists the urge entirely.

What makes this approach work is that argan oil is genuinely a good standalone ingredient. It’s been one of the most studied facial oils in cosmetic chemistry for a couple of decades. The fatty acid profile is roughly 45% oleic acid and 35% linoleic acid, with the rest in palmitic and stearic acids — a balance that supports the skin barrier without being too rich for most users to tolerate. It contains a meaningful concentration of vitamin E (tocopherols and tocotrienols), which provides antioxidant capacity and helps protect the oil itself from oxidation. It also contains polyphenolic antioxidants that aren’t found in most other facial oils. And the molecular size and structure mean it absorbs reasonably well into the upper layers of the skin without sitting on the surface like heavier oils do.

The practical experience matches the ingredient. The oil is a clear golden liquid with a faint natural nutty scent — the smell of pure argan, not a perfumed version. A few drops warmed between the palms and pressed into the face after moisturizer absorb within a minute or two, leaving skin feeling softer and slightly more dewy without a greasy film. Used as a final-step seal in a nighttime routine, it locks in hydration from the products underneath. Used as a mid-routine treatment for very dry skin, it adds an extra emollient layer. Used on hair ends, cuticles, or dry body areas, it does exactly what argan oil does in those contexts. The versatility is one of the strongest selling points — this is one of the few products you can buy and use across face, hair, and body without contradictions.

The single-ingredient format also makes it ideal for some specific use cases that more complex oils can’t serve. If you have sensitive or reactive skin and you’re doing an elimination diet to figure out which ingredients are causing reactions, a pure single-ingredient oil is exactly what you want — there’s nothing else in the bottle to confound the test. If you’re a skincare beginner who’s overwhelmed by the complexity of the category and just wants something foolproof, you can’t go wrong with one ingredient. If you’re pregnant or nursing and want to simplify your routine to ingredients you know are safe, pure argan oil checks every box.

The limitations are inherent to argan oil itself rather than to the formulation. The moderate oleic acid content means it can feel heavy on oily skin and may trigger breakouts for some acne-prone users. The fatty acid profile also means it’s not fungal-acne-safe — if you have pityrosporum folliculitis, argan can feed Malassezia and worsen the condition. And while the oil is generally well tolerated, it’s still an oil, which means it’s the wrong product for anyone whose skin doesn’t get along with facial oils as a category. None of these are formulation problems — they’re properties of argan oil that you’d have with any pure version.

There are also small batch-to-batch variations worth noting. Pure plant oils don’t have the consistency that synthetic ingredients do — color, scent, and viscosity can shift slightly between bottles depending on harvest, processing, and storage. Some users notice a more pronounced nutty scent in certain batches. None of this affects the actual function of the oil, but it’s worth knowing if you’re particular about consistency. The plastic dropper is also slightly less premium than glass-on-glass droppers some prestige brands use, but for a $13 product the packaging is fine.

Where this oil really earns its place is as a foundational item in a routine — the kind of product you keep around for years because it does its job and never breaks anything. It’s the natural starter oil for anyone exploring facial oils for the first time, the safe pregnancy-routine choice, the multi-tasking travel item, the elimination-routine baseline. At $13 for an ounce, the price-to-versatility math is one of the strongest in the entire budget skincare category. From an established brand with a decade of distribution, the quality is consistent enough to trust. And the simplicity itself is a feature, not a bug.

In a category full of products trying to convince you they’re complicated enough to be worth their price, this one is proudly simple, and it’s better for it. If you’re looking for a budget face oil that does what an oil should do without any marketing additions, this is one of the best places to start.

Formula

03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
Argan Kernel Oil (Argania Spinosa)](/ingredients/argan-oil) (100%)
The single ingredient in this product. Argan oil is rich in vitamin E (tocopherols), oleic acid, linoleic acid, and antioxidant phenolic compounds. As a 100% pure oil, it provides barrier-supporting fatty acids and antioxidant capacity in a minimalist single-ingredient format with zero risk of formulation-related irritation.
Promising
OK
Full INCI list

Argania Spinosa (Argan) Kernel Oil

Product flags
✓ Fragrance Free ✓ Alcohol Free ✗ Oil Free ✓ Silicone Free ✓ Paraben Free ✓ Sulfate Free ✓ Cruelty Free ✓ Vegan ✗ Fungal Acne Safe
04 · Compatibility

Skin match.

