Modular Solution for Cosmetics Compliance
Check the Conformity of your Formulas
Secure your regulatory documents for each zone
Optimize on-site risk management
Manage your Safety Data Sheets efficiently
Automate your regulatory monitoring
Ensure the traceability of your substances
Maintain good HSE risk management
After more than twenty-five years of negotiations, the European Union and the Mercosur countries — Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay — finalized their trade agreement. Provisionally applied since 1 May 2026, the agreement marks a major step in economic relations between Europe and South America. For European companies in cosmetics, fragrance and home fragrance, the issue is twofold: benefiting from progressively improved commercial access to high-potential markets, while continuing to comply with regulatory requirements that remain largely national. Although the EU–Mercosur agreement creates new opportunities, it does not remove product registration obligations, labelling requirements or the need for a local responsible party in the countries concerned. For European brands, success will depend not only on commercial strategy, but also on early regulatory planning.
Recevez une fois par mois les dernières actus réglementaires et conseils d’experts.
Looking for the MoCRA update in 2026? This article explains what is expected this year, what has not changed, and how cosmetic companies should prepare.
Launching cosmetic products in Australia requires more than a strong marketing strategy. Market entry models, AICIS and TGA compliance, ingredient control, and the adaptation of labelling and claims all shape the go-to-market approach. This article outlines the key regulatory steps to secure launches, reassure local partners, and accelerate market access in Australia.
Many CEPA compliance risks arise from overlooked operational obligations. Learn which reporting, recordkeeping, and notification duties companies often underestimate.
Home fragrances (candles, incense, diffusers, room sprays) are increasingly scrutinized for VOC emissions and potential impacts on indoor air quality. This article clarifies why “natural vs synthetic” is a misleading safety proxy: what matters is the risk of the finished product—hazard combined with real-world exposure under foreseeable use. It highlights why emissions vary widely across product types, formulations, and usage conditions (combustion, ventilation, duration), and connects the risk assessment approach to EU Regulation 2023/988 on general product safety.
An overview of CEPA requirements for organizations operating in Canada. Learn key obligations, compliance responsibilities, and best practices across all sectors.
Managing cosmetic compliance across multiple markets quickly becomes complex when relying on spreadsheets. This article examines the limits of manual data management and when a more structured approach becomes necessary.