TL;DR: A zinc pyrithione lot comes in at 98.2% purity, passes the threshold, gets accepted
TL;DR: The parameter we prioritise internally is particle size D90, measured under our QC-07 material entry protocol, and it matters disproportionately for scalp actives because so many of them are suspensions or poorly-soluble botanical extracts
Key Technical Parameters #
Sourcing actives for scalp care is where a lot of projects get quietly derailed. The ingredient arrives, the COA looks fine on first pass, and formulation starts — only for stability or efficacy data to fall apart six weeks later. The brand partners who avoid this are the ones who know exactly which COA fields to interrogate before accepting a lot, and what an acceptable response from a supplier actually looks like. This guide covers our incoming inspection protocol for scalp actives specifically: the field-level COA requirements, the pass/fail thresholds we apply, and the supplier behaviours that tell us more than any datasheet can.
The Specification That Drives Outcomes — and Why Buyers Keep Requesting the Wrong One #
Most incoming COA reviews for scalp actives focus on assay purity. It’s the number everyone asks for. A zinc pyrithione lot comes in at 98.2% purity, passes the threshold, gets accepted. Fine. But purity alone doesn’t tell you whether that ZPT will stay suspended at your target viscosity, or whether the particle size distribution will cause settling in a leave-on tonic by week four.
The parameter we prioritise internally is particle size D90, measured under our QC-07 material entry protocol, and it matters disproportionately for scalp actives because so many of them are suspensions or poorly-soluble botanical extracts. For ZPT specifically, we require D90 ≤ 8 µm for leave-on formats and ≤ 12 µm for rinse-off. Above those thresholds, we’ve seen visible sedimentation in transparent serums within 6 weeks at 25°C, regardless of rheology modifier levels. Purity was fine in every single failing batch. D90 was the issue.
For scalp microbiome-targeted actives like prebiotic complexes or fermented extracts, the relevant spec shifts to residual solvent content and microbial load. Many fermented ingredients are supplied with excellent antifungal activity data, but incoming lots from secondary suppliers occasionally arrive with total aerobic plate counts above 100 CFU/g. That’s not a catastrophic number, but it creates challenges in preservation system design — especially for low-pH scalp serums where you’re already pushing the preservative hard.
Buyers consistently underestimate heavy metal content as a qualifying spec for botanical-heavy scalp formulas. Saw palmetto extract, caffeine from botanical sources, rosemary CO2 — all can carry detectable arsenic, cadmium or lead depending on country of cultivation and extraction practice. The EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 doesn’t set a single explicit threshold for trace metals in finished cosmetics, but the SCCS risk assessment framework applies, and in practice we reject lots where lead exceeds 10 ppm or arsenic exceeds 3 ppm. For brands targeting the EU or UK market, this has to be on your qualification checklist from the start.
The secondary spec that surprises most project teams is pH of the active in its supplied form. This sounds minor. For scalp formulas it isn’t. Several high-purity niacinamide lots we’ve received have been buffered at different baseline pH values by different suppliers — anywhere from pH 5.5 to 7.2. When you’re targeting a finished scalp serum at pH 4.5–5.0, that incoming pH variation changes your acid load calculation and can affect nicotinic acid conversion risk at elevated temperatures.
Supplier Qualification — What to Request and What the Response Tells You #
When we onboard a new scalp active supplier, the first thing we ask for is not a brochure or a MSDS. We ask for a complete multi-lot COA package — at least three consecutive lots, not cherry-picked. The purpose is simple: we’re not assessing peak performance, we’re assessing consistency. A single lot at 99.1% assay means nothing. Three consecutive lots at 97.8%, 98.4%, and 99.1% tells us the process is in control. Three lots at 97.2%, 98.9%, and 96.4% tells us something else entirely.
How a supplier responds to this request is itself informative. Suppliers with genuine batch records send the data within 48 hours. Those without them either push back, offer “representative” COAs, or send three documents that share suspiciously identical testing dates. We’ve flagged this internally as a Category B indicator in our supplier risk scoring.
For scalp actives specifically, ask for the following on every COA, not just at qualification but on every incoming lot:
Assay/purity — method specified (HPLC, titration, UV), not just a result. Two suppliers can both report “98% purity” using methods that aren’t comparable. We require HPLC for any active where concentration drives efficacy claims.
Heavy metals panel — at minimum lead, arsenic, cadmium, mercury. If a supplier provides this only at qualification and resists per-lot reporting, that’s a flag. Heavy metal content varies by harvest region and year for botanical actives. A qualification result from 2022 tells you nothing about a 2024 lot grown after a drought year.
Microbial limits — total aerobic count, total yeast and mould, absence of specified pathogens. Required under PCPC Guidelines and consistent with ISO Standards for cosmetic ingredient testing. Scalp products sit close to damaged or sensitised skin in many target consumers. This isn’t optional.
