Health & AI Disclaimer
Version 1.0 · Effective July 15, 2026 · Last updated June 11, 2026
Please read this first
Amorie is a cosmetic skincare guide. The guidance it offers is educational, grounded in published research — and not a substitute for professional medical advice. For a skin concern, or before a major change to your routine, please check in with a dermatologist or doctor. This page explains the limits of what Amorie does, so you can use it with the right expectations.
Not medical advice
Amorie does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment. It is not a medical device, a healthcare service, or a telemedicine platform, and we are not your doctors, dermatologists, or pharmacists. Anything Amorie suggests is general cosmetic guidance about over-the-counter cosmetic products — never a clinical recommendation tailored to your medical history.
Always seek the advice of a qualified health professional with any question about a skin or health condition. Never disregard professional medical advice, or delay seeking it, because of something Amorie showed you. If you think you may have a medical emergency, contact your doctor or emergency services immediately.
How the recommendations are made
Amorie's suggestions are generated by automated AI systems from the information you provide in the quiz and your reaction logs. Those systems:
- do not physically examine you and have no access to your medical records;
- cannot account for every individual factor that affects your skin;
- may produce results that are incomplete, inaccurate, or not right for you; and
- are not reviewed by a medical professional before you see them.
We ground recommendations in peer-reviewed dermatology research and apply clinician-informed safety rules, but this does not make them medical advice. The quality of any suggestion also depends on the accuracy of the information you give us.
Cosmetic products, not medicines
Every product Amorie references is a cosmetic product under EU Regulation (EC) No 1223/2009 — not a medicinal product, prescription treatment, or medical device. We use phrasing like "has been studied for" rather than "treats" or "cures" on purpose: cosmetics care for and improve the appearance of skin; they do not treat disease.
Patch-test & check the label
Skin is individual. Any cosmetic ingredient can cause irritation, sensitivity, or an allergic reaction in some people — even one that's widely recommended. Before using a new product: read its full ingredient list (Amorie cannot guarantee a product is free of something you react to, even where you've told us about an allergy), patch-test it, and introduce one new active at a time. If a product causes a reaction, stop using it.
When to talk to a professional first
Please consult a dermatologist, doctor, or pharmacist before following any Amorie suggestion if you:
- are pregnant, breastfeeding, or planning a pregnancy;
- have a diagnosed skin condition (e.g. eczema, psoriasis, rosacea, severe acne);
- take medication that may interact with topical products (e.g. retinoids, certain acne treatments);
- have known allergies or highly sensitive skin; or
- experience a persistent, severe, or worsening skin reaction.
Reaction logging is for you, not a medical record
The reaction log helps you notice patterns over time. It is a personal tracking tool — not a medical record, not a diagnosis, and not reviewed by any professional. For a significant or severe reaction, seek medical advice and, where relevant, report it to your national cosmetic-vigilance authority.
Your sensitive data
To personalise safely we ask about health-related details (such as pregnancy status, medications, and allergies). This is "special-category" health data under Article 9 GDPR, processed only with your explicit consent, which you can withdraw at any time. How we handle it is set out in our Privacy Policy.
Related documents
This Disclaimer forms part of your agreement with us. Please also read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Questions? Write to hello@amorieapp.com.