One is solid and lauric-acid-rich; the other is liquid and oleic-acid-rich. Both are good plant-oil moisturizers with different trade-offs — here's the honest comparison for your skin.

Neither coconut nor olive oil wins outright — they're both good plant-oil moisturizers with different trade-offs. Coconut oil is solid and lauric-acid-rich: lovely for body and hair, but fairly comedogenic (rated ~4). Olive oil is liquid and oleic-acid-rich: lower on the comedogenic scale (~2), but heavier-feeling, with a barrier nuance worth knowing. On the body, either works; for the face, both have caveats. Choose by use, feel, and how your skin responds — and many people happily use each for different jobs.
Coconut oil and olive oil are two of the most popular kitchen-to-bathroom crossover oils — both cheap, natural, food-grade, and widely used on skin. So which is better? As usual, the honest answer is: it depends on what you're doing and your skin.
The core difference is their fatty acids and form. Coconut oil is solid and rich in medium-chain lauric acid; olive oil is liquid and rich in long-chain oleic acid. That one distinction drives almost everything else — how they feel, how they behave, and their different tendencies around clogged pores and the skin barrier.
Both are genuinely good moisturizing oils with real trade-offs, and neither is a miracle. This guide compares them fairly, point by point, so you can pick the right one for your skin and your use — with clear eyes about what each does and doesn't do well.
It's worth setting expectations honestly up front: this is a comparison of two good, humble kitchen oils, not a search for a miracle. Both have been used on skin for centuries precisely because they're cheap, gentle, and effective at the basic job of moisturizing. If you're hoping one of them is a secret anti-aging or acne cure, neither is — but if you want a simple, natural oil that does an honest job of softening dry skin, you genuinely can't go too wrong with either. The differences below are about fit and feel, not good versus bad.
Coconut oil is pressed from coconut meat, and for skin you want virgin, cold-pressed. It's solid at room temperature and melts on contact with warm skin, thanks to being rich in lauric acid (about half its fatty acids). It's loved for a rich-yet-lighter finish, a fresh scent, and being wonderful on the body and hair.
Its one real caveat: it's fairly comedogenic (rated around 4), so it can clog pores for some people, especially on acne-prone faces. It's naturally vegan, affordable, and simple. For the full picture, see is coconut oil good for your skin?
Olive oil is pressed from olives, and the quality version for skin is extra-virgin (cold-pressed). It's liquid at room temperature and rich in oleic acid, a long-chain monounsaturated fatty acid, giving it a heavier, more cushioning feel. It carries naturally occurring antioxidants, including vitamin E and polyphenols, and has been used on skin around the Mediterranean for millennia.
Its comedogenic rating is lower than coconut's (around 2), so it's less likely to clog pores — though it has its own nuance around the skin barrier we'll cover. It's naturally vegan, affordable, and a genuine classic. Heavier and more distinctly scented than coconut, but deeply moisturizing.
Everything comes back to the fatty acids, so let's make the key difference clear.
Lauric acid (coconut) is a medium-chain fatty acid — shorter, giving coconut oil its firm-then-melting texture. Oleic acid (olive) is a long-chain monounsaturated fatty acid — giving olive oil its liquid, heavier, cushioning character. Different building blocks, different behavior.
You don't need the chemistry memorized; the practical upshot is what matters. Coconut's lauric acid makes it solid, quick-melting, and (partly) more comedogenic. Olive's oleic acid makes it liquid, richer-feeling, lower-comedogenic, but with a barrier nuance. Two different fatty-acid profiles, two different experiences on your skin. For more on the coconut side, see what is lauric acid?
The medium-chain versus long-chain distinction is the same idea that separates coconut oil from most other plant oils, olive included. Coconut's shorter-chain lauric acid is why it's solid at room temperature and melts on contact — an unusual property in the oil world. Olive's longer-chain oleic acid keeps it liquid and gives it that heavier, more coating feel. So when you notice one oil is firm and the other pours, you're literally observing the fatty-acid chemistry with your own eyes.
The feel is where you notice the difference immediately:
Some people love coconut's lighter melt; others prefer olive's rich cushion. If a greasy feel bothers you, coconut may suit you better; if you want maximum richness, olive delivers. Try each and trust your own skin.
Scent is part of feel, too, and it's more decisive than people expect for something you'll wear daily. Coconut oil has that fresh, faintly tropical smell many people love; extra-virgin olive oil has a distinctly savory, green aroma that some find pleasant and others really don't want lingering on their skin all day. Neither is wrong, but if you're sensitive to smells, give each a sniff before committing — it's a small factor that quietly decides a lot of preferences.
For anyone thinking about facial use, the comedogenic comparison matters — and here olive has an edge.
| Coconut Oil | Olive Oil | |
|---|---|---|
| Comedogenic rating | ~4 (fairly high) | ~2 (lower) |
| Pore-clogging risk | Higher for some | Lower for most |
| Acne-prone faces | Use caution | Milder, but patch-test |
Olive oil's lower comedogenic rating means it's less likely to clog pores than coconut oil for most people. That doesn't make it perfect for every face (see the barrier nuance next), but on the pore question specifically, olive comes out ahead. For either, if you're acne-prone, patch-test on your face first. More on ratings in do comedogenic ratings actually matter?
