Overview #
INCI nomenclature for facial oils is not just a labelling formality. It is the first thing a customs officer, a retailer compliance team, or an EU responsible person checks — and getting it wrong can pull your product off shelves before a single consumer sees it. We see this more than we should. Brand owners invest months in sourcing a beautiful cold-pressed Marula or a certified organic Rosehip, then submit artwork with “Rosehip Oil” on the ingredient deck instead of Rosa Canina Fruit Oil. That one mistake can trigger a non-conformity notice under EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009. Natural claim compliance adds another layer — “100% natural origin” means something very specific under ISO 16128, and most brands are not calculating it correctly. This guide covers how we handle INCI accuracy, natural origin index scoring, and active ingredient selection for facial oil SKUs from brief intake through to final artwork sign-off.
INCI Nomenclature: Where Brands Get It Wrong #
The INCI name is not the common name, the marketing name, or the supplier’s trade name. It is the standardised nomenclature maintained by the Personal Care Products Council and cross-referenced in Annex II–VI of the EU Cosmetics Regulation. For botanical oils, the correct format follows the Latin binomial of the plant source plus the plant part and processing descriptor — Simmondsia Chinensis Seed Oil for jojoba, Argania Spinosa Kernel Oil for argan, Hippophae Rhamnoides Fruit Oil for sea buckthorn. We keep an internal verified INCI library of over 340 botanical oils because supplier COAs frequently list trade names or abbreviated Latin that does not match the official PCPC dictionary entry.
Fractionated or modified oils are a common trap. Fractionated coconut oil is Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride — not Cocos Nucifera Oil. Hydrogenated versions require the “Hydrogenated” prefix. Ethoxylated derivatives are a different INCI entirely and carry different regulatory status. When a brand partner sends us a brief with “natural coconut oil derivative” as the emollient, the first thing we do is request the full supplier specification sheet and CAS number before we touch the formula.
One failure mode we see repeatedly: brands sourcing oils from small artisan suppliers who provide beautiful sensory profiles but incomplete documentation. We rejected one cold-pressed Prickly Pear seed oil supplier last year because their COA listed Opuntia Ficus-Indica Seed Oil but the peroxide value was 4.2 meq O₂/kg at delivery — already above our 3.0 meq O₂/kg incoming QC threshold. The INCI was correct. The oil was not usable.
For the US market, FDA Cosmetics Guidelines require INCI labelling under 21 CFR Part 701.3. The EU and US INCI systems are largely harmonised, but there are edge cases — particularly around complex botanical extracts and fermented ingredients — where the accepted name differs between jurisdictions. We flag these during the regulatory review stage, not at artwork approval.
Natural Origin Index: The ISO 16128 Calculation Most Brands Misunderstand #
ISO 16128 defines the natural origin index (NOI) as the fraction of an ingredient’s molecular weight that derives from a natural source. A fully natural ingredient scores 1.0. A fully synthetic ingredient scores 0.0. The formula-level natural origin index is the weighted average across all ingredients by mass fraction.
Here is where most brands go wrong. They assume that because their formula is “mostly oils,” the NOI will be high. It often is — but not always at 1.0, and the gap matters when you want to claim “99% natural origin” or “100% natural origin.” Tocopherol (vitamin E) used as an antioxidant at 0.5% is typically synthetic dl-alpha-tocopherol with an NOI of 0.0 unless you specifically source natural d-alpha-tocopherol from vegetable sources, which costs roughly 4–6× more. Phenoxyethanol, a common preservative in anhydrous systems that contain any water-contamination risk, scores 0.0. Fragrance components are calculated individually — a “natural fragrance” blend may still contain synthetic fixatives that pull the formula NOI below your claim threshold.
We run the ISO 16128 calculation for every facial oil SKU before artwork is finalised. The calculation is not complicated, but it requires accurate NOI values for every raw material, and those values must come from supplier documentation, not assumptions. We now require all oil suppliers to provide ISO 16128 NOI values on their technical data sheets as a standard qualification criterion.
The SCCS Scientific Opinion framework is also relevant here when botanical actives are present at functional concentrations — particularly for ingredients with known sensitisation potential like certain citrus cold-press oils containing furocoumarin levels above 1 ppm.
Established vs. Next-Generation Facial Oil Actives #
This is where the brief gets interesting. Most facial oil formulas we receive are built around the same five or six carrier oils — argan, rosehip, jojoba, marula, squalane — with tocopherol at 0.5% and maybe a botanical extract. That is a perfectly functional formula. It is also what every other brand on the shelf is doing.