Pairs well with
ceramideshyaluronic-acidniacinamidevitamin-c
Skin types
Best for
drynormalsensitive
Works for
combination
Not ideal for
oily
Caution for
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

Argan oil (Argania spinosa kernel oil) has a substantial body of cosmetic literature supporting its role as a skin-barrier-supporting facial oil. Its fatty acid profile — approximately 45% oleic acid, 35% linoleic acid, 12% palmitic acid, and smaller percentages of other fatty acids — provides the lipid composition needed to support the stratum corneum. The high tocopherol content (vitamin E) provides antioxidant activity that protects both the oil itself from oxidation and the skin from environmental free radicals. Polyphenolic compounds in argan oil add a secondary antioxidant layer not found in most other plant oils.

Clinical research on argan oil includes studies suggesting it can improve skin elasticity in postmenopausal women, support barrier function in dry skin, and provide modest anti-inflammatory effects. The 2015 study by Boucetta et al. published in Clinical Interventions in Aging demonstrated improvements in skin elasticity with daily topical argan oil application. While the effect sizes are modest compared to active treatments like retinoids, argan oil is one of the better-studied facial oils available and has more clinical backing than most botanical alternatives.

The single-ingredient format of this product eliminates a significant variable in evaluating cosmetic safety: there's no preservative, no fragrance, no essential oils, no botanical extracts, and no formulation chemistry to consider. Whatever effect the oil has — positive or negative — comes from the argan oil itself. For users with documented sensitivities to common cosmetic ingredients, this is one of the safest possible facial oil choices, since the only variable is whether the user reacts to argan oil specifically.

References

  1. The effect of dietary and/or cosmetic argan oil on postmenopausal skin elasticityClinical Interventions in Aging (2015)

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists generally view pure plant oils like argan as supportive emollient products that can help with dry or barrier-compromised skin. Board-certified dermatologists frequently recommend single-ingredient oils for patients with sensitive skin or those undergoing elimination protocols, since the absence of formulation complexity removes confounding variables. For dry, normal, or mature skin, dermatologists often suggest argan oil as a final-step nighttime seal over moisturizer. For acne-prone or oily skin, dermatologists generally recommend lighter alternatives like squalane or grapeseed oil, citing the moderate oleic acid content of argan as a potential issue for some users. As a multi-purpose product, dermatologists also acknowledge argan oil's value for hair and body care, particularly for cuticles, dry hands, and hair ends.

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Cleanser
02 Hydrating serum
03 Moisturizer
04 SPF 50
PM routine
01 Cleanser
02 Hydrating serum
03 Moisturizer
04 THIS PRODUCT (1-3 drops as final seal)
How to use

Apply 2-4 drops to clean, slightly damp skin after moisturizer as the final nighttime step. Warm between palms and press into face, neck, and décolleté. Use on hair ends to tame frizz, on cuticles for nail health, or on dry body areas. Mix one drop into moisturizer to thicken the texture. Apply to damp skin for better absorption. Store the bottle upright and away from direct sunlight to preserve the natural antioxidants.

Value assessment

At around $13 for one ounce of 100% pure argan oil, this product offers high value for a single-ingredient oil. Prestige natural-beauty brands often charge $25-$50 for the same volume of comparable pure argan oils, with different quality and sourcing. The Acure version provides a basic, dependable cosmetic-grade argan oil at one of the lowest prices in the category. The bottle lasts 3-6 months depending on usage. This established brand has decade-long distribution; the simplicity and value are honest.

Who should buy

Dry, normal, or sensitive skin types wanting a budget-friendly multi-purpose facial oil. Skincare beginners wanting a foolproof single-ingredient product. People using an elimination routine to find reactive ingredients. Pregnant or nursing users seeking a simple, safe oil. Anyone who values minimalist formulations.