Residual solvents — especially for CO2 or solvent-extracted botanicals. Supercritical CO2 extraction is generally cleaner, but ethanol and hexane residuals show up more often than suppliers admit. Our internal threshold for hexane residuals in scalp actives is ≤ 5 ppm.
Particle size distribution (where applicable) — D10, D50, D90 reported with measurement method and instrument used. Results without instrument specification are not accepted.
Response time matters too. A qualified, production-scale supplier should be able to answer a COA query within 3 business days. Longer than that is usually not a logistics issue. It’s a system issue.
Cost-Performance Trade-offs in Scalp Active Sourcing #
Grade matters differently depending on which active you’re sourcing. For caffeine, pharmaceutical grade versus cosmetic grade is a meaningful spec decision — pharma grade typically runs ≥ 99.0% assay by HPLC, while cosmetic grade varies widely, sometimes sitting at 95–97% depending on the supplier tier. The price gap between those grades is real, but for a caffeine-forward scalp serum with an on-pack 2% claim, you need HPLC-verified assay on every lot regardless of grade label.
Zinc pyrithione is a case where buying from the primary manufacturer versus a distributor makes a measurable difference. Primary manufacturer lots we’ve qualified run at tighter particle size distributions with documented process controls. Distributor lots of the same nominal grade can carry wider D90 variance, sometimes ±3 µm batch to batch, which matters at scale when you’re relying on consistent suspension behaviour across a 500 kg batch. The price premium for primary-source ZPT is roughly 15–20% in our recent procurement. For most brand margin structures, that delta is recoverable.
The counterargument: for high-solubility actives like niacinamide or panthenol, sourcing grade and supplier tier genuinely matter less. These are commoditised ingredients with limited performance differentiation across reputable suppliers. Spending qualification effort on third-party HPLC confirmation for every niacinamide lot is, honestly, a poor use of budget. Our AVL gate review process flags these as Tier C ingredients — basic COA acceptance criteria, no incoming HPLC required above a certain supplier trust level.
Where cost-cutting reliably backfires is in plant-derived scalp actives. Saw palmetto extract, rosemary extract, pumpkin seed oil — these are areas where cheaper supplier tiers often mean inconsistent growing conditions, variable extraction efficiency, and limited traceability. We’ve had two projects in the last 18 months where a mid-project supplier switch on a botanical was made purely on cost, and the reformulation cost ate the savings within two production cycles.
Technical Deep-Dive: COA Field Integrity and What “Passing” Actually Means #
A COA is only as reliable as the testing lab behind it. This is the part of supplier qualification that most procurement teams treat as a formality.
Scalp care actives present a specific challenge here because several efficacy claims — dandruff reduction, sebum normalisation, follicle activation — rest on actives where in-house testing by the supplier is nearly impossible to verify without retesting. Zinc pyrithione antifungal efficacy, for example, is sometimes cited on supplier COAs with reference to MIC data against Malassezia furfur. That data is often generated once, at registration, and then attached to COAs indefinitely. The lot you’re receiving may have been tested only for assay and physical appearance. The antifungal activity is assumed, not measured.
Our protocol for this is straightforward: for any active where the clinical mechanism is the commercial claim, we require either (a) certificate of analysis from a third-party ISO 17025-accredited lab, or (b) our own incoming retest. For ZPT, niacinamide, and salicylic acid, we retest one lot per new supplier and then one in every five subsequent lots. For botanicals with fragile bioactives, we retest more frequently — typically one in three lots for saw palmetto and rosemary extracts, because the degradation pattern during storage is more variable.
The table below reflects the pass/fail thresholds we apply across the five scalp actives that appear most frequently in our briefs. These are not universal industry standards — they’re the internal criteria we’ve refined across incoming inspections and stability trials over roughly three years of dedicated scalp care production.
| Active | Key Qualifying Parameter | Our Pass Threshold | Common Failure Mode |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zinc Pyrithione (ZPT) | Particle size D90 | ≤ 8 µm (leave-on) / ≤ 12 µm (rinse-off) | Sedimentation in transparent serums by week 4–6 |
| Niacinamide | Assay (HPLC) | ≥ 99.0% | Nicotinic acid conversion at elevated pH or temperature |
| Salicylic Acid | Heavy metals (Pb) | ≤ 10 ppm | Regulatory non-compliance for EU/UK market |
| Saw Palmetto Extract | Fatty acid profile (β-sitosterol) | ≥ 0.3% β-sitosterol by HPLC | Efficacy dilution from low-grade extraction |
| Caffeine (botanical) | Residual solvent (ethanol) | ≤ 0.5% | Preservation system interaction, formula instability |
Internal pass/fail criteria per QC-07 protocol. Thresholds apply to our standard scalp serum and tonic formats — high-leave-on formats or specific market registrations may require tighter limits.
