Categories

EU Bans and Restricts Dozens of Hazardous Cosmetic Ingredients

Recently, The European Union is taking decisive steps to enhance consumer safety in cosmetics with the introduction of Omnibus Act VIII, a sweeping update to the EU Cosmetics Regulation. This act bans or restricts dozens of ingredients deemed hazardous, including widely used substances such as sodium perborate, silver, and hexyl salicylate. The regulation reflects recent scientific assessments and reclassifications of CMR (carcinogenic, mutagenic, or reprotoxic) substances and enforces the Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety’s (SCCS) recommendations.

Starting 1 May 2026, all cosmetic products that do not comply with the updated rules must be withdrawn from the EU market, regardless of whether they are already on store shelves or in distribution channels. Brands and manufacturers will need to reformulate affected products promptly, as the changes will impact ingredient selection, labeling, and product viability.

The regulation modifies four critical annexes of the Cosmetics Regulation:

Annex II (Banned Substances): Newly banned substances include several forms of sodium perborate, a bleaching agent now classified as toxic to reproduction, multi-walled carbon nanotubes, which pose respiratory risks, and acetone oxime, used in fragrances and industrial applications.

Annex III (Restricted Substances): This introduces stringent usage limits for silver powder (non-nano), capped at 0.05% in toothpaste and mouthwash, and hexyl salicylate, a popular fragrance ingredient. Limits for hexyl salicylate vary by product type, including 2% in perfumes, 0.001% in oral care, and 0.1% in children’s products.

Annex IV (Colorants): Limits silver powder in lip and eye products to 0.2%, citing risks related to particle accumulation and potential long-term health effects such as kidney damage and tissue discoloration.

Annex V (Preservatives): Updates include new concentration limits for o-phenylphenol and its sodium salts, now restricted to 0.2% in rinse-off and 0.15% in leave-on products. These preservatives are banned in inhalation and oral products, and any use must include the label warning: “Avoid contact with eyes.”

With this legislative overhaul, the EU continues to set the global standard for cosmetic safety, reinforcing its commitment to protecting consumers through science-based regulation and proactive ingredient oversight.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest

Leave a Reply

Beauty News

Industry News, Broadcast and Breakings

Industry Stats

In-depth Statistics from all aspects to dig out the sales, up and downs.

Consumer Research

Exclusive service to survey numerous consumers across the country and get the best expected results

Brand Analysis

Examine and analyse a brand in details to conclude a report showcasing the desired information

Niche Market Research

Study into the niche product market, producing whitepaper helpping business to understand the potential, development of a product and make decisions.

 

Retail / Distributor Finder

Help brand distribute in China.

Cosmetics/ Makeup Compliance

Help make your product legal in China

OEM/ODM Manufacturers

Know what's trending or find the best possible material / ingredient / product supplier

Scroll to Top

Discover more from chaileedo

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Subscribe Now

Be the first to know about our latest news and market analysis. Sign up now to get all the beauty news you need!

Subscribe Yearly Member to Read More