Check the label in front of you

Pregnancy ingredient checker for food, skincare, supplements, and labels. Doola makes them easier to check.

Use Doola Scan to check ingredients during pregnancy when you are looking at food, skincare, supplements, product pages, menus, Korean beauty products, or a label without a helpful barcode.

Pregnant woman checking food, skincare, and supplement ingredient labels with Doola Scan.

What you can check

  • Food labels, prepared meals, sauces, and restaurant menus
  • Skincare, cosmetics, PDRN, retinoid-like names, and acne products
  • Supplement panels, vitamins, herbs, and wellness products
  • Imported goods, product pages, and non-barcode items

How Doola Scan helps

  • Works from visible label text, not only barcode databases.
  • Turns ingredient lists into pregnancy-relevant checks across food, skincare, supplements, and menus.
  • Keeps uncertainty clear when dose, preparation, medication, symptoms, or personal history matter.

Trust boundary

Doola Scan provides educational support. It does not diagnose symptoms, clear medications, replace your clinician, or make emergency decisions. See our editorial policy and source standards.

Questions parents ask

What is a pregnancy ingredient checker?

It is a tool that helps review ingredient lists through a pregnancy-safety lens. Doola Scan is built for food, skincare, supplements, product labels, product pages, and menu text.

Can I check food and skincare ingredients in the same pregnancy checker?

Yes. Doola Scan is designed for cross-category ingredient checks, so you can review food labels, skincare ingredients, supplements, menu text, and product pages in one place.

Does it work without a barcode?

Yes. Doola Scan is useful when the product is niche, imported, handmade, restaurant-based, or missing from a barcode database because it can start from visible text.

Can Doola check supplements?

Doola can organize supplement label context, but supplement choices during pregnancy can depend on dose, medication interactions, and personal history. Ask your clinician or pharmacist before starting or changing supplements.