Can Vaseline Help with Eyelash Growth?
Can Vaseline Help with Eyelash Growth?
Vaseline can make eyelashes look shinier, smoother, and more conditioned, but it is not clinically proven to make eyelashes grow longer or faster. It is best treated as a surface conditioner, not a true lash-growth treatment.
Does Vaseline actually help eyelashes grow?
Vaseline, or petroleum jelly, is often used around beauty routines because it is inexpensive, fragrance-free in its classic form, and good at sealing moisture. On eyelashes, it can make existing hairs look darker, shinier, and slightly fuller because it coats the lash shaft.
That visual improvement is different from true lash growth. Vaseline does not stimulate the hair follicle, extend the anagen growth phase, or create new lash density. It is better understood as a conditioning layer rather than a lash-growth active.
What Vaseline can do for eyelashes
Vaseline can be helpful when the goal is to condition the surface of lashes, reduce dryness, or create a glossy no-makeup look. Its effect comes from occlusion: it forms a light water-resistant film over the hair and surrounding skin.
What Vaseline cannot do
The common claim that Vaseline “grows eyelashes” is overstated. It may help lashes look better by conditioning them, but it does not contain ingredients known to signal the follicle or clinically extend the lash growth phase.
| Claim | Reality | Better interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| “Vaseline grows eyelashes” | Not proven | It may reduce dryness and breakage, making existing lashes look healthier. |
| “Vaseline makes lashes thicker” | Temporary visual effect | The coating can make lashes appear fuller until it is washed off. |
| “Vaseline replaces lash serum” | No | Growth serums use targeted actives; Vaseline is mainly an occlusive conditioner. |
| “Vaseline protects lashes” | Partly true | It can reduce moisture loss and friction when used sparingly. |
How to use Vaseline on eyelashes safely
If you choose to use Vaseline on your lashes, apply it as a thin conditioning layer, not as a heavy overnight mask. Too much product can migrate into the eye or clog the lash line.
Start with clean, dry eyelids. Use a clean microbrush, disposable mascara wand, or cotton swab. Pick up a rice-grain amount of Vaseline, wipe off the excess, and lightly brush it over the lash tips or the outer lash surface. Avoid the waterline and avoid putting product directly into the eye.
In the morning, cleanse gently with warm water and a mild cleanser. If your eyes feel cloudy, itchy, swollen, or irritated, stop using it immediately.
Vaseline on eyelashes before and after
Before-and-after changes from Vaseline are usually cosmetic rather than biological. The most realistic result is a healthier-looking lash surface, not a dramatic increase in lash length.
| Timeframe | What you may notice | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Immediately | Glossy look | Lashes may look darker and smoother because they are coated. |
| 1 week | Softer feel | Reduced dryness can make lashes feel more conditioned. |
| 4 weeks | Less breakage possible | If makeup removal is gentler, fewer lashes may snap from friction. |
| 8–12 weeks | Growth still not proven | Any true growth change is more likely from your natural lash cycle than Vaseline itself. |
Risks and precautions
Even though classic petroleum jelly is generally considered simple and low-allergen, the eye area is delicate. Avoid applying it if you are prone to styes, blepharitis, clogged oil glands, eyelid acne, or recurring irritation. Do not use technical or fragranced petroleum jelly near the eyes; only use a cosmetic or skin-protectant product intended for personal care.
Do a small patch test first. If you experience redness, swelling, rash, burning, blurred vision, or persistent discomfort, wash the area and stop use.
What helps eyelashes grow instead?
True lash growth depends on the follicle and the natural lash growth cycle. A good routine includes gentle makeup removal, avoiding aggressive rubbing, supporting general nutrition, and choosing targeted lash-care actives when you want visible length and density.
Scientific References
Frequently asked questions
Can Vaseline Help with Eyelash Growth — FAQ
Can Vaseline help with eyelash growth?
Vaseline can make eyelashes look smoother, darker, and more conditioned, but it is not proven to stimulate new eyelash growth. It works mainly as an occlusive moisturizer that coats existing lashes.
Is it safe to put Vaseline on eyelashes?
A tiny amount of cosmetic-grade petroleum jelly is generally tolerated by many people, but it must be kept out of the eye and away from the waterline. Avoid it if you are prone to styes, clogged glands, blepharitis, or irritation.
How often should I use Vaseline on my lashes?
If you use it, apply a very thin layer occasionally or at night on clean lashes. More product does not improve results and may increase the chance of eye irritation or residue buildup.
Can Vaseline replace lash serum?
No. Vaseline can condition the lash surface, but it does not contain targeted growth-supporting ingredients. A peptide-based lash serum is a better option if your goal is visible lash length and density.
What should I use if I want real lash growth?
For visible lash growth, look for a prostaglandin-free serum with peptides, panthenol, hyaluronic acid, and conditioning ingredients. Keep expectations realistic and use the product consistently through the lash growth cycle.
The opinion of a cosmetologist
Branda M. Heim
Board-Certified Cosmetologist & Trichologist | 15+ years of lash and brow care experience
Vaseline can be useful as a simple conditioning product, but I would not present it as a proven eyelash-growth treatment. It can help lashes look smoother by sealing moisture, yet it does not deliver follicle-level growth support.
For clients with dry or brittle lashes, I recommend first fixing friction: remove mascara gently, avoid rubbing, and keep the lash line clean. If the goal is visible growth, choose a targeted lash serum rather than relying on petroleum jelly alone.
References: FDA OTC skin protectant monograph FDA LATISSE information NIH ODS biotin guidance
Beauty blogger recommendation:
Elisabeth Buss
Cosmetics Blog
Vaseline is a classic beauty-cabinet product, and I understand why people use it on lashes: it gives that clean, glossy, no-makeup look. But I would frame it as a conditioning trick, not a growth hack.
My practical rule is simple: use the tiniest amount, keep it away from the waterline, and do not expect it to replace a real lash serum. For visible length and density, a peptide lash serum is a more modern and targeted approach.
Real Customer Feedback from Independent Platforms
I ordered this 6 months ago and waited to write a review to give it time. I have ordered many lash growth serums in the past but this one really works. My lashes are much longer today. Sorry I forgot to take a before and after picture. But it does work — just give it time.
★★★★★
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2026
Read original reviewGood website. Shipping was fairly quick. I really like this brand.
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May 10, 2026
Read original reviewPublished: Sep 1, 2022