The more interesting work is in the active layer. Here is how we compare the established actives against the next-generation options we are currently working with:
| Active | Typical Use Level | Stability Profile | Relative Cost Index | Key Claim |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosehip Oil (Rosa Canina Fruit Oil) | 5–30% | Moderate — peroxide risk above 40°C | 1.0× (baseline) | Retinol precursor (beta-carotene), linoleic acid |
| Bakuchiol (Psoralea Corylifolia Seed Extract) | 0.5–2.0% | Good — stable to 45°C, 12 months | 8–12× | Retinol alternative, anti-ageing |
| Sea Buckthorn CO₂ Extract (Hippophae Rhamnoides Fruit Oil) | 0.1–1.0% | Moderate — carotenoid oxidation risk | 15–20× | Carotenoid density, wound support |
| Chia Seed Oil (Salvia Hispanica Seed Oil) | 5–20% | Low — high ALA content, rapid oxidation | 1.5–2.0× | Omega-3 density, barrier support |
| Meadowfoam Seed Oil (Limnanthes Alba Seed Oil) | 5–25% | Excellent — oxidative stability >18 months | 2.5–3.0× | Long-chain eicosenoic acid, emolliency |
| Polyglyceryl-3 Diisostearate (emulsifier variant) | 1–3% | Excellent | 3–4× | Anhydrous emulsification, texture |
Bakuchiol is the one we get briefed on most often right now. Honestly, the clinical evidence is stronger than we expected when we first started working with it. One double-blind, randomised controlled trial (n=44, 12 weeks, twice-daily application at 0.5%) demonstrated a 20% reduction in fine line depth and a 19% improvement in skin firmness versus baseline, with tolerability comparable to placebo — no significant irritation events. That is meaningful data for a retinol-alternative claim, and it holds up in our own stability testing. At 1.0% in a squalane-dominant base, we see no colour shift and no peroxide value increase beyond 0.5 meq O₂/kg over 12 weeks at 40°C/75% RH.
Chia seed oil is a different story. The omega-3 (alpha-linolenic acid) content is genuinely high — typically 60–65% ALA by fatty acid profile — but that is also why it oxidises fast. We’ve had batches where the peroxide value at 6 months exceeded 10 meq O₂/kg even with 0.5% tocopherol antioxidant protection. We now cap chia at 10% in any formula and require nitrogen blanketing during filling. Some brands still push for higher levels. We push back.
For our encapsulation technology platform, we have been exploring microencapsulated astaxanthin as a facial oil active. The stability improvement is real — unencapsulated astaxanthin at 0.05% in a clear oil base loses approximately 40% of its carotenoid content within 8 weeks at ambient light exposure. Encapsulated, that degradation drops to under 10% over the same period. The cost trade-off is significant though. Encapsulation adds roughly 3× the raw material cost of the astaxanthin itself. Most indie brands at MOQ 2,000 units cannot absorb that.
The Hard Truth About “Clean” Preservative Systems in Facial Oils #
Anhydrous facial oils do not require preservatives in the traditional sense — there is no free water to support microbial growth. But this is where brands get overconfident. The moment your formula contains any water-soluble botanical extract, any hydrosol, or any ingredient with residual moisture above 0.5%, you have a potential contamination vector. We’ve seen gram-negative contamination in what was briefed as a “100% anhydrous” formula because the brand had added an aloe vera powder that was not fully anhydrous-grade.
A lot of clean beauty brands also underestimate how fragile low-pH preservative systems become at production scale. If you are using a phenoxyethanol-free system based on ethylhexylglycerin and caprylyl glycol, those systems work well in truly anhydrous conditions. At scale, with 200kg batches and filling lines that are not perfectly dry, we have seen microbial challenge test failures that did not appear at 500g lab scale. The water activity at lab scale is controlled. On a production line, it is not.
Our current recommendation for facial oils with any botanical water-phase component: treat it as a low-water emulsion from a preservation standpoint, not as an anhydrous system. That means challenge testing per ISO 11930, not just AET. It means preservative efficacy testing at the formula’s actual water activity, not at theoretical zero.
We haven’t fully solved the clean preservation question for high-botanical-load facial oils. Our current approach works — ethylhexylglycerin at 0.3–0.5% combined with rosemary extract as a secondary antioxidant — but it is not elegant, and the rosemary extract can introduce colour instability in pale formulas.
Formulation Notes for Brand Partners #
What market? What are you expecting on-pack? Those are the first two questions we ask when a facial oil brief comes in, because the answers determine everything from INCI strategy to preservation approach to packaging material compatibility.
If you are targeting the EU market with a natural origin claim, we need your NOI target before we start selecting actives. “As natural as possible” is not a specification. 95% NOI and 99% NOI require different raw material choices, and those choices affect cost, stability, and sensory profile. Tell us the number.
If you are targeting the US market with a “clean” positioning, we need to know your restricted ingredient list upfront — not at artwork review. We have had projects where a brand’s retailer compliance list excluded an ingredient we had already stability-tested at 3 months. That is expensive to fix late.
