Overview #
Regulatory compliance is not a checklist you hand off at the end of a project. It shapes which actives you can use, at what concentration, in what claim language, and in what packaging — before a single gram goes into a mixer. We’ve had brand partners come to us with fully developed formulas that couldn’t be registered in their target market without a complete reformulation. That’s an expensive lesson. The three major markets — EU, US, and China — each have fundamentally different philosophies about what a cosmetic product is allowed to do, and those differences have direct consequences for how we design hair growth formulations from day one.
What “Hair Growth” Actually Means to a Regulator #
This is where most projects start on the wrong foot. A brand founder says “hair growth serum” and means something that visibly thickens hair and reduces shedding. A regulator reads “hair growth” and immediately asks: is this a drug claim?
In the EU, cosmetics are governed by EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009. The regulation defines a cosmetic product as one intended to cleanse, perfume, change appearance, protect, or keep in good condition — not to treat or prevent disease. “Stimulates follicle regeneration” is a drug claim. “Supports the appearance of fuller, denser hair” is cosmetic. That line is not always obvious, and we’ve had EU-bound products flagged during safety assessment because the brief used clinical language that crossed into therapeutic territory.
In the US, the FDA operates under a dual cosmetic/drug framework. Products that affect the structure or function of the body are drugs. Minoxidil is the clearest example — it’s an OTC drug, not a cosmetic. If your formula contains minoxidil at any concentration and you’re selling in the US, you’re in drug territory, full stop. The FDA Cosmetics Guidelines are explicit on this. Cosmetic claims for hair products must stay in the lane of appearance and condition, not biological mechanism.
China’s NMPA Cosmetic Regulation introduced a two-tier system under the 2021 Cosmetic Supervision and Administration Regulation (CSAR). Hair growth products — specifically those claiming to promote hair growth or reduce hair loss — are classified as “special-use cosmetics” (特殊化妆品). That classification triggers a full registration pathway, not just notification. It’s a meaningful distinction that adds 6–12 months to your China launch timeline.
Permitted Actives and Concentration Limits by Market #
Not every ingredient that works in a lab is permitted in every market. This is where formulation and regulatory intersect most directly.
For scalp and hair growth actives, the regulatory picture looks like this:
| Active | EU (Cosmetics Reg. 1223/2009) | US FDA (Cosmetic Use) | China NMPA (CSAR 2021) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minoxidil | Not permitted in cosmetics; drug classification | OTC drug (2% women, 5% men); not cosmetic | Prohibited in cosmetics |
| Caffeine | Permitted; no concentration cap in Annex | Permitted; GRAS status | Permitted; standard safety dossier |
| Biotin (topical) | Permitted; no Annex restriction | Permitted | Permitted; included in standard dossier |
| Procyanidin B-2 | Permitted as cosmetic ingredient | Permitted | Permitted; efficacy data may be requested |
| Redensyl (DHQG + EGCG2) | Permitted; supplier safety data required | Permitted | Permitted; novel ingredient review may apply |
| Capixyl (acetyl tetrapeptide-3 + red clover) | Permitted; peptide + botanical composite | Permitted | Permitted; peptide component requires documentation |
| Saw Palmetto Extract | Permitted; concentration-dependent safety review | Permitted | Permitted; botanical origin documentation required |
Minoxidil is the hard wall. We get briefs for it regularly, especially from US brand partners who see it in OTC products and assume it’s freely available. It isn’t — not in a cosmetic context in any of the three major markets. We always redirect those briefs toward cosmetic-pathway actives like Redensyl, Capixyl, or high-concentration caffeine systems.
Caffeine is underrated. At 1.0–4.0%, it has a reasonable body of evidence for DHT inhibition at the follicle level, and it clears regulatory review in all three markets without special classification. We use it as a backbone in most of our scalp growth formulas.
For EU specifically, the SCCS Scientific Opinion process matters when you’re working with novel actives or high-concentration botanical extracts. If an ingredient doesn’t have established Annex status and the safety data is thin, SCCS opinion becomes part of your safety assessment pathway. We’ve had one project delayed 4 months because a botanical extract at 3.5% didn’t have sufficient genotoxicity data in the supplier dossier.
Clinical Evidence: What Study Design Actually Holds Up #
Brand partners often ask us to “include the clinical data” in their product brief. The question is which data, and whether it’s defensible in a regulatory context.
