Editorial Policy
The standards every page on this site is held to — sourcing, independence, corrections, and the lines we won't cross.
Sourcing
Every factual claim about how retinol works is tied to a published source — the American Academy of Dermatology or the peer-reviewed literature — cited on the page. Product facts (retinol form, stated concentration, format, fragrance status) are read from the product’s own listing on a dated visit. We do not assert benefits on our own authority, and we do not present a brand’s marketing copy as fact.
No fabricated proof, ever
Retinol Room contains no invented reviews, testimonials, star ratings, or before-and-after photos. We have not physically tested the retinols we write about, and we never imply otherwise. Product images come from the retailer; verdicts are our own analysis of the formula. This is the single line we will not cross for any layout, any partner, or any reason.
Independence from commission
We earn affiliate commissions, disclosed on our affiliate disclosurepage. Those commissions never influence a recommendation. When the retinol that pays us less is the better buy, it is our pick. We do not sell reviews, rankings, or “sponsored” placements disguised as editorial.
Honesty about limits
The author is an enthusiast, not a dermatologist, and the site is not medical advice. We say so on every guide. Where a brand hides a strength, we print “Not published” rather than estimate it. Where the evidence for an ingredient is thin — bakuchiol, for instance — we say the evidence is thin. Our full evaluation process is on the methodology page.
Corrections
We get things wrong sometimes, and we’d rather fix them in the open than quietly. If you find a factual error, tell us: we’ll check the claim against its source, and if you’re right, correct it and update the page’s “last updated” date. Substantive corrections to a live claim are noted rather than hidden.
Updates
Formulas change, products get discontinued, and prices move. Each article shows a “last updated” date, and prices are refreshed automatically and stamped with the date they were pulled. We revisit our roundups as the products in them change.
Reader safety
We recommend patch-testing new retinols, introducing them one at a time, starting at a low frequency, and using daily sunscreen — retinol increases sun sensitivity. For anything beyond general guidance — a persistent reaction, a diagnosis, a prescription retinoid — we point readers to a qualified professional rather than pretending to substitute for one.