Clear, evidence-based guidance for parents — without unnecessary food restrictions.
It’s extremely common for parents of children with eczema to wonder if food is the cause. In reality, most childhood eczema is driven by a leaky skin barrier + inflammation + irritants, not by a hidden food problem.
Food allergy can matter for a small group of children — but testing and elimination diets are often overused, and can sometimes do more harm than good if done without a clear reason. (1,2)
At The Skin Doctor, we help families work out what’s likely, what’s not, and what the safest next step is.
[Book appointment] (Childhood Eczema Consultation)
Key takeaways
- Most children with eczema do not need allergy testing. (2)
- Blood/skin tests can be false positive in eczema and don’t reliably predict which foods “make eczema worse.” (1)
- Avoiding foods “just in case” can affect growth and nutrition, and may increase the chance of developing allergy to the avoided food. (3)
- If a child has immediate symptoms after eating (hives, swelling, vomiting), that’s different — and should be assessed properly. (1,4)
Related pages:
Jump links
- Does diet cause eczema?
- When to suspect a true food allergy
- When allergy testing is worth considering
- Why “panel testing” often confuses things
- What about redness around the mouth after food?
- How to introduce allergenic foods (especially in babies with eczema)
- What we recommend at The Skin Doctor
- FAQ
- Book
Does diet cause eczema?
In most children, diet does not cause eczema. Eczema is primarily a skin-barrier and inflammation condition. Food can sometimes trigger symptoms in children who already have eczema — but food is usually not the root cause of why eczema developed in the first place. (1,2)
The biggest improvements for most families come from:
- consistent moisturising and “soak + seal”
- avoiding irritating soaps/detergents and reducing heat/sweat triggers
- using the right anti-inflammatory treatment early in flares
When to suspect a true food allergy
Consider food allergy assessment if your child has immediate symptoms after eating a specific food, such as:
- hives (urticaria)
- swelling of lips/eyes/face
- vomiting soon after eating
- coughing, wheeze, breathing difficulty
- floppiness or pale episodes
- severe distress shortly after ingestion
These are more consistent with IgE-mediated allergy and should be assessed properly. (4,5)
Important: eczema alone is not proof of food allergy
Eczema by itself is not an indicator of immediate IgE-mediated food allergy. (4)
When is allergy testing worth considering?
Allergy testing is generally not routine for eczema. It’s most helpful when the history suggests allergy or when eczema isn’t responding as expected despite good care. (2,6)
Testing may be considered when:
- your child has the immediate symptoms above (IgE-type reactions) (4,5)
- your child is very young and has moderate–severe eczema that is difficult to control (6)
- eczema remains uncontrolled despite consistent routine + appropriate medication plan (2,6)
- there are additional red flags like poor growth, persistent gastrointestinal symptoms, or multiple allergic conditions (6)
If testing is pursued, guidance from Australian allergy organisations emphasises that testing should be recommended, interpreted, and acted upon by an allergy-trained clinician, because eczema is associated with false positives. (1,3)
Why “panel testing” often makes things worse
A very common problem is broad testing (large food panels) without a strong clinical reason. Eczema-prone children can show sensitisation on tests without true clinical allergy — leading to unnecessary restriction. (1,3)
Why this matters:
- unnecessary elimination can cause nutritional deficiency and growth issues (3,7)
- avoidance may increase the chance of developing allergy to the avoided food over time (3)
- families become overwhelmed and focus on diet instead of the interventions most likely to help consistent moisturising and “soak + seal” , avoiding irritating soaps/detergents and reducing heat/sweat triggers , using the right anti-inflammatory treatment early in flares
Bottom line: tests are useful only when the result will change management and matches a convincing history.
What about redness around the mouth after food?