For packaging: facial oils are aggressive on certain plastics. We require compatibility testing against your chosen closure and pump components before we finalise the formula. Silicone-heavy formulas and high-oleic oils can cause seal degradation in standard PE closures within 6 months. Airless pump systems add $0.40–$0.80 per unit at MOQ 1,000 — most indie brands absorb this for premium positioning, but it needs to be in the COGS model from day one.
Our standard facial oil development timeline is 10–14 weeks from confirmed brief to stability-qualified formula, assuming raw material availability. Expedited timelines are possible but compress stability data windows, which we will always flag in writing.
Supplier Qualification Checklist for Facial Oil Raw Materials #
When we qualify a new botanical oil supplier, these are the non-negotiables. We share this with brand partners who are bringing their own preferred suppliers to a project.
Documentation requirements: full INCI name matching PCPC dictionary, CAS number, EINECS/ELINCS number where applicable, ISO 16128 NOI value, country of origin and plant part, extraction method, and organic certification body and certificate number if claiming organic. We also require IFRA compliance documentation for any fragrant botanical oils.
Quality parameters we test on every incoming lot: peroxide value (our limit is ≤3.0 meq O₂/kg for polyunsaturated oils, ≤5.0 meq O₂/kg for more stable oils), acid value, saponification value, fatty acid profile by GC, heavy metals (lead ≤2 ppm, arsenic ≤1 ppm, mercury ≤0.1 ppm, cadmium ≤0.1 ppm per EU Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 Annex II limits), and microbial count (TPC ≤100 CFU/g for anhydrous materials).
For suppliers claiming natural or organic status, we additionally require: third-party organic certification (COSMOS, ECOCERT, or NOP), pesticide residue screening, and solvent residue declaration for CO₂ or solvent-extracted materials.
Stability documentation: we require a minimum 12-month accelerated stability report (40°C/75% RH per ICH Stability Guidelines) for any active ingredient supplied at functional concentration. Supplier-provided data is a starting point. We run our own stability in-formula.
For NMPA registration of facial oils in China, additional documentation requirements apply — refer to NMPA Cosmetic Regulation for current filing requirements, which were updated significantly under the 2021 Cosmetic Supervision and Administration Regulation. Our regulatory team handles NMPA filing as part of the ODM service for brands entering the China market.
For brands building their own facial oil product line with proprietary actives, we also recommend reviewing our botanical active sourcing framework, which covers traceability documentation, fair trade certification alignment, and biodiversity impact assessment — increasingly required by EU retail buyers under ESG procurement policies.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q: We want to list our oil as “organic” on the label — what does that actually require?
The claim has to be substantiated at the formula level, not just the ingredient level. Under COSMOS standard, at least 95% of physically processed agro-ingredients must be certified organic, and the total natural origin content must be 100%. If your formula contains any synthetic emulsifier or preservative, you cannot use “organic” — you can use “contains X% organic ingredients.” We calculate this for every brief before artwork goes anywhere near a designer.
Q: Can we combine retinol and bakuchiol in the same facial oil formula?
Yes, and we have done it. The combination at retinol 0.1% + bakuchiol 0.5% in a squalane base showed better 12-week colour stability than retinol alone at 0.3% in our internal testing. The practical limit is pH — retinol in an oil system does not have a pH per se, but if you are adding any water-phase component, keep it above pH 5.0 or retinol degradation accelerates significantly.
Q: Our retailer wants an INCI list with “no synthetic ingredients” — is phenoxyethanol a problem?
Phenoxyethanol has an ISO 16128 NOI of 0.0, so yes, it will pull your natural origin index down and most clean beauty retailers flag it. For a truly anhydrous formula, you may not need it at all. For anything with residual moisture, we would move to an ethylhexylglycerin-based system, which scores 0.0 as well but is more widely accepted on clean beauty approved lists. Honestly, the “no synthetic preservatives” brief is one of the harder ones to execute safely at scale.
Q: How many SKUs can we realistically build from one base formula?
In our experience, a well-designed facial oil base can support 3–5 SKUs through active swaps and concentration adjustments without triggering a full re-stability. Beyond that, you are usually looking at meaningful formula changes that require new 12-week accelerated stability data. The economics work well at MOQ 500 units per SKU if you are sharing a base — below that, the setup costs per batch start to hurt.
Q: We’ve seen “cold-pressed” on competitor labels — is that an INCI-regulated term?
No. “Cold-pressed” is a process descriptor, not an INCI term, and it is not regulated under EU or US cosmetics law in the same way INCI nomenclature is. It is a marketing claim, which means it needs to be substantiated — your supplier needs to document that the oil was processed below a defined temperature threshold (typically below 40°C or 49°C depending on the certifying body). We require a process declaration from the supplier before we allow it on artwork. Without that, a retailer compliance audit can challenge it.
Have a product concept in mind? Contact our formulation team to request a complimentary brief review.
© 2026 Mastracare.com. All rights reserved.
Unauthorized reproduction or distribution is prohibited.