Pick up your shampoo bottle right now and scan the ingredient list. The word "formaldehyde" almost certainly does not appear — but that does not mean it is absent. A family of preservatives called formaldehyde releasers hides in plain sight under names like DMDM hydantoin, quaternium-15, imidazolidinyl urea and diazolidinyl urea. Once inside the bottle, they slowly decompose and emit formaldehyde directly onto your scalp, your hairline, and the skin you wash with them every single day. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies formaldehyde as a Group 1 known human carcinogen — the same tier as tobacco smoke. You have been rinsing a carcinogen generator through your hair, and the label was designed so you would never know. Women across Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait and the wider Gulf reach for these products every single morning without a second thought.
The chemistry: how formaldehyde-releasing preservatives work
Formaldehyde-releasing preservatives are not inert carriers — they are programmed to react. When dissolved in water (which every shampoo and hair mask is), they undergo slow hydrolysis and nitrogen-group breakdown, continuously shedding free formaldehyde molecules into the formula. The released formaldehyde then does the actual microbial work: it denatures proteins in bacteria and fungi, keeping the product from spoiling. The problem is that formaldehyde does not distinguish between microbial proteins and yours. A 2010 study published in Contact Dermatitis (Fransway et al., 2010) confirmed that DMDM hydantoin and quaternium-15 are among the most frequently positive allergens in patch-test clinics worldwide — with sensitisation rates rising in direct proportion to product rinse time.
The exposure dynamic matters here. A leave-on moisturiser delivers a fixed dose. A shampoo is different: you apply it to a warm, slightly abraded scalp, lather, and let it sit — heat and agitation accelerate hydrolysis and increase the amount of free formaldehyde generated before you rinse. Hair masks sit longer still. This is not a trace-exposure concern; it is a repeated, warm-scalp, cumulative-dose scenario on one of the most absorptive surfaces of the body.
What is actually in most conventional shampoos
The four most common formaldehyde releasers in hair-care — DMDM hydantoin, quaternium-15, imidazolidinyl urea, and diazolidinyl urea — appear across mid-range and premium conventional brands alike. The EU's Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety (SCCS) has repeatedly evaluated these compounds and in its 2023 opinion confirmed that quaternium-15 releases formaldehyde at levels sufficient to cause sensitisation at current permitted concentrations (SCCS/1634/21). The EU subsequently moved to restrict quaternium-15 further in Annex V of Cosmetics Regulation (EC) No 1223/2009 — yet it remains legal in many markets, including across much of the GCC.
The IARC's definitive verdict is unambiguous: formaldehyde is a Group 1 carcinogen (IARC Monographs, Vol. 100F), with causal links established for nasopharyngeal cancer and leukaemia. Allowing a Group 1 carcinogen to be slowly manufactured inside a product and applied to the scalp daily is not a marginal regulatory oversight — it is a fundamental design flaw baked into conventional preservation chemistry.
Conventional hair care vs. Born to Bio ECOCERT COSMOS — side by side
| Category | Conventional Hair Care | Born to Bio ECOCERT COSMOS |
|---|---|---|
| Formaldehyde releasers | DMDM hydantoin, quaternium-15, imidazolidinyl urea permitted | Entire family prohibited by standard |
| Carcinogen risk | IARC Group 1 substance generated in formula | No formaldehyde-generating chemistry present |
| Fragrance disclosure | “Parfum” can mask hundreds of undisclosed compounds | Only natural aromatic materials; all components declared |
| Preservative system | Synthetic preservatives, parabens, or formaldehyde donors | Permitted plant-derived preservatives only |
| Certified by | Self-declared “clean” or “natural” claims, no audit | ECOCERT independent third-party audit |
| Safe for daily scalp use | Not confirmed — releasers accumulate with repeated warm-scalp exposure | Yes — formulation audited against restricted substances list |
What ECOCERT COSMOS actually certifies
ECOCERT COSMOS is not a marketing badge — it is a technical audit protocol operated by an independent French certification body. Before any formula can carry the mark, every single ingredient must appear on COSMOS's approved-substance list. Formaldehyde and all formaldehyde-releasing preservatives appear on the prohibited list, not because they exceed a concentration threshold, but because the standard refuses the chemistry entirely. The brand does not self-certify; an ECOCERT inspector verifies the full formulation, the supply chain traceability, and the manufacturing facility against the standard annually.