Many children with eczema develop a red, irritated rash around the mouth after messy eating (especially with tomato, citrus, salty foods). This is often contact irritation, not a true allergy. (4)
Helpful approach:
- apply a thin barrier ointment around the mouth before meals
- wipe gently (don’t scrub) and moisturise afterwards
- if there are immediate hives, swelling, vomiting, or breathing symptoms, that’s different and should be assessed (4,5)
Introducing allergenic foods (especially in babies with eczema)
Babies with eczema have a higher chance of developing food allergy, so allergy prevention advice matters. Australian allergy guidance supports introducing common allergenic foods soon after starting solids (in an age-appropriate form), rather than delaying them. (8,9)
If your baby has eczema
- If eczema is mild and your baby is otherwise well, introduction of common allergenic foods can usually proceed in an age-appropriate way. (9)
- If your baby has severe eczema (or an existing food allergy), peanut introduction may need a more structured approach, sometimes with medical guidance, because this group is higher risk. (8)
Once introduced, allergenic foods like peanut and egg should be continued regularly (e.g., weekly) in age-appropriate forms to help maintain tolerance. (9)
(Practical reminder: never give whole nuts to babies or toddlers due to choking risk; use age-appropriate textures.) (9)
What we recommend at The Skin Doctor
When families ask “is it food?”, we usually take a staged approach:
Step 1 — Get the skin under control first
We optimise:
This alone often reduces eczema dramatically, making it clear whether food is likely to be relevant. (2)
Step 2 — Look for true allergy patterns
If the history suggests immediate reactions, we guide appropriate next steps and referral pathways.
Step 3 — Avoid broad elimination unless medically indicated
If dietary changes are needed, they should be specific, time-limited, and supervised — ideally involving an allergy specialist and a dietitian to protect growth and nutrition. (3,7)
FAQ
Should I remove dairy or gluten to fix eczema?
Not routinely. Restrictive diets are usually not helpful for eczema and should not be started without guidance. (2,7)
My child’s eczema flares sometimes after certain foods — does that mean allergy?
Not necessarily. Eczema naturally fluctuates, and irritation around the mouth is common. True allergy is more likely when symptoms are immediate and repeatable (hives/swelling/vomiting). (4,5)
Should my child have allergy tests “just to check”?
Usually no. Eczema is associated with false positives and tests don’t reliably predict which foods are driving eczema. (1,3)
Book an appointment
If you’re worried about diet triggers, allergy testing, or you’re feeling stuck with eczema control, we can help you sort signal from noise and build a clear plan.
[Book appointment] (Childhood Eczema Consultation)
Clinics: Ivanhoe and Diamond Creek
References
1.Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy (ASCIA). Eczema and Food Allergy – Fast Facts.
https://www.allergy.org.au/patients/fast-facts/eczema-and-food-allergy
2.Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne. Clinical Practice Guidelines: Eczema (includes guidance that allergy testing is usually not required and restrictive diets are usually not helpful).
https://www.rch.org.au/clinicalguide/guideline_index/eczema/
3.ASCIA. Eczema (Atopic Dermatitis) Frequently Asked Questions (notes false positives, growth/nutrition risk, and potential increased allergy risk from unnecessary avoidance).
https://www.allergy.org.au/images/pc/ASCIA_PC_Eczema_FAQ_2024.pdf
4.Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne. Clinical Practice Guidelines: Food allergy – IgE mediated (includes that eczema alone is not indicative of IgE food allergy and that contact reactions around the mouth can occur and are not diagnostic).
https://www.rch.org.au/clinicalguide/guideline_index/Food_allergy_-_IgE_mediated_food_allergy/
5.NICE. Food allergy in under 19s: assessment and diagnosis (considers food allergy where symptoms, including eczema, do not respond adequately to treatment).
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg116/chapter/Recommendations
6.American Academy of Dermatology. When does a child with eczema need allergy testing?
https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/eczema/childhood/treating/allergy-testing
7.RACGP. Atopic dermatitis in children (discourages parent-led elimination diets; recommends specialist/dietitian supervision when elimination is indicated).
https://www.racgp.org.au/afp/2016/may/atopic-dermatitis-in-children
8.ASCIA. Guide for introduction of peanut to infants with severe eczema and/or food allergy (high-risk pathway).
https://www.allergy.org.au/hp/papers/ascia-guide-peanut-introduction
9.ASCIA. How to introduce solid foods to babies for allergy prevention (includes regular ongoing inclusion once introduced).
https://www.allergy.org.au/patients/allergy-prevention/ascia-how-to-introduce-solid-foods-to-babies