The most-cited study design for scalp actives is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial measuring hair density by phototrichogram or TrichoScan. One published RCT on Redensyl (n=26, 90 days, twice-daily application at 3% concentration) showed a 17% increase in hair density versus baseline and a 9% reduction in telogen hair ratio compared to placebo. That’s the kind of data that supports a cosmetic efficacy claim — not a drug claim, but a meaningful “visibly fuller” or “reduced hair fall” positioning.
What that study doesn’t tell you is how the result translates across different scalp conditions, ethnicities, or baseline hair density profiles. Internally, we’ve seen brand partners use supplier-provided clinical data on packaging claims and then face pushback from EU distributors who wanted independent verification. The supplier data and our own stability results don’t always agree either — and that’s a separate problem.
For China NMPA special-use registration, efficacy data requirements are more prescriptive. The NMPA expects human use test data conducted in China or by a NMPA-recognized testing institution, with specific endpoints for hair growth claims. A foreign clinical study alone is generally not sufficient. This is one of the most common surprises for brands entering China — they have solid EU or US clinical backing and assume it transfers. It doesn’t, not automatically.
We now require brand partners targeting China to budget for a local efficacy study if they’re pursuing special-use classification. Typical timeline for that study: 3–6 months. Add that to the 6–12 month NMPA registration window and you’re looking at 9–18 months before China launch. Plan accordingly.
For more on how we approach active ingredient evidence in scalp formulations, see our Scalp Health & Hair Growth documentation and our technical notes on peptide and growth factor systems.
Labeling Requirements: Where Brands Get Caught #
EU labeling under Regulation 1223/2009 requires INCI nomenclature for all ingredients, listed in descending order of concentration above 1%, and alphabetically below 1%. That’s standard. What catches brands is the responsible person (RP) requirement — every EU-marketed cosmetic must have a designated RP established in the EU. We help brand partners identify RP services, but the RP relationship needs to be in place before the product information file (PIF) is finalized. We’ve had shipments held because the RP wasn’t formally appointed before the product hit the EU market.
US labeling follows FDA 21 CFR Part 701. INCI listing is required, and the “principal display panel” must carry the net quantity of contents. For hair products making structure/function-adjacent claims, the claim language on pack needs legal review. Honestly, most indie brands underestimate how much a single word choice — “regrows” versus “supports the look of regrowth” — can shift a product from cosmetic to drug territory.
China requires both Chinese and English labeling, with the Chinese name of the product registered with NMPA. For special-use cosmetics, the registration approval number must appear on pack. The full ingredient list must use INCI names as listed in the China Cosmetic Ingredient Inventory (CICI). If an ingredient isn’t in CICI, you’re looking at a new ingredient registration — that’s a separate process with its own timeline and data requirements.
Registration Timelines: The Numbers That Actually Matter #
This is usually where projects go sideways. Brand partners build a launch calendar based on product development timelines and forget that regulatory registration is on the critical path.
EU notification via the Cosmetic Products Notification Portal (CPNP) is relatively fast — typically 2–4 weeks once the PIF is complete and the RP is in place. The PIF itself, including the Cosmetic Product Safety Report (CPSR) prepared by a qualified safety assessor, takes 4–8 weeks depending on the complexity of the formula and the availability of ingredient safety data. Total realistic timeline from formula lock to EU market: 8–14 weeks.
US is faster for standard cosmetics. There’s no pre-market approval requirement. The MoCRA (Modernization of Cosmetics Regulation Act, 2022) introduced facility registration and product listing requirements, but these don’t create a pre-market gate. From formula lock to US market: 4–6 weeks, assuming labeling is clean.
China is the long pole. Standard cosmetics (non-special-use): filing/notification pathway, approximately 3–4 months. Special-use cosmetics (including hair growth claims): full registration, 12–18 months including local efficacy testing. We’ve seen some registrations complete in 10 months with clean dossiers and no supplementary questions from NMPA. We’ve also seen them stretch to 24 months. Budget for the longer end.
For stability testing protocols that feed into these regulatory dossiers, ICH Stability Guidelines provide the reference framework, though China NMPA has its own stability requirements that don’t map perfectly to ICH Q1A. We run parallel stability programs for products targeting both markets.
Where Most Brands Get This Wrong #
The brief says “global launch.” The timeline says 6 months. Those two things are almost never compatible if China is in scope.
We almost always push back on global simultaneous launch briefs when China special-use registration is involved. The math doesn’t work. What we recommend instead: launch EU and US first on the cosmetic pathway, generate real-world performance data, and use that period to run the China registration process in parallel. By the time China registration clears, you have 12–18 months of market data that strengthens your brand story for the China launch.
