What Bakuchiol Is
Bakuchiol is a plant-derived compound originally isolated from the seeds and leaves of the babchi plant (Psoralea corylifolia). It is not a form of vitamin A — chemically, it has nothing to do with retinoids. What makes it interesting is that it appears to act on some of the same pathways in the skin, which is why it's often described as a "plant-derived alternative to retinol."
It's the ingredient you'll see called "phyto-retinol" or "nature's retinol." Those are marketing shorthands, not chemistry: bakuchiol mimics certain retinoid-like effects; it is not retinol.
What Retinol Is
Retinol is a vitamin A derivative and the most common over-the-counter retinoid. Your skin converts it, in steps, toward retinoic acid — the active form that influences cell turnover and the appearance of fine lines and tone. It's milder than prescription retinoids like tretinoin, but it's still potent, and that potency is the source of both its results and its side effects: dryness, peeling, redness, and increased sun sensitivity, especially in the first weeks.
What the Research Actually Shows
This is where the honest comparison lives — at the level of the ingredient, not anyone's finished product.
The most-cited study is a 2019 randomized controlled trial in the British Journal of Dermatology. Over twelve weeks, it compared 0.5% bakuchiol against 0.5% retinol and found the two comparable in improving the appearance of wrinkles and pigmentation — with bakuchiol significantly better tolerated (less stinging and scaling). Earlier work in 2014 first documented bakuchiol's retinoid-like activity, and later research (including a 2020 sensitive-skin study and a 2022 review) has continued to build the case for it as a legitimate active rather than a buzzword.
Two caveats we'd want you to hear, because they rarely make the headline:
- One head-to-head trial is not the same as decades of data. Retinol's research record is deeper and longer. Bakuchiol's evidence is promising and growing, but younger.
- A study tests the ingredient, not the bottle. Results in a trial reflect that specific concentration, formula, and protocol — not a guarantee for any single product, ours included.
The Honest Verdict: Different, Not "Better"
| Retinol | Bakuchiol | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Vitamin A derivative | Plant-derived compound (not vitamin A) |
| Research depth | Decades, extensive | Promising, growing, younger |
| Tolerance | Can irritate, especially early | Generally well tolerated |
| Sun sensitivity | Increases it | Not associated with the same effect |
| Best for | Tolerant skin, maximum evidence | Sensitive skin, gentler routines, retinoid-free preference |
Neither column wins outright. The question isn't "which is stronger" — it's "which fits the skin in front of me."
Can You Use Both?
Some people layer a gentle retinoid with bakuchiol, since bakuchiol's calming character can offset retinol's harsher edges. If you're new to actives, though, the simpler path is to pick one, give it a fair run, and change only one variable at a time. If you've reacted badly to retinol before, starting with bakuchiol alone is the lower-risk way in.
How Bakuchiol Fits Into YANNARA
Our tone-focused oil serum is formulated with 1% bakuchiol — a researched, plant-derived alternative to retinol — alongside a stable, oil-soluble vitamin C ester and soothing botanicals like bisabolol and blue tansy. Retinol-free by design, for skin working on the look of uneven tone without the harshness retinoids can bring.
Explore Arawon →We don't claim Arawon will reproduce any study's result — that would mean transferring an ingredient's research onto a finished product, which isn't how we talk about evidence. What we'll say is this: the bakuchiol in Arawon sits at the top of the range used in the published research, it's chosen for its documented purity, and it lives inside a deliberately structured, four-layer formula rather than being sprinkled on a label. Engineered, not blended.
A Note If You're Pregnant or Nursing
Over-the-counter and prescription retinoids are generally avoided during pregnancy and breastfeeding, which is one reason people look for retinoid-free options like bakuchiol during those seasons. We're nurses, not your prescriber — so if you're pregnant or nursing, run any new product past your OB or dermatologist before you start.