On clinical backing: for scalp actives specifically, we look for study design that mirrors real-world contact time. A 2022 randomised controlled trial (n=64, 12 weeks) evaluating a standardised 1% ZPT scalp tonic applied daily showed a 44% reduction in Malassezia-associated dandruff scores versus vehicle control, with tolerability acceptable across all participants. What we notice is that study used a leave-on format with a 15-minute contact time before rinsing. Translate that to a true rinse-off shampoo with 60-second contact, and the efficacy signal drops. The study design and the product format have to be matched before you use the data for claim support.
One area we’re still working through: the relationship between incoming β-sitosterol content in saw palmetto and actual follicle-level activity in vivo. Our dataset only covers 11 lots and one consumer panel — not enough to set a validated threshold with confidence. We’ll have better numbers after our 2025 batch series closes.
Formulation Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a scalp care project, the first questions aren’t about the formula — they’re about the target market and the active list. Those two inputs determine the entire qualification burden before a single pilot batch runs.
If you’re targeting the EU or UK, heavy metal screening on botanicals is non-negotiable from day one. If you’re targeting the US, the FDA Cosmetics Guidelines framework applies a different risk threshold, and the qualification checklist shifts accordingly. Telling us the market early saves weeks.
The brief mistake we see most often is brands arriving with a supplier they’ve already committed to, either commercially or because a marketing team bonded with the supplier’s story. That’s fine — we work with brand-nominated suppliers regularly. But we apply the same incoming inspection criteria regardless of the relationship. We’ve had to reject nominated lots of fermented scalp extract that arrived with total yeast and mould counts above acceptance limits. The brand needed two weeks to find an alternative. That delay is avoidable if qualification happens before commercial commitment.
For scalp serum and tonic formats, our typical timeline from brief to qualified sample is 2–3 weeks for first lab samples, 4–8 weeks for accelerated stability at 40°C/75% RH, with 24-month real-time stability initiated concurrently from the first stable pilot batch. Active qualification — if you’re using unfamiliar suppliers — should run in parallel with formulation, not after.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Our supplier sends a COA with every shipment — isn’t that enough?
A COA is a starting document, not a pass certificate. The question is whether the COA covers the right parameters — particle size, heavy metals, microbial limits — and whether it was generated by an accredited third-party lab or by the supplier’s own in-house team. For scalp actives where the active is doing the regulatory and efficacy heavy lifting, incoming retest on key parameters is standard practice in projects that go smoothly.
We’re launching in the EU — do we need per-lot heavy metal testing on all botanicals?
Yes, practically speaking. The EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 doesn’t print a single fixed threshold, but the SCCS risk methodology applies to finished product safety assessment, and your Responsible Person will need evidence of contaminant control. A one-time qualification result won’t cover you for botanical actives where heavy metal content varies by harvest year. Per-lot testing, or at minimum annual lot testing plus supplier audit, is the practical standard.
We switched saw palmetto suppliers mid-project to save cost — the COA looked identical. Why did the formula change?
This is a pattern we’ve flagted internally more than once. Two lots can share the same nominal extract specification but differ significantly in β-sitosterol content, fatty acid profile, and residual solvent levels. If the incoming β-sitosterol content drops below roughly 0.3% — which we’ve seen on several lower-tier lots — the formula’s efficacy claim basis weakens and the sensory profile can shift noticeably due to different fatty acid ratios. A COA assay number alone doesn’t capture that variation.
What’s your MOQ and timeline if we need a new scalp active qualified alongside formulation?
Our standard MOQ for scalp serum formats is 500 kg per SKU. Active qualification in parallel with formulation adds roughly 2–3 weeks to the timeline depending on the testing queue and whether the supplier has existing documentation we can review. First lab samples typically take 2–3 weeks from confirmed brief. Accelerated stability runs 4–8 weeks. If you’re on a tight launch timeline, tell us early — we can sequence the critical-path items differently.
What’s the one thing brands don’t put on the brief that changes everything downstream?
Packaging material. Every scalp serum or tonic project eventually hits compatibility testing — and the combinations that cause problems aren’t always obvious. Aluminium-free roll-ons with high-salicylic-acid formulas, droppers with high-ethanol leave-ons, certain HDPE bottles with fragrance-containing tonics. We now include a packaging material declaration in our AVL gate review at brief intake, because the formula-to-pack interaction is as important as the active-to-active interaction. Brands that hand us a formula brief without a packaging spec add at least 3–4 weeks of risk to the back end of the project.
Have a product concept in mind? Contact our formulation team to request a complimentary brief review.