The other thing we see constantly: brands want to use the same formula and the same claims across all markets. That’s rarely possible. EU claim language tends to be more conservative than US. China requires specific approved claim language for special-use categories. A claim that’s fine in the US may need to be softened for EU and rewritten entirely for China. We build claim matrices for brand partners as part of our regulatory documentation package — it’s not optional, it’s how you avoid a recall or a registration rejection.
A lot of clean beauty brands also underestimate how fragile low-preservative systems become when you add high-concentration botanical extracts at the levels needed for scalp efficacy. We had one batch — worked perfectly at 500g lab scale — where gram-negative contamination appeared at week 10 of preservative challenge testing at 50kg scale. The botanical extract at 4.2% was feeding the organisms. We reformulated the preservative system and added a chelating agent. It’s not a perfect solution for every formula, but it’s the approach that got us through challenge testing.
Formulation Notes for Brand Partners #
What market? What are you expecting on-pack? Those are the first two questions we ask when a hair growth brief comes in, because the answers determine everything downstream — active selection, concentration, claim language, and registration pathway.
If you’re targeting EU and US with cosmetic claims, we can typically work within a 10–14 week development timeline from brief to formula lock, with regulatory documentation running in parallel. The active stack we default to for this pathway: caffeine at 2.0–3.5%, a peptide complex (acetyl tetrapeptide-3 or similar), and a scalp-conditioning base that supports the efficacy story without triggering drug-claim territory.
If China is in scope, we need to know upfront. The formula may need adjustment to avoid ingredients not listed in CICI, and the claim language needs to be drafted with NMPA special-use requirements in mind from day one — not retrofitted after EU approval.
MOQ and packaging matter here too. Airless pump formats, which we recommend for oxidation-sensitive actives like certain botanical extracts, add approximately $0.50–$0.90 per unit at MOQ 3,000 units. Most indie brands can absorb that. At MOQ 1,000, it starts to hurt the unit economics. We’ll flag this in the brief review.
We prepare a full regulatory documentation package for each project: PIF-ready safety dossier, CPSR brief for EU safety assessors, NMPA dossier template for China, MoCRA product listing data for US, and a claim matrix covering all target markets. That package is part of our standard OEM deliverable, not an add-on.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q: We want to claim “reduces hair loss by X%” on pack — is that a cosmetic claim or a drug claim?
It depends entirely on the mechanism language around it. “Visibly reduces the appearance of hair thinning” is cosmetic. “Reduces hair loss by inhibiting DHT” is a drug claim in the EU and US. We can help you build a claim that’s supported by your clinical data and stays on the right side of the line — but we need to see the study design first. Most supplier-provided efficacy data supports a 15–30% improvement in hair density metrics, which is workable for cosmetic claim language.
Q: Can we use the same formula for EU, US, and China?
Usually yes on the formula itself, but not always on the claims or labeling. The bigger issue is China NMPA — if any ingredient isn’t in the China Cosmetic Ingredient Inventory (CICI), you need a new ingredient registration before the product can be filed. We screen every formula against CICI before confirming China compatibility. In our experience, about 1 in 4 briefs has at least one ingredient that needs substitution or documentation for China.
Q: How long does China NMPA registration take for a hair growth product?
For special-use classification (which covers hair growth claims), budget 12–18 months minimum. That includes 3–6 months for local efficacy testing at a NMPA-recognized institution, plus the registration review period. We’ve seen clean dossiers clear in 10 months. We’ve also seen straightforward products take 22 months due to supplementary information requests. Don’t build a China launch date around the optimistic end of that range.
Q: Do we need a separate safety assessment for each market?
For EU, yes — a Cosmetic Product Safety Report (CPSR) prepared by a qualified safety assessor is mandatory under Regulation 1223/2009. For the US, there’s no mandatory pre-market safety assessment, but MoCRA now requires that safety substantiation be on file. For China, the NMPA dossier includes a safety evaluation component. We prepare a consolidated safety data package that feeds all three assessments, which reduces duplication and keeps the timelines aligned.
Q: We’ve seen Redensyl at 3% in competitor products — can we use that concentration?
Yes, 3% is the concentration used in the primary published efficacy study (n=26, 90 days), and it’s what we typically formulate to when the brief supports it. The cost impact is real — Redensyl at 3% adds approximately $2.80–$4.50 per kg to your formula cost depending on supplier and volume. At lower concentrations (1–2%), the efficacy data is thinner and we’re less confident the clinical story holds. We’re still not fully convinced the evidence base at sub-1% concentrations is strong enough to support meaningful on-pack claims.
Have a product concept in mind? Contact our formulation team to request a complimentary brief review.
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