Who should skip

Oily or acne-prone skin types who find oleic acid heavy or cause breakouts. People with fungal acne or pityrosporum folliculitis. Anyone wanting a multi-ingredient facial oil with extra botanical actives.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Texture

Lightweight golden oil that absorbs quickly without heavy residue

Scent

Faint natural nutty note characteristic of pure argan oil; no added scent

Packaging

Glass bottle with dropper applicator

First use

Skin feels softer and slightly dewier upon application. The oil absorbs within one to two minutes and leaves no greasy film. It does not tingle or burn — single-ingredient oils have zero formulation-related irritation potential.

How long it lasts

3-6 months depending on use case — longer if used as a treatment oil, shorter if used as a primary moisturizer

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

All Year

Finish
satinnon-greasy
Certifications
EWG VerifiedVeganCruelty-Free
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

Acure introduced its Moroccan argan oil as part of The Essentials line in 2012, positioning it as a foundational single-ingredient product alongside other simple oils like rosehip and marula. Argan oil was experiencing a major popularity boom in the early 2010s, driven by mass-market hair care products, and Acure's facial-grade version brought the ingredient into the budget skincare aisle. The product has remained largely unchanged for over a decade.

About Acure

Established Brand (5–20 years)

Acure launched in 2010, building a budget natural beauty brand sold at Whole Foods, Target, and Ulta. The Essentials line uses simple, single-ingredient or minimal-ingredient formulas and is the brand's most stripped-down range.

Brand founded: 2010 · Product launched: 2012
09 · Setting the record straight

Common myths.

Myth

All argan oils are the same.

Reality

Argan oil quality changes based on processing method (cold-pressed vs heat-extracted), filtration, and source. Cold-pressed cosmetic-grade argan oil has more antioxidants and fatty acids than heat-processed versions. Acure markets this as cosmetic-grade, but the label lacks specific processing details.

Myth

Argan oil works for every skin type, including oily.

Reality

Argan oil has moderate oleic acid levels, which feels heavy or clogs pores for some oily and acne-prone users. It works best for dry, normal, or moderately sensitive skin instead of all skin types. Its reputation for universal effectiveness oversimplifies the reality.

10 · Common questions

FAQ.

Is Acure's argan oil 100% pure?

Yes. The ingredient list contains only Argania spinosa (argan) kernel oil — no preservatives, fragrances, carriers, or essential oils. It is one of the simplest products in the Acure lineup and works well for elimination routines or minimalist oil users.

Can I use this on my hair as well as my face?

Yes — argan oil works for many uses. Apply a few drops to damp hair ends to tame frizz and add shine, use as a leave-in treatment for dry hair, or apply to cuticles and dry body areas. The single-ingredient formulation makes it safe for face, hair, and body use without conflicts.

Will argan oil break me out?

It is possible. Argan oil has moderate oleic acid, which feels heavy or triggers breakouts for some acne-prone users. If you have acne or fungal acne, use a lighter oil like squalane or grapeseed instead. Pure argan oil rarely causes breakouts for dry or normal skin.

How does Acure's argan oil compare to luxury argan oils?

Luxury brands often buy from Moroccan cooperatives, use fair-trade practices, and use cold-pressed processing. Acure's version has simpler sourcing claims but provides a comparable ingredient for a much lower price. For most users, the difference is minimal — argan oil is argan oil, and the simplicity of this product is a feature.

Is it safe during pregnancy?

Yes. Pure argan oil has no ingredients flagged for pregnancy. It is one of the safest face oils for pregnant or nursing users. Use it to simplify a routine during pregnancy.

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"Pure single-ingredient formulation"

"Multi-purpose use across face, hair, and body"

"Affordable compared to specialty argan brands"

"Light absorption with no greasy residue"

Common complaints

"Some batches have a slightly nutty scent some users dislike"

"Plastic dropper feels less premium"

"Color and consistency can vary slightly between batches"

Notable endorsements
EWG VerifiedWhole Foods Premium Body CareTarget beauty regular
Related ingredients
Search the catalog
↑↓ navigate · select · Esc close Powered by Pagefind