This means when you see the COSMOS ORGANIC or COSMOS NATURAL mark on a Born to Bio bottle, the absence of DMDM hydantoin is not a claim Hanadi makes on the packaging — it is a condition that an independent auditor has confirmed. “Free from formaldehyde releasers” is not a differentiator for certified organic products; it is simply the floor. Read the full documented science →
Why certified organic hair care costs more — and why that is exactly the point
The price difference between a Born to Bio shampoo and a supermarket bottle is almost entirely a formulation cost story, not a margin story. Replacing synthetic preservatives with certified plant-derived alternatives — coconut-derived surfactants, organic argan, organic shea — costs meaningfully more per kilogram, requires more sophisticated emulsification, and demands shorter production runs to maintain freshness. The formulas are manufactured in France to pharmaceutical-grade GMP standards, which adds traceability costs that mass-market brands simply absorb into longer shelf-life chemistry. You are not paying for a logo; you are paying for the ingredients the logo required.
Made in France
Manufactured under French pharmaceutical-grade GMP in certified facilities — not outsourced to the lowest bidder.
Every ingredient vetted
Each raw material is audited against the COSMOS approved-substance list before it reaches the formula. No ingredient slips through on a brand promise.
Short shelf life by design
Without formaldehyde chemistry extending shelf life to 3+ years, organic formulas are fresher and more bioactive — and priced accordingly.
What most conventional formulas include
- DMDM hydantoin (formaldehyde releaser)
- Quaternium-15 (IARC-linked sensitiser)
- Synthetic fragrances masking irritants
- Parabens or PEG-derived emulsifiers
- Silicones that coat without nourishing
What Born to Bio eliminates
- All formaldehyde-releasing preservatives
- Parabens and synthetic antimicrobials
- Petrochemical-derived surfactants
- Undisclosed synthetic fragrance compounds
- Silicone film-formers with no biological benefit
The Born to Bio hair care range — formaldehyde-free by certification
✔ Free delivery in Saudi Arabia on orders over 249 ﷼ · Ships to UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman & Qatar
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What to look for on any label
You do not need to memorise the full list of formaldehyde donors — but knowing four names gives you a powerful filter: DMDM hydantoin, quaternium-15, imidazolidinyl urea, diazolidinyl urea. If any of these appears in the ingredients, the product releases formaldehyde during use. The fastest reliable alternative is to look for an independently audited certification mark — ECOCERT COSMOS, COSMOS ORGANIC, or COSMOS NATURAL — which guarantees the entire family has been excluded, regardless of concentration. A brand that claims “clean” without third-party certification is making a promise with no auditor behind it.
Frequently asked questions
Does rinsing the shampoo off mean formaldehyde does not absorb?
Rinsing reduces but does not eliminate exposure. Free formaldehyde is generated during the lathering process — when the product is warm, agitated, and in contact with the scalp. Scalp skin is thinner and better-vascularised than most body skin, and the formaldehyde generated before rinsing has already been in contact with it. Daily repeated exposure is the core concern, not a single wash.
Is organic shampoo as effective as conventional at cleaning and lathering?
Yes. Born to Bio shampoos use coconut-derived surfactants (sodium cocoyl glutamate, disodium cocoyl glutamate) that clean effectively and produce a rich lather without the stripping effect of sulphates. Many users find the transition involves a 2–3 week scalp adjustment period as sebum production normalises — after which hair feels lighter and cleaner than with silicone-heavy conventional formulas.
What is the difference between ECOCERT COSMOS and a product labelled “natural”?
“Natural” is an unregulated marketing term — any brand can print it with no audit, no banned-substance list, and no independent verification. ECOCERT COSMOS is a contractual certification: the formula is inspected annually by an independent body, every ingredient is checked against a published approved-substance list, and the certificate can be revoked. The two are not comparable claims.
Are formaldehyde-releasers only a problem in shampoo?
No. DMDM hydantoin and related releasers appear in liquid hand soaps, body washes, facial cleansers, moisturisers, hair masks, and some nail-hardening treatments — anywhere a water-based formula needs preserving on a long shelf-life budget. The hair-care concern is elevated because of scalp proximity and daily-use frequency, but the issue is systemic across conventional personal care.
Is DMDM hydantoin the same as formaldehyde? Should I avoid both?
DMDM hydantoin is not formaldehyde itself — it is a compound that releases formaldehyde slowly when dissolved in water. The practical result is the same: your scalp is exposed to free formaldehyde during product use. Yes, you should avoid both the direct substance and all known releasers. An ECOCERT COSMOS certification covers the entire family by rule.
Sources
- IARC Monographs on the Identification of Carcinogenic Hazards to Humans — List of Classifications (formaldehyde: Group 1)
- Fransway et al. (2010). “Formaldehyde and formaldehyde-releasing biocides in cosmetics.” Contact Dermatitis, 62(3), 144–150.
- SCCS Opinion on Quaternium-15 (SCCS/1634/21) — European Commission, 2023
- COSMOS Standard — Approved Substances and Prohibited Ingredient List
- U.S. National Cancer Institute — Formaldehyde and Cancer Risk Fact Sheet