What's Really Inside Conventional Cosmetics — and Why Certified-Organic Is the Cleaner Choice

No single product is the problem. The accumulation is.

An average morning routine is around 12 personal-care products and roughly 168 individual ingredients — repeated every day, for decades. That is about 175,200 applications across a lifetime. Each dose is tiny; the cumulative, leave-on exposure is not — especially during pregnancy and adolescence. This is why a cleaner everyday choice matters more than any single “miracle” product.

Europe bans 1,700+ ingredients. The US bans about 11.

Under EU Regulation 1223/2009, more than 1,700 substances are prohibited in cosmetics. At the US federal level, the number is around 11. The Gulf standard GSO 1943:2016 is aligned with the European rule — which means, legally, the Gulf shopper is entitled to the cleaner European formula. A certified-organic standard simply takes that further.

The difference is measurable in days, not years.

In the HERMOSA study (University of California, Berkeley, 2016), teenage girls switched to cleaner-labelled personal-care products for just three days. Their bodies’ levels of phthalate, paraben and triclosan markers fell by 27–45%. The takeaway is hopeful: what you put on today, your body clears within days once you switch.

“Parfum” — the one ingredient that can legally stay secret.

Fragrance is the only cosmetic ingredient a manufacturer may legally hide behind a single word: “Parfum.” Yet it is also among the most common triggers of skin sensitivity and headaches. On certified products, each allergenic fragrance component is named on the label — Limonene, Linalool, Citral — so a sensitive customer knows exactly what she is avoiding. EU rule 2023/1545 expands this required disclosure to more than 80 components.

What certification actually guarantees.

“Natural,” “clean” and “hypoallergenic” have no legal definition. ECOCERT COSMOS Organic does: a positive list of permitted ingredients, a ban-list of controversial ones, a minimum share of organic content, and an independent annual audit. Crucially, it is a single global standard — one formula worldwide, with no diluted “export version” for less-regulated markets. The Pure n’ Bio cosmetic you receive in Riyadh is the same one sold in a Vichy pharmacy in France. (Our food supplements carry the AB – Agriculture Biologique organic standard.)

The cleaner version of what you already use.

You do not need to overhaul your routine overnight. Start with one daily product — your cleanser, your micellar water, your lipstick — and choose the certified-organic version. Explore our certified-organic skincare, or read the deeper dives on micellar water and eye makeup.

Sources

  • EU Regulation 1223/2009 (cosmetics) — eur-lex.europa.eu
  • Harley et al., HERMOSA study, Environmental Health Perspectives, 2016 — doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1510514
  • EU Regulation 2023/1545 (fragrance allergen labelling)
  • COSMOS-Standard — cosmos-standard.org
  • GSO 1943:2016 (Gulf cosmetics standard)
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