Here's the honest counterpoint that keeps this fair — olive oil isn't automatically the facial winner despite its lower comedogenic score.
Olive oil is high in oleic acid, and some research suggests high-oleic oils may affect or disrupt the skin barrier for certain people, particularly on sensitive or compromised skin. It's not a reason to avoid olive oil, but it means "lower comedogenic" doesn't automatically mean "perfect for every face."
So both oils carry a facial caveat: coconut for its higher comedogenic rating, olive for its oleic-acid barrier nuance. The fair takeaway is that neither is a guaranteed facial oil — both are excellent on the body, and facial use is a patch-test-and-observe situation for either. If your skin is sensitive or acne-prone, a skin-compatible fat like tallow may actually suit your face better than either.
This is the part most "coconut vs olive" articles skip, so it's worth stating plainly: the honest winner for a lot of faces is "neither, at least not without testing." Facial skin is fussier than body skin, and richer oils of any kind can be hit or miss on it. That's not a reason for alarm — it's just a reason to treat facial use as an experiment on a small patch rather than an assumption, and to keep a lighter or more skin-compatible option in mind if either oil doesn't agree with you.
Both oils bring naturally occurring nutrients — a nice bonus in each case:
Olive oil is often highlighted for its antioxidant content, which is genuine. As always, though, the honest framing is that these are welcome bonuses to a good moisturizing oil — not reasons to expect dramatic results or to treat either as a supplement for your skin. Both are, first and foremost, moisturizers; the nutrients ride along.
Olive oil's antioxidant reputation is genuinely well-earned in the kitchen, and it's a nice thing to have in a skincare oil too — but be a little wary of marketing that leaps from 'rich in polyphenols' to dramatic skin claims. The antioxidants in a plant oil, applied topically, are a pleasant bonus rather than a proven transformation. Enjoy olive oil as an excellent, antioxidant-containing moisturizer, and let the grander promises stay in the realm of hype.
Matching each oil to what it does best:
For hair specifically, coconut is the popular pick; for maximum richness on dry body skin, olive is a strong choice. Both are lovely on the body, and neither will let you down for simple everyday moisturizing.
Everything in one place:
| Coconut Oil | Olive Oil | |
|---|---|---|
| Form | Solid (melts) | Liquid |
| Key fatty acid | Lauric (medium-chain) | Oleic (long-chain) |
| Comedogenic | ~4 | ~2 |
| Feel | Lighter finish | Heavier, cushioning |
| Barrier nuance | Fewer concerns | Oleic-acid caveat |
| Antioxidants | Some | Notably rich |
| Best for hair | Yes (classic) | Heavier |
| Vegan | Yes | Yes |
A practical guide to choosing:
And for sensitive or acne-prone faces, remember both have caveats — a patch test (or a different oil entirely) is the wise move.
Since both live in your kitchen, a quick practical note on grades:
You can absolutely use good-quality food-grade oils on your skin — people have for centuries. But quality still matters: cold-pressed, virgin versions (extra-virgin olive oil, virgin coconut oil) retain more of the antioxidants and character that make them nice for skin, versus heavily refined cooking grades. A product formulated specifically for skincare is designed for the purpose, but a good virgin culinary oil can work fine for simple moisturizing. The tell, as always, is a short, honest label and a cold-pressed, virgin designation on the label.
Of course — and matching each to its strength is the smart play. Many people use coconut oil for hair and a lighter body finish, and olive oil for very dry patches wanting rich cushion. Some products even blend oils to balance their properties.
They're complementary, not rivals. If you can't decide, you don't have to — keep both, use each where it shines, and skip the idea that one has to be the single winner. Your skin (and your hair) will happily take the best of each.
A simple way to split them in practice: think of coconut oil as your hair-and-lighter-body oil and olive oil as your heavy-duty-dry-patch oil. Coconut for after-shower body moisture and the occasional hair treatment; olive for cracked heels, elbows, and shins that need serious cushioning in deep winter. Divided that way, they stop competing and start covering different needs — which is a far more useful outcome than crowning a single champion.
Coconut oil vs olive oil comes down to their fatty acids. Coconut is solid, lauric-acid-rich, lighter-finishing, and the classic for hair — but fairly comedogenic. Olive is liquid, oleic-acid-rich, heavier and antioxidant-rich, and lower on the comedogenic scale — but carries an oleic-acid barrier nuance. On the body, both are excellent; for the face, both have caveats, so patch-test or consider a skin-compatible fat like tallow.
Neither "wins" universally — choose by use, feel, and how your skin responds, or use each where it shines. If you want simple, cold-pressed coconut oil done right, see our coconut oil line; and if your face wants something skin-compatible, explore our tallow balms.

Ian founded Bear Basics on one idea: personal care built from a short list of food-grade ingredients we all recognize. Everything is small-batch and made in Colorado